Posts: 16,162
Threads: 344
Likes Received: 709 in 393 posts
Likes Given: 821
Joined: Apr 2025
I find that, when the motor is hot, it can be hard to get the CB from 1st to neutral, particularly if the bike is stationary. It can be really sticky and, when it will move often flicks straight into 2nd from where I have to go back to neutral.
Posts: 1,298
Threads: 39
Likes Received: 15 in 8 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Apr 2025
Funny you should say that Cormanus, i have that effect too as the bike gets more miles on it, that effect is 4 times more pronounced on my old cb550, cold, piece of cake to get into neutral but when hot it's near impossible, so i get around that by selecting neutral whilst still rolling to a stop, no problem then.
Not that it would make a difference but would be nice to know what made it do that, i guess it's to do with the selector drum but it's not very intuitive to me.
Posts: 928
Threads: 9
Likes Received: 56 in 16 posts
Likes Given: 2
Joined: May 2025
Sometimes the gearbox in the area around 1-neutral-2 gear is a bit sticky and stiff as Cormanus wrote. Don't know why, maybe it has a life of its own with to me unkown parameters. In other shifting processes the gears can easily be found as cutting with a knife through butter. I take it as it is. Sometimes a bit of extra gas by turning the throttle helps before shifting again and the gears or neutral find their way.
Wisedrum
Posts: 204
Threads: 20
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Oct 2013
My 73 Kawasaki 900 has a positive neutral finder. It makes it impossible to shift the bike into second gear from neutral when stationary. I have not seen this on other brands of motorcycle. Maybe it was a patented design.
Posts: 12,677
Threads: 77
Likes Received: 3 in 3 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Dec 2014
(12-07-2019, 05:05 PM)max_imp Wrote: Funny you should say that Cormanus, i have that effect too as the bike gets more miles on it, that effect is 4 times more pronounced on my old cb550, cold, piece of cake to get into neutral but when hot it's near impossible, so i get around that by selecting neutral whilst still rolling to a stop, no problem then.
Not that it would make a difference but would be nice to know what made it do that, i guess it's to do with the selector drum but it's not very intuitive to me.
(+1) Similar experience; use final rolling stop distance to slip into neutral.
Posts: 23,416
Threads: 697
Likes Received: 498 in 228 posts
Likes Given: 624
Joined: Apr 2025
Hmmm 45,000 miles and mine goes into neutral easy as pie all the time.
Posts: 12,677
Threads: 77
Likes Received: 3 in 3 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Dec 2014
At stop, mine won't slip into neutral 100% of the time, but better than 95% of the time when the engine is nice 'n' hot. I view this a par-for-the-course for Japanese bikes and think not much more than that.
- - -
That said, the less than 5% is made up to neutral by a slight move forward or backward of the bike. Again, I don't think about this.
Posts: 673
Threads: 26
Likes Received: 5 in 5 posts
Likes Given: 62
Joined: May 2025
(12-08-2019, 01:13 AM)The ferret_imp Wrote: Hmmm 45,000 miles and mine goes into neutral easy as pie all the time.
+1
you should have bought a DELUXE
2014 Honda CB1100 DLX
2002 Honda CB750 Nighthawk
Posts: 6,983
Threads: 93
Likes Received: 433 in 244 posts
Likes Given: 852
Joined: Apr 2025
(12-08-2019, 05:41 AM)clearviewx_imp Wrote: (12-08-2019, 01:13 AM)The ferret_imp Wrote: Hmmm 45,000 miles and mine goes into neutral easy as pie all the time.
+1
+1
^^ +1 with 38,000 kms
Posts: 862
Threads: 30
Likes Received: 0 in 0 posts
Likes Given: 0
Joined: Jan 2019
Finding neutral can be problematic, but there are workarounds. If you're stopped and can't find neutral, keep it in first, rev it just a bit, preload the shifter just a bit, let the clutch out until it just begins to catch, pull the clutch in and snick into neutral.
If you had to stop quick and you're stopped in second or third gear, let the clutch out just until it begins to grab, pull it in, drop a gear, repeat as necessary.