Honda CRF description
This is a nice bike. I purchased it for my son about 4yrs ago. We have probably gone riding together six times. We do not have the time with sports and all to use this little bike or the motorcycle I purchased for myself.This bike still has the original tires with a few of the little stems all new tires start out with when new. We are the 2nd owner. The previous owner like ourselves barely pre-owned the bike. This motorcycle slept every night inside and next to owners Ferrari! This is a VERY NICE BIKE!Great Christmas present!1st one with the cash gets it.THANKS,Nick404-579-XXXX
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Moto blog
NEW: Yoshimura ends cans for Honda CB1000R
Wed, 10 Feb 2010LEGENDARY JAPANESE tuning house Yoshimura has designed a series of slip-on performance end cans for Honda’s naked CB1000R.The brand new EEC-approved cans bolt straight onto the bike's exiting pipework and feature a stainless steel end cone and integral lower Yoshimura logoed cat-converter heat shield. Even with the dB-Killer baffle in place peak power is improved, as is mid-range torque with further performance gains available if the baffle is removed.A full race mid-pipe, extracting yet more power is on the way and will be available later in the year. The Yoshimura CB1000R Slip-On, including the supplied heat shield, is over 4kgs lighter than the OE item, the Carbon sleeve, even more so at just 4.65kg.Part Number/Sleeve Type/Weight/RRP including VAT1A0-480-5B50 Stainless Steel 2.61kg £712.711A0-480-5B80 Titanium 2.45kg £770.181A0-480-5B80B Titan Blue 2.45kg £850.651A0-480-5B90 Carbon 2.35kg £896.631A0-480-5B20 Metal Magic 2.61kg £793.17 Noise Output (decibels)Standard end can: 94dB @ 5,000rpmYoshimura EEC Slip-On: 94.5dB @ 5,000rpm(with db-killer in place)
Schoolboy Heroes
Fri, 04 Mar 2011A wet and grey day in Calais in 1992 wouldn’t be the obvious situation for a life changing experience, but for a 11 year old lad on a boring booze cruise from Dover this is exactly what happened. Pockets bulging with funny money I headed to the Tabac for the obligatory bangers, dirty playing cards and some sweets. Then it happened, I stood in front of the magazine rack and reached up, as if drawn by an external force. At the time I wasn’t tall enough for Playboy or L’ Escort so settled for a copy of Moto Verte, the French motocross mag. Life would never be the same again. Inside there was a double page spread, with a fresh faced Jeremy McGrath resting a leg over his #15 Honda CR125. Sporting a pair of fluro MX trousers with a, now retro, bright white surname emblazoned jersey, and casting an eye over a seriously vast motocross park. I stared at this Sinisalo advert all the way home, partly because all the articles were in foreign, but also because I was transfixed. What and how do I become a motocross champion?
Gardner chilling out and taking it easy
Wed, 14 Jul 2010Away from the pressures of being a Grand Prix racer in the days when fierce on-track battles and unexpected highsides were common place, Wayne Gardner throws a Honda VFR750F around Oran Park in Australia. The bike that Wayne is likely to be riding is special VFR750F, that was given the codename '6X'. The VFR was an experiment with prototype components including titanium valves and magnesium flat-slide carburetors, the result was the bike that weighed less than a factory RC30.
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