Apparently not testosterone-laced enough for the Murican market; liked a lot elsewhere -- great for new riders to develop a sense of the dance. Honda had a CB-400-4! which was smooth as butter; lighter == good always, but essential IMhO for any beginner. I actually traded-in my CB-750 when the CB-550-4 came out. (Just Had to have a Four.. when that 750 came out, in case I died before ever having owned one). Accompanied a couple females (One on the hot Yamaha 250 du jour) pass-storming of the Sierra, occasional camp-outs near Ebbetts Pass, etc. 550 was just fine at all altitudes and laden with much of the gear.
But that 750, smooth as it was - was a Beast at 'trials' speeds; the MASS was evident in every move, no matter how ameliorated by the turbine smoothness. I cringe when I see some 16 yo on a huge bike which bike-cluless Daddy just cosigned on: fear will dominate the learning curve and, who has the guts to practice a small rear wheel slide - on an Expensive behemoth? (And if you never educate the inner ear for what a small-slide feels like - you'll move to panic mode when it happens unexpectedly and you haven't the foggiest how to correct.) Y'know?
Sounds as if you've sampled the range. Hey.. there's no substitute for experience But.. Be Careful Out There - if anything, the insouciance of auto drivers has worsened over the past 2 decades, not improved. These yokels Will Not See You. Period. (And you ain't gots the steering lock, on these cafe-racers, to pull off any spectacular avoidance stuff).
Mo to Joisey, eh. Gonna take the back roads?
Nostalgia.. not envy of the butt-boring Interstates,
Ashton
who learned the basic dirt-skills on a loaner Harley 125 2-stroke while my Matchless forks were being er - realigned from an incident with a log. So tiny you could throw it all around, make lurid drifts and all the good stuff. Happened to be some sandy soil around. The Matchless 500 twin seemed a monster, later.