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Honda CBF 1000FA
Produced by Honda subsidiary Honda
Italia Industriale S.P.A. (Italy), the CBF1000 motorcycle was orignally released
in the European markets.
Review While our northern neighbours crave access to the Honda NT700V, a bike that's not in the Canadian Honda line-up, they do enjoy a host of other models we don't get stateside. A while back, we reported on the CB1000R, a bike that may be available in Canada soon. This time we bring you a naked bike they do get, the 2010 CBF1000. There are some things Canadian that you just won't find anywhere
else in North America. We crazy Canucks eat beaver tails (PETA members stand
down; they're not the kind attached to buck-toothed rodents), our parking meters
accept Loonies and Toonies, and French Canadians combine fried potatoes, gravy
and cheese curds in a delicious concoction called poutine. Now, to understand the significance of importing
these machines, we must first give some perspective. Canada has a
population of 34 million. That's a few million short of the
population of California, and the country's annual new motorcycle
sales are about half those sold in that state or about one-tenth
annual U.S. sales. In 2007 Honda Canada broke from tradition and dealt directly with Japan to import the CBR125R, a model it believed would boost sales to new, young riders. Studies made by the Honda Canada showed that motorcycle consumer trends north of the border mirrored those of Germany, and the CBR125R was very popular in Deutschland. Canadian riders ate up the diminutive CBR, and the entry-level sportbike sold out in its first year. Riding on the popularity of this exclusive model,
the following year Honda Canada imported two more models that were
popular with German riders, the Varadero adventure-touring bike and
the CBF1000. Revised styling includes a new, frame-mounted half-fairing with a hawk-eye beak that hints at the CBF's CBR1000RR heritage, and it has a four-position adjustable windscreen. The screen can be lifted or lowered manually by pulling up or pushing down on it. I was able to adjust it while riding, though disclaimers in the owner's manual clearly state you shouldn't do this.
Replacing the previous model's steel frame is a lighter, more
rigid aluminum piece, onto which pivots a 41mm telescopic fork and a
single-shock swingarm made from rectangular-section steel. High-speed handling at the track was remarkably settled, which
came as a surprise after experiencing the bike's effortless steering on the
street. Steering effort was naked-bike light and neutral, and the machine dove
to maximum lean and held its line with the determination of an English Pointer.
Its racetrack handling was commendable, but it's not a point-and-shoot type of bike, and kamikaze-diving to the apex was not its strong point. It weighs a claimed 540 pounds wet, which is 20 pounds less than the ABS-equipped Suzuki Bandit 1250 but a whopping 53 pounds more than the Yamaha FZ1, though the big Fizzer doesn't have ABS, while the CBF1000 has Honda's Combined ABS as standard. Although Europeans have a choice between ABS and
non-ABS models, Honda Canada decided to import only the ABS model,
which uses two 296mm discs and three-piston calipers up front, while
a 240mm disc with a single-piston caliper in the rear contributes to
the linked system.
A comfortably upright riding position reinforced this bike's all-round demeanor and was unmistakably reminiscent of the once popular UJM. Seat height can be adjusted to three positions from 30.7 to 31.9 inches. I rode the bike in its standard, middle setting (31.3 inches) and had plenty of legroom. Instruments are attractive yet spartan, with a large
central tachometer domineering over two digital displays to either
side of it. Aside from the basic speedo, readouts include time, dual
tripmeters, fuel level and a fuel economy computer; absent is a
gear-position indicator. Honda needs to fortify its line-up with accessible, easy-to-ride machines on which to build a customer base of new riders. Despite this CBF's ties to the CBR1000RR, it's not a high-tech, high-performance rocketship; it's Honda's modern interpretation of a back-to-basics standard. Honda Canada hopes this machine will have a broader appeal than its supersports and cruisers, and will attract riders that would otherwise look elsewhere for a do-it-all bike. Source Motorcycle.com
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Any corrections or more information on these motorcycles will be kindly appreciated. |