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Honda VFR 750F-R
If I had a real life and a real job and was going to buy just
one brand new bike to be my one and only bike, it would be the new Honda VFR750.
It has gobs of torque for commuting, refined handling for weekend warrior duty
in the canyons, and it is comfortable enough for 600 mile days. It is
beautifully proportioned, and the simple black and red paint job is just
gorgeous. This is a bike for adults who know the difference between a damn good streetbike and a bike that could be made into a really cool racebike but isn't.
Honda makes the RC45 for racing, and the VFR for the real world of the streets. They're sisters, and as much I lust after the RC 45, I'd marry the VFR. Of course, I should be honest and admit that I like VFRs in general, and the heart of this smoldering passion starts with the Honda V-45 engine. Think of it as two 90 degree v-twins molded together. Sure, it screams once you get the revs
up like any other Japanese sportbike, but the difference is that it pulls hard
at the bottom of the midrange. Putting along at 4000 rpm, you can open up the
throttle, and it starts yanking. Most in-line four cylinder motors will dog you
right there, and the ones that don't have generally sacrificed some top end
power for this driveability. The reason, of course, lies in the inherent
advantages of a v design. The VFR walks all over any other 750 class motorcycle
(and even Ducatis) in top gear roll-ons. For the street, there's nothing like a
V-four.
As an experiment, I tried to run the windy section of Mulholland between The
Rock store and the overlook a mile or two uphill in one gear. I figured it would
be sweet to just work the fat power curve. All was well until I found the one
fly in the ointment of this otherwise lovable bike. You see, it has a rev
limiter at 11,500 (I think) that doesn't just bounce the revs like most rev
limiters. It apparently cuts the power to two cylinders, which amounts to a
partial throttle shutoff. I bogged in a corner, went into the opposite lane for
a heart stopping moment, and was on my way. Keep in mind that this happened
during an experiment which, in retrospect, seems kinda stupid. It does, however,
point out the amazingly linear pull of the engine. I know this rev limiter means
that the engine will last a lot longer, and I did get used to it immediately,
but knowing that it's there is a bummer.
But I'd be remiss in describing this bike if I didn't mention that it looks even
better in person than it does in pictures. The aforementioned candied pearlized
paint looks like it is glowing and wet, even at night under a single light bulb
in the garage. The black rims look mean, and aren't as hard to keep clean as
white ones. Take off the grab rails, fit the seat cowling, squint a little, and
it looks like the NR750. The headlights look all cat-eyed, which looks sharp,
but is just the result of new plastic over the old lenses. Honda really should
have given this new bike new plastic lightweight lenses like on the 95 CBR900RR.
Source By Paul Peczon
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Any corrections or more information on these motorcycles will be kindly appreciated. |