Key performance
Technical specifications
Engine
- Displacement
- 745 cc
- Power
- 33.5 ch @ 5500 tr/min (33.5 kW)
- Torque
- 65.0 Nm @ 3500 tr/min
- Engine type
- Four stroke, 52° V-twin, SOHC, 6 valve
- Compression ratio
- 9.6:1
- Bore × stroke
- 79 x 76 mm
- Fuel system
- PGM-FI electronic fuel injection with automatic choke, 34mm throttle body
- Ignition
- Digital 3-D mapping, two spark plugs per cylinder
- Starter
- Electric
Chassis
- Gearbox
- Wide ratio 5 speed
- Clutch
- Wet, multiplate with coil springs
- Front suspension
- 41mm telescopic fork
- Rear suspension
- Dual conventional dampers with 5-step adjustable spring preload, 90mm wheel travel
Brakes
- Front brakes
- Single 296 mm disc, 2 piston caliper
- Rear brakes
- Single276mm disc w/ 2-piston caliper
- Front tyre
- 120/90-17
- Rear tyre
- 160/80-15
Dimensions
- Seat height
- 655.00 mm
- Wheelbase
- 1641.00 mm
- Fuel capacity
- 14.00 L
Overview
In 2024, Honda continues to prove that there is a market for motorcycles that reject the pursuit of power. The 750 Shadow Aero, with its 33.5 horsepower patiently drawn from a 745 cm3 V-twin, does not aim for adrenaline but serenity. It is a machine built around a torque present from 3500 rpm, a mechanical proposition where simplicity outweighs complexity. In a segment often noisy, it whispers.

Its SOHC six-valve engine is an exercise in quiet robustness. A bore and stroke almost square, a modest compression ratio of 9.6:1, everything is calibrated for flexibility and longevity. The wide-ratio five-speed gearbox and electronic PGM-FI injection with automatic choke contribute to this philosophy: a motorcycle that starts, runs, and accompanies you without incident. It will never push you in the back, but it pulls with the smoothness of a locomotive.
The chassis follows this logic of appeasement. A seat height of 655 mm is an open invitation, making the motorcycle accessible to almost everyone. The generous wheelbase and high-profile tires ensure ship-like stability, while the conventional suspensions, with rear preload adjustment, handle imperfections without brutality. Braking, with its two discs and two-piston calipers, is sufficient for the cruising pace adopted, ABS remaining a paid option.
Who buys a Honda Shadow Aero today? The motorcyclist who is looking for a classic custom silhouette, without the mechanical hassles or exorbitant prices of American V-twins. It is a motorcycle for daily commutes and Sunday rides where the landscape counts more than the speedometer. With its 14-liter tank, it promises reasonable ranges for these uses. It does not claim to be anything other than a simple and reliable pleasure object, and it is precisely in this honesty that its charm lies.
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