Honda CB series


The Honda CB Series is an extensive line of Honda motorcycles. Most CB models are road-going motorcycles for commuting and cruising. The smaller CB models are also popular for vintage motorcycle racing.[1]
Honda CB series
- CB50
- CB90 Super Sport
- CB92 also known as Benly Super Sport[2]
- CB100N
- CB100 Super Sport
- CB110 also known as CB Twister
- CB125
- CB125E
- CB125N
- CB125T
- CB125 Super Dream
- CB150 also known as CB Trigger
- CB150 Verza
- CB150 Invicta
- CB160 Super Sport[3][4]
- CB175
- CB200
- CB250N
- CB250RS
- CB250T
- CB350
- CB350 H'Ness (also known as CB350 RS, sold as GB350 in Japan and EU)[5][6]
- CB360
- CB400N
- CB400T
- CB450T
- CB450
- CB450DX-K
- CB500
- CB500 Four
- CB500T
- CB550
- CB650
- CB750
- CB1000GT
- CB1100
- CB-1
Honda CB-F series
- CB125F
- CB150F
- CB250F
- CB250F Jade
- CB300F
- CB350F
- CB400F
- CB400F CB-1
- CB450F
- CB500F
- CB600F
- CB650F
- CB900F
- CB1000F
- CB1100F
Honda CB-R series
Honda Super Four
- CB400 Super Four
- CB500 Super Four
- CB1000 Super Four
- CB1300 Super Four
Honda Hornet
- CB125 Hornet
- CB250 Hornet
- CB500 Hornet
- CB600 Hornet
- CB750 Hornet
- CB900 Hornet
- CB1000 Hornet
Honda CB-X series
Honda Nighthawk series
- CB250 Nighthawk
- CB450 Nighthawk
- CB550 Nighthawk
- CB650 Nighthawk
- CB700 Nighthawk
- CB750 Nighthawk
Custom series
- CB650 Custom
- CB750 Custom
- CB900 Custom
- CB1000 Custom
Other models
- CB77 Super Hawk
- CB1100SF
Gallery
-
CB 92 "Benly" 1965 -
CB 450 "DOHC", the model with the highest capacity engine until 1969 -
CB 750 "Four" 1969 to 1978, the model that set a new standard for "Superbikes" -
CB 500 "Four", the first model with a 500 cc engine 1972 to 1977 -
CB450N, a simpler version of the CB450 -
CB900F "Bol d´Or" (also built in 750 and 1100 versions) (1979 to 1984) -
CB150R Streetfire 2016 -
CB500F 2013 naked 471 cc twin -
CB500X 2016
* Note: unless otherwise stated the engine capacity in ccs can be derived from the number in the model reference.
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Honda CB.
- ^ Shawn McDonald (September–October 2009). "Honda CB160 racing". Motorcycle Classics. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
- ^ Roland Brown (May–June 2007). "1958 Honda CB92 Benly". Motorcycle Classics. Retrieved 2009-08-12.
- ^ "1965 Honda Sport CB160". Classic Bikes from the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum. American Motorcyclist Association. Archived from the original on 11 January 2011. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
For a list price of $530, a young rider who may have started on a step-through Honda 50 or 90 got something that looked like a true motorcycle. And the 161cc single-overhead cam, four-stroke twin delivered on that promise, spinning up to 10,000 rpm and generating 16.5 horsepower—enough, the company claimed, for a top end of 75 mph. In a road test, Cycle World even dubbed the new bike a 'baby Super Hawk.'
- ^ Honda Motor Co., LTD (1965). Honda 125/160 Super Sports CB125-CB160 Owner's Manual. Japan: Honda. p. 1.
This HONDA motorcycle is designed and produced as a compact version of the HONDA 250 Super Sports model CB-72
- ^ Simon Hancocks (30 September 2020). "HONDA GOES AFTER ROYAL ENFIELD WITH THE HONDA H'NESS CB350". visordown.com.
- ^ Azwar Ferdian (February 22, 2021). "Honda GB350 Menyapa, Intip Bedanya dengan H'Ness CB350" [Honda GB350 introduced, Take a Peek at the Difference with H'Ness CB350]. Kompas (in Indonesian).
- ^ "CB 200X | Honda".