Honda
CBX-6
December 10th,
2004 - By, Frank
Melling
There
are many contenders for the world’s most charismatic production
motorcycle but one of the favourites must be Honda’s iconic CBX
6. Everything about the bike says it is a work of uncompromising
genius - and it is.
The CBX engine is 100% the work of Shoichiro Irimajiri who, as a
precocious young designer, was responsible for Honda’s legendary
six cylinder race bikes.
Mr. Irimajiri was clear about the link between the exotic GP
machines like the RC166 250cc GP bike and the road going CBX. At
the bike’s launch late in 1978 he said: "When we were racing, we
were up against four cylinder two-strokes built by Yamaha and
Suzuki. Cylinder multiplication was the only way we could be
competitive. That’s why we built the five cylinder 125 and the
two six cylinder machines. The CBX is a direct descendant of
these race engines. That’s one reason why it took only a year
and a half to develop. We already had the engine technology from
our GP racing experience."
Another reason for the bike’s very existence was the opening of
Honda’s then brand-new R&D centre at Asaka. Bursting with the
brightest designers in Japan, and filled with a burning desire
to show that Honda occupied the top spot in world wide bike
design, the CBX was intended to make it clear just who ruled the
bike world.
The CBX was every bit as exotic as its GP predecessors. It
featured no less than 24 valves feeding the motor through the
most sophisticated constant velocity carburettors ever made. The
engine was also incredibly practical. Despite looking vast, it
was only two inches wider than the four cylinder Honda CB750 it
replaced and boasted a sweet gearbox and svelte clutch. Best of
all, producing 103hp at 9,000 rpm, it made the power its looks
promised. Enough power in fact to make it the quickest most
powerful production bike available with quarter mile times in
the mid 11s.
The styling was equally dramatic. A team of five chassis
engineers and stylists, working under the direction of Norimoto
Otsuka, produced one of the most dramatic petrol tanks ever to
grace a motorcycle.
The chassis was less successful with spindly front forks and a
swinging arm which was definitely not conceived by a master
engineer. Neither were the rear shocks. Finally, the Dunlop
tyres, which the bike came equipped with as standard, did not do
the bike any favours.
Not that any of these factors caused the CBX to handle badly.
Rather it required thought, care and intelligence to perform
well.
The root of the problem lay mainly in its weight. Tipping the
scales at around 270kg wet, this was not a bike which took
kindly to sloppy or indecisive riding. And so developed the
great myth that CBX 6s don’t handle.
This falsehood, combined with a high list price, eventually
killed the bike. The gossip was also that Honda actually lost
money on every CBX they sold. So, after only four years, the CBX
ceased production - and the biking fraternity should have
mourned the passing of a truly great motorcycle. The first two
years of production saw the CBX sold as a sportsbike before in
the latter half of it's life it grew a fairing and became a
sports-touring model.
Now, equipped with modern tyres and aftermarket rear shocks, it
is a surprisingly nice ride and the CBX certainly feels totally
different to everything else in the biking world.
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