Jump to content

Honda CB1300

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by InternetArchiveBot (talk | contribs) at 06:50, 1 March 2018 (Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v1.6.4) (Artix Kreiger)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Honda CB1300
ManufacturerHonda
Also calledSuper Four
Production1998–
PredecessorHonda CB1000
EngineInline-4, 16 valve, water-cooled, fuel injected
Bore / stroke78 mm x 67.2 mm
Compression ratio9.6:1
Power100 hp @ 7,500 rpm
Transmission5-speed
Frame typeSteel double cradle
SuspensionFront: 43 mm cartridge-type telescopic fork with adjustable preload and adjustable compression and rebound damping, 109 mm axle travel
Rear: swingarm, twin "piggy-back" shock absorbers, adjustable for preload and combined compression/rebound damping.
BrakesFront 310 x 4.5 mm dual disc with 4-piston calipers

Rear 256 x 6 mm dual-piston caliper


Available ABS
Wheelbase1,515 mm (59.6 in)
DimensionsL: 2,220 mm (87 in)
W: 790 mm (31 in)
H: 1,120 mm (44 in)
Seat height790 mm (31 in)
Weight249 kg (549 lb) (dry)
273 kg (602 lb) (wet)
Fuel capacity21 L (4.6 imp gal; 5.5 US gal)

The CB1300 is a 1,284 cc (78.4 cu in) Honda motorcycle released in 1998 as a successor to the CB1000. Its engine, with minor modifications, came from the Honda X4, released in the previous year. In 2003, the CB1300 received a slightly different engine which lacked cooling fins.

Beginning in 2005, Honda offered two versions of the CB1300: the standard, unfaired model, and the Super Bol D'Or (in Europe the CB1300S), with half fairing.[1]

The CB1300 has never been sold by authorized dealers in the United States or Canada.[2][3] Gray market importers brought in small numbers.

Notes

  1. ^ Honda Announces Minor Changes for the Large-Displacement CB1300 SUPER FOUR Road Sport Bike and the Addition of the New CB1300 SUPER BOL D’OR with Half Cowl Archived 2006-03-14 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Wes Siler (January 7, 2014), "The most desirable motorcycles not sold in America", RideApart
  3. ^ Zac Kurylyk (October 24, 2013), "New Hondas en route?", Canada Moto Guide