COMMON MOTOR COLLECTIVE
Gasket Kit (Oil Change) | Honda CB200 / CL200
Gasket Kit (Oil Change) | Honda CB200 / CL200

Gasket Kit (Oil Change) | Honda CB200 / CL200

Your Price: $20.00
In Stock
CMC Part Number:4179
  • Replaces OEM Part:91301-216-000, 91305-426-003, 91305-216-000, 91304-HB3-003, 91302-943-003, 91302-200-000, 15219-302-000, 11691-354-306, 11691-354-000, 11394-302-306
  • Qty:Sold as Kit (8 pieces, 6 gasket types)

Oil Change Gasket Kit | Honda CB200 / CL200

Every CB200 oil change needs a fresh drain plug O-ring at minimum. If you're cleaning the centrifugal oil filter and rotor — recommended every other oil change — the whole right side cover has to come off, which means new gaskets for both the cover itself and the rotor underneath. This kit bundles all 6 gasket types you need for an oil change with filter clean on any CB200 or CL200 from 1973 through 1976.

Why You Need This

Honda specs the CB200 family oil change at every 3,000 miles. We recommend a more conservative 1,500-mile interval — these little parallel twins work hard and the oil shears down faster than the factory schedule assumes. The factory schedule calls for cleaning the centrifugal filter and oil rotor every other oil change (every 3,000 miles by our timing). That's the operation this kit is built for.

The CB200 oil system is doubly filtered — a screen filter on the pump inlet catches coarse debris, and a centrifugal rotor on the pump outlet spins out fine particles. Skip the filter clean and sludge packs into the rotor over time, choking off oil delivery to the top end.

Here's where CB200 differs from its CB175 sibling: the 175 has an access panel on the right side cover that lets you reach the filter without pulling the whole cover. The CB200 doesn't. To clean the filter on a CB200, the entire right crankcase cover has to come off — which means the cover gasket and rotor cover gasket both get broken. In the past, you either reused old gaskets (which leak) or bought a full overhaul kit and paid for parts you didn't need. This kit gives you exactly the 6 gasket types required for an oil change with filter clean on a CB200. Nothing extra.

Specifications

SpecDetail
Replaces OEM Part Numbers91301-216-000, 91305-426-003, 91305-216-000, 91304-HB3-003, 91302-943-003, 91302-200-000, 15219-302-000, 11691-354-306, 11691-354-000, 11394-302-306, 11394-302-010, 30391-354-306, 30391-354-000, 16173-253-004, 11395-302-307, 11395-302-010, 12391-354-306, 12391-354-000, 12191-354-306, 12191-354-000, 12251-354-405, 12251-354-000, 18291-MN5-650, 18291-KE5-000, 18291-306-000, 12394-216-306, 12394-216-000, 91302-001-710, 91302-001-000, 91301-354-000, 91301-428-003, 91301-MG2-790, 91301-MG2-791, 91302-216-000, 91302-500-000, 91305-028-900, 91305-028-158, 91302-315-000, 91301-200-000, 12209-354-003
Fits ModelsCB200 K0 (1973-1974), CB200T (1975-1976), CL200 (1974)
Sold AsKit (8 pieces, 6 gasket types)

Important: Use 100% mineral 10W-40 only. Most modern diesel oils — Shell Rotella T4, Chevron Delo 400, Mobil Delvac 1300 — reformulated to semi-synthetic in late 2023. Semi-synthetic causes clutch slip on these wet-clutch engines. 15W-40 mineral diesel oil is fine as an alternative if you can verify it's still 100% mineral.

Gasket grease trick: Apply a thin layer of grease to both faces of each new gasket during install. Next time you pull the cover, the gasket releases cleanly and you may be able to reuse it.

CB200-specific reassembly note: The oil filter cover access screw should be a button-head Allen (M6 × 20), not a socket-head. The socket-head's larger top mass restricts oil flow through the passageway behind it.

What's in the Kit

  • A: Stator Rotor Cover Bolt O-Rings — 3 pieces
  • B: Oil Rotor Cover O-Ring — 1 piece
  • C: Oil Drain Plug O-Ring — 1 piece
  • D: Oil Pump Gasket — 1 piece
  • E: Stator Rotor Cover Gasket — 1 piece
  • F: Right Crankcase Cover Gasket — 1 piece

Total: 8 pieces, 6 unique gasket types.

Honda CB200 / CL200 Gasket Kits
KitLetterGasketQty
#4179
Oil Change Gasket Kit
(Includes Gaskets A-F)
AStator Rotor Cover Bolt O-Rings3
BOil Rotor Cover O-Ring1
COil Drain Plug O-Ring1
DOil Pump Gasket1
EStator Rotor Cover Gasket1
FRight Crankcase Cover Gasket1
#4180
Service Gasket Kit
(Includes Gaskets A-J)
GPoints Cover Gasket1
HIntake Manifold Gaskets2
ILeft Crankcase Cover Gasket1
JTop Cam Cover Gasket1
#4178
Overhaul Gasket Kit
(Includes Gaskets A-V)
KCylinder Base Gasket1
LHead Gasket1
MExhaust Gaskets (copper)2
NCamshaft End Cover2
ODipstick O-Ring1
PClutch Lifter Adjuster O-Ring1
QValve Cover O-Ring4
RExhaust Guide to Head O-Rings2
STensioner Bolt O-Ring1
TCylinder Head Dowel Oil Passage O-Ring2
UValve Stem Seal4
VNeutral Light Switch O-Ring1

Installation

Difficulty: Intermediate — more involved than the CB175 because the whole right cover has to come off, including muffler removal on CB200.

Tools needed: Wrench/socket for drain plug, JIS or Allen driver for cover bolts, M8 × 1.25 pitch bolt (for rotor cover puller), oil drain pan, lint-free rag, razor blade or gasket scraper, fresh 10W-40 mineral oil (about 1.8 qt), zinc ZDDP additive (2 oz).

  1. Warm the engine, place on center stand. Have a drain pan ready.
  2. Break the drain plug loose with a breaker bar — turn the right direction or you'll strip the threads. Drain the oil.
  3. Kick the engine over a few times to clear the last of the oil.
  4. Inspect the drain plug for thread or hex damage. Replace if rounded off.
  5. Quick path (oil change only): Replace the drain plug O-ring (Letter C). Move to step 14.
  6. Full path (oil change with filter clean): Remove the right footrest. Remove the muffler (CB200 only — CL200's exhaust routes differently and doesn't need removal). Remove the kickstart pedal.
  7. Loosen the right side cover bolts in a star pattern. If they're original JIS Phillips, an impact driver helps break them loose — consider switching to Allen bolts on reassembly. Tap the cover lightly with a rubber mallet to break the gasket seal. (If you greased the gasket on a prior service, it may release cleanly.)
  8. To pop the rotor cover for cleaning, thread an M8 × 1.25 pitch bolt into the center until it bottoms on the crankshaft and pushes the cover off.
  9. Wipe sludge from the rotor and filter chamber with a lint-free cloth. Blow the rotor clean with compressed air per the CB200 service manual.
  10. Scrape any remaining gasket material from the case and cover sealing surfaces with a razor blade or gasket scraper. Don't gouge the aluminum.
  11. Apply a thin coat of grease to both faces of each new gasket — Letter B (rotor cover O-ring), Letter D (oil pump gasket if pump was removed), Letter E (rotor cover gasket), Letter F (right crankcase cover gasket).
  12. Reinstall the rotor cover with new gaskets B and E. Use new Letter A O-rings on the rotor cover bolts. For the filter cover access screw, use a button-head Allen (M6 × 20), not a socket-head — the larger head restricts oil flow through the passageway.
  13. Apply anti-seize to the right side cover bolt threads. Reinstall the cover with new gasket F. Cross-pattern tighten from middle outward. Torque the 6mm cover bolts to 5.1-8.0 ft-lbs (70-110 kg-cm).
  14. Reinstall the kickstart pedal, muffler (if removed), and right footrest.
  15. Replace the drain plug O-ring (Letter C). Reinstall the drain plug — snug, do not over-tighten. Honda doesn't publish a specific drain plug torque, so use feel.
  16. Refill with 1.7 L (1.8 US qt) SAE 10W-40 mineral oil. Add 2 oz zinc ZDDP additive.
  17. Run the engine briefly. Check for leaks at the cover and drain plug. Re-check oil level on the dipstick — pull it, wipe it, drop it back in (don't thread it), then pull and read.

If you're going deeper to clean the mesh pickup screen on the pump inlet: That requires removing the clutch basket and the oil pump itself. The Service Kit (#4180) covers the gaskets you'll need for that level of access.

Our walkthrough video covers the filter clean procedure on the CB175/CB200 family — the M8 puller bolt trick for the rotor cover, the button-head Allen note for the filter cover access screw, anti-seize on reassembly, and the kickstart shaft seal opportunity while you're in there. Note: the demonstration is on a CB175 with the access panel; on a CB200 the same sequence applies but you'll be removing the full right cover. We also have a separate basic oil change video covering CB175 / CL175 / SL175 / CB200 / CL200 if you don't need the full filter service.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use the CB175 oil change kit on my CB200?

No. The kits look similar but the gasket sizes differ, and the right side cover designs aren't the same. The CB175 has an access panel on the cover that lets you reach the filter without removing the whole cover; the CB200 doesn't. The CB200 cover is also a different shape with a different gasket profile. Use this kit (#4179) for CB200 and CL200. Use the #4176 CB175 / CL175 / SL175 kit for the 175 family.

Do I need this entire kit at every oil change, or only when cleaning the filter?

Only Letter C (drain plug O-ring) is strictly required at every oil change. Letters A, B, D, E, and F come into play when you pull the right side cover for the centrifugal filter clean — recommended every other oil change (every 3,000 miles). The kit is priced for one cleaning service.

How often should I change the oil on my CB200?

Honda's factory schedule says every 3,000 miles. We recommend every 1,500 miles — these little parallel twins shear oil down faster than the factory schedule assumes. Clean the centrifugal oil filter and rotor every other oil change (every 3,000 miles by our schedule, which matches Honda's factory filter-clean interval).

What's the difference between the Oil Change, Service, and Overhaul kits?

The Oil Change Kit (#4179, this product) covers gaskets A-F — exactly what you need for a routine oil change with centrifugal filter clean. The Service Kit (#4180) covers gaskets A-J — adds the points cover, intake manifold gaskets, left crankcase cover, and top cam cover for full tune-up service or cylinder head work. The Overhaul Kit (#4178) covers A-V — every gasket on the engine including the head, cylinder base, exhaust, valve stem seals, and dipstick O-ring for a complete engine teardown.

What oil should I use?

SAE 10W-40, 100% mineral oil per the Honda CB200 service manual. 15W-40 mineral diesel truck oil works as an alternative. Avoid full synthetic and semi-synthetic — both cause clutch slip on these wet-clutch engines. Most modern diesel oils (Shell Rotella T4, Chevron Delo 400, Mobil Delvac 1300) reformulated to semi-synthetic in late 2023, so check the bottle. Add 2 oz of zinc ZDDP additive per quart for cam and rocker protection.

Why does the CB200 need the muffler removed but the CL200 doesn't?

Per the Honda CB200/CL200 service manual, the CB200's stock muffler routing blocks access to the right footrest and side cover area. The CL200 scrambler exhaust routes higher and to the rear, leaving cover access clear. If you've fitted an aftermarket exhaust to either bike, the requirement may differ — remove whatever needs to come off to clear the right side cover.

You Might Also Need

Last updated: May 2026

This Oil Change Gasket Kit Fits These Honda Motorcycles
1973197419751976
200CB200K0CB200K0CB200TCB200T
CL200

Related Items

Recently Viewed Items

Logo