Honda CBR650R Review: Locked and Loaded

I think it has to do with growing up in a non-metro city that I still have a soft spot for fully faired bikes. We grew up with mostly small-displacement bikes, amazing two-strokes at that, and anything fully faired was always an import and definitely powerful. Everyone in the town knew who had a big sportsbike and in all likelihood it was a Honda Fireblade, probably owned tenth-hand, but hey, it was a fully faired sportsbike. So when Honda launched the revised CBR650R in India, its look alone was enough for me to like the motorcycle. It looks so much like the Fireblade, and that can never be a bad thing.

Visually, there isn’t much that has changed on the BS6 CBR650R over the BS4, and the bike gets the full LED treatment all round, from the headlamps to the turn indicators and the tail-lamp. The large fuel tank, the split-seat setup and minimalist side panels all gel together to give the bike a rounded sportsbike look. The fully digital backlit instrument screen gives out basic information, and isn’t something you expect in 2021 when all instrument consoles are competing with tablet/phone screens, but it does its job. One of the bigger changes, if you can call it that, is that you get a USB charging port.

The theme of minimal changes continues with the engine, too, which is now BS6 compliant and, to the disappointment of some fans, makes less power than the BS4 model. Blame it on our quality of fuel, but Honda had to detune it, though it doesn’t take much away from the riding experience. The sweet inline-four, liquid-cooled 649cc engine which the CBR650R shares with its naked counterpart, the CB 650R, makes it the smallest fully-faired motorcycle to feature a four-cylinder engine. Married to a 6-speed gearbox, the CBR650R makes 85.8 bhp at 12,000 rpm and 5.7 kgm at 8,500 rpm which, compared to some other 650s around, is a lot more. Also take a minute to read that again — 12,000 rpm on a 650cc bike!

Honda has done a lot of tinkering on the inside, with tweaks to the ECU, the cam lobes, the intake timing, the exhaust pipe, the catalyser and the silencer, and despite all the changes weight gain is limited to only 3 kg. The engine, in true Honda inline-four fashion, is almost silent at idle, something I am not a fan of. I like sportsbikes to be a little louder than regular bikes. However, the CBR650R is ready to shatter that impression, and some ear drums, at higher revs. The motor is always ready to scream its way through the gears in the higher rev range, and it is a deep racy growl you will enjoy. There is a decent spread of power available through the range, but above 6000 rpm is where the bike is really in its element.

The CBR650R gets a 41-mm Showa Separate Function Big Piston fork and although it’s nonadjustable, it does make the bike feel more composed over bumps and under hard braking. The clutch is light and the 6-speed gearbox is smooth enough for daily riding. This may be a reflection of how unfit I am, but the riding position is where I was a little less than happy with the CBR650 R. With the bars set 30 mm lower and 30 mm forward to put more of the rider’s weight on the front wheel, the riding position isn’t as committed as it would be on a bigger sportsbike. It is far from a typical sports bike crouch, but the footpegs are 6 mm higher and 3 mm back, and with a seat height of 810 mm it does get tiring after an hour of riding. Fitter and/or younger riders may not feel this as much as I did.

Remember the gun-to-the-knife-fight analogy? Well, guns also do cost a lot more than knives, and the CBR650R’s price is in line with that idea. At ` 8.88 lakh, ex-showroom, it’s quite expensive. However, let’s not forget it’s an inline-four engine and it has almost no competition. The CBR650R is pretty much what you expect from a Honda sportsbike – well balanced, agile and engaging without a backbreaking ride. It is fast and furious enough to take on the big boys, without making it a difficult bike to live with on a daily basis. More often than not, guns win all knife fights, and the CBR650R is most definitely a winner.

MOTODATA

Honda CBR650R

POWERTRAIN

Displacement:

Max Power:

Max Torque:

Transmission:

649cc, inline-four

87 bhp@12000 rpm

5.7 kgm@8500 rpm

6-speed

CHASSIS

Type: Twin-tube type

BRAKES

F/R: 310-mm disc / 240-mm disc

TYRES

F/R: 120/70 R17 / 180/55 R17

DIMENSIONS

L/W/H(mm):

Wheelbase:

Ground Clearance:

Seat height:

Kerb Weight:

Fuel Capacity:

2128/749/1150

1449 mm

132 mm

810 mm

208 kg

15.4 litres

PRICE

Rs 8.88 lakh (ex-showroom, Delhi)

Bạn đang xem bài viết: Honda CBR650R Review: Locked and Loaded. Thông tin do Hyundai Kon Tum chọn lọc và tổng hợp cùng với các chủ đề liên quan khác.

Đánh giá post

Bài viết liên Quan

2023 Honda CBR650R Review / Specs + NEW Changes Explained!

2022 Honda CBR650R launched in India at Rs 9.35 lakh: Bookings open

2023 Honda CBR 650R: Performance, Price And Photos

Honda CBR650R HRC 2022 Màu đặc biệt, Limited Edition

Chi tiết Honda CBR650R giá 245,99 triệu đồng tại Việt Nam

Honda CBR650R 2021 ra mắt tại Nhật Bản, giá bán từ 10.220 USD

2022 Honda CBR650R Launch Price Rs 9.25 L – Two Colour Options

Sticker set compatible with per Honda CBR 650R 2019 – 2022- MXPKAD16227

Contact Me on Zalo