New Hornet
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Re: New Hornet
As a big fan of lower powered bikes, CB500's and Honda's in general I could see one of these in the garage for the occasional ride and trackday.
When I say lower powered remember when the GPZ600R,CBR600F etc came out they were less power....
When I say lower powered remember when the GPZ600R,CBR600F etc came out they were less power....
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Re: New Hornet
The forks are Showa big piston, the brakes are Nissin radial and the wheels look pretty decent. They are all identical to everything from the CB125R upwards. Economies of scale 101!Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 8:44 am I was gonna say the wheels look pretty high spec - the spokes are really thin. But they are on the CBR650 too. Honda clearly invested in higher spec wheel manufacture
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Re: New Hornet
The CB1000R looks way higher spec in person when you see it. They look pretty dull in pics, but they seem 10 times more high end in real life. Maybe this Hornet is the same.
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Re: New Hornet
Someone earlier was saying the cb650r has poor build quality. I saw one parked a few metres from the sea yesterday, where it always parks. Next to a Benelli 250 which is always parked nearby. The CB still looks good, the Benelli has rusty fixings and paint peeling all over it.
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Re: New Hornet
I was watching the 44teeth dyno run on the Fireblade that came out a day or two ago - did a quick double take when they were whooping and cheering for 100bhp
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Re: New Hornet
I did wonder if it was a conservative dyno. Although my 96 Blade my 112bhp as standard on Harris's dyno, 119bhp with dynojet kit, filter and exhaust so Blades were never big power. So Al's was I think 106bhp which isn't bad at near 30 years old I guess.
Be interesting what the Hornet puts out on a dyno as its a lot more than the MT07 quoted. If it's 100bhp at the back wheel it should be fun as that's what my Firestorm was.
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Re: New Hornet
MT07 dyno at 65ish hp at the wheel on most dynos, this hornet will be 80ish at the wheel which is a fair jump over an MT07 which is lively enough to have fun on road and track so bodes well for the HondaSupermofo wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 9:57 amI did wonder if it was a conservative dyno. Although my 96 Blade my 112bhp as standard on Harris's dyno, 119bhp with dynojet kit, filter and exhaust so Blades were never big power. So Al's was I think 106bhp which isn't bad at near 30 years old I guess.
Be interesting what the Hornet puts out on a dyno as its a lot more than the MT07 quoted. If it's 100bhp at the back wheel it should be fun as that's what my Firestorm was.
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Re: New Hornet
I did say that, but I wasn't comparing them with Chinese budget bikes.A_morti wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 9:51 am Someone earlier was saying the cb650r has poor build quality. I saw one parked a few metres from the sea yesterday, where it always parks. Next to a Benelli 250 which is always parked nearby. The CB still looks good, the Benelli has rusty fixings and paint peeling all over it.
When I bought my GSXS750 a year ago I looked at CB650s and CBR650s and they all had rusty disc centres and corroded rear shocks, none of them looked worth the £6K dealers were asking for them.
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Re: New Hornet
Is a Benelli really the best yardstick for quality?A_morti wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 9:51 am Someone earlier was saying the cb650r has poor build quality. I saw one parked a few metres from the sea yesterday, where it always parks. Next to a Benelli 250 which is always parked nearby. The CB still looks good, the Benelli has rusty fixings and paint peeling all over it.
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Re: New Hornet
How much is down to the owners, though?Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 10:18 amI did say that, but I wasn't comparing them with Chinese budget bikes.A_morti wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 9:51 am Someone earlier was saying the cb650r has poor build quality. I saw one parked a few metres from the sea yesterday, where it always parks. Next to a Benelli 250 which is always parked nearby. The CB still looks good, the Benelli has rusty fixings and paint peeling all over it.
When I bought my GSXS750 a year ago I looked at CB650s and CBR650s and they all had rusty disc centres and corroded rear shocks, none of them looked worth the £6K dealers were asking for them.
My 130k mile GS500 still looked pretty good and I hardly ever cleaned it - just made sure it was waxed up regularly. Yet everyone says what crap the finish on those was.
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Re: New Hornet
It was probably down to the owners, do Hondas attract people less likely to clean their bikes than Suzukis? (and Triumphs btw)The Spin Doctor wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 6:31 pmHow much is down to the owners, though?Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 10:18 amI did say that, but I wasn't comparing them with Chinese budget bikes.A_morti wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 9:51 am Someone earlier was saying the cb650r has poor build quality. I saw one parked a few metres from the sea yesterday, where it always parks. Next to a Benelli 250 which is always parked nearby. The CB still looks good, the Benelli has rusty fixings and paint peeling all over it.
When I bought my GSXS750 a year ago I looked at CB650s and CBR650s and they all had rusty disc centres and corroded rear shocks, none of them looked worth the £6K dealers were asking for them.
My 130k mile GS500 still looked pretty good and I hardly ever cleaned it - just made sure it was waxed up regularly. Yet everyone says what crap the finish on those was.
It also could have been the Honda dealers I went to over price bikes and don't prepare them very well, I was looking for a modern day FZ750 and thought the CBR560 really fitted the bill, instead I bought a modern day Bandit.
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Re: New Hornet
I managed to buy a higher spec newer Suzuki for £6.5K, I could also have bought an older but very good condition Triumph for the same money.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 7:37 pm Or maybe £6k just isn't that much to pay in a dealer these days.
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Re: New Hornet
The condition was down to how they've been cared for or not, these bikes are aimed at beginners and a lot don't know how to look after them. us lot would keep most bikes mint as we've been doing it years and know what's needed.Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 7:19 pmIt was probably down to the owners, do Hondas attract people less likely to clean their bikes than Suzukis? (and Triumphs btw)The Spin Doctor wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 6:31 pmHow much is down to the owners, though?Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 10:18 am
I did say that, but I wasn't comparing them with Chinese budget bikes.
When I bought my GSXS750 a year ago I looked at CB650s and CBR650s and they all had rusty disc centres and corroded rear shocks, none of them looked worth the £6K dealers were asking for them.
My 130k mile GS500 still looked pretty good and I hardly ever cleaned it - just made sure it was waxed up regularly. Yet everyone says what crap the finish on those was.
It also could have been the Honda dealers I went to over price bikes and don't prepare them very well, I was looking for a modern day FZ750 and thought the CBR560 really fitted the bill, instead I bought a modern day Bandit.
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Re: New Hornet
KarDesign has been remixing the new Hornet:
https://www.kardesignkoncepts.com/konce ... ornet-750/
The single swingarm from the CB1000R looks aces, but it's not realistic spec on a budget bike.
https://www.kardesignkoncepts.com/konce ... ornet-750/
- Nevermind the triple engine. The bike can't make over 94hp by design to be A2 restrictable, and it's at 90hp with a twin so more cylinders aren't required but would add a chunk to the price while reducing economy.
- The high exhaust should've been a given if you're calling it a Hornet, and would've allowed more commonality with the coming Transalp
- The bike is much nicer with a CB650R headlight which is truer to original and already in the parts bin as much as the CB500F one is
- The CB650R swingarm couldn't be that much more expensive than the CB500F one, right? Anyway I think most of us would pay that difference
The single swingarm from the CB1000R looks aces, but it's not realistic spec on a budget bike.
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Re: New Hornet
Probably not feasible to get the modern emissions stuff in the exhaust up there.
*waits for a million people to post pictures of new bikes with high mounted exhausts*
*waits for a million people to post pictures of new bikes with high mounted exhausts*
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Re: New Hornet
AFAIK euro 5 has meant most bikes will have one catalytic converter in the headers, plus one in the silencer.Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 3:21 pm Probably not feasible to get the modern emissions stuff in the exhaust up there.
I reckon as long as you put the (first) cat pretty near the motor, you'll be alright for emissions? Heat management around the silencer would probably be an issue though, cats get pretty hot.
Can you think of any Euro5 bike with the exhaust mounted up high? Either under the seat, or right near the rear bodywork?Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 3:21 pm *waits for a million people to post pictures of new bikes with high mounted exhausts*
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Re: New Hornet
No, mostly 'cause they need to get hot to work properly - hence why so many bikes have really short fat exhausts now.