It looks pretty good to me, there are a lot of diffrent things that have been done to it also a lot of things that will need fixing as well, but for what it is it will make someone happy to fix the way they want it as we all have our own ideas on how a Commando should look, a few are saying the price is high but as these bikes get older the prices are going to get even higher, but this bike is a good starting point to make it your own.
Over here in Aussie land the prices for any Nortons are going through the roof, a mate of mine payed $8,500 for a nice looking 850 Commando but by the time he rode it home (about 20 miles) the primary was full of motor oil and spewed all over the floor, this was 3 years ago, he works at a Triumph shop here in Brisbane so he got one of his workshop mate to pull it down and found where the main oil seal on the primary side had a section broken away, so now the motor sits on my workshop bench being rebuilt, the broken piece has been welded ane milled.
My point to this is to expect the unknown unless you know the full history of the bike, we all take risks in life and buying a old motorcycle is the same, but they can be fixed and only the lucky ones seem to pick up the cheap ones but they are harder to fine these days, its all depends on how much you are willing to pay.
Ashley