The 2013 Bull City Rumble in Pictures

<Norton Commando Tank Art>

Who wants to ride this Night Train?

<at the Bull City Rumble>

a look down the street

<a yellow CB400F>

The first of a pair of great looking CB400F Hondas.

<a red CB400F Honda>

a better view of the red one

<a far out Honda bobbber>

a spaced out Honda bobber

<wild chopped Honda>

the super low riding alien Honda

<kids love vintage scooters>

kids love vintage scooters

<Kawasaki 120TR Enduro>

Vintage Kawasaki Enduro

<street legal 50cc Suzuki>

Who else remembers street legal mini-enduros like this 50cc Suzuki

2 stroke Yamaha flat tracker

Check out the radial cylinder head!

<Yamaha XS650 street tracker>

a very well done Yamaha XS650 street tracker

other side of xs650

other side of xs650

organic transit pedal electric three wheeler

organic transit pedal electric three wheeler

rare Bimota Kawasaki

rare Bimota Kawasaki

Bimota Kawasaki

a better view of this exotic motorcycle

Moto Guzzi 850T

Moto Guzzi 850T

1935 Royal Enfield

1935 Royal Enfield original but not mint

35 Royal Enfield 500

35 Royal Enfield 500

1982 National Champion Honda Superbike

1982 National Champion Honda Superbike

number 1 plate

it aint bragging if you really did it

sweet looking CR750 Honda

sweet looking CR750 Honda

Honda CR750

Got velocity stacks?

CCW Tha Heist

not in the show but too kool to ignore

 A row of British iron.

A row of British iron.

a tasty looking bathtub Triumph

a tasty looking bathtub Triumph

serious looking Norton Comando Interstate

serious looking Norton Commando Interstate

Triumph bobber

Triumph bobber

GS Suzuki

GS Suzuki

<a pic of down the street>

Henderson SuperX

Henderson Super X

super X engine

super X engine

nice red BSA

nice red BSA

Laverda Jota

Laverda Jota

<Laverda tank close up>

a bevy of Italian beauties

a bevy of Italian beauties

<bevel drive Ducati 750 Super Sport>

drool….

What a good looking engine.

What a good looking engine.

<registration tent Bull City Rumble

<randum bikes parked on the street>

1983 Honda CB1100F

1983 Honda CB1100F

ratty old Triumph

ratty old Triumph

neat old Chevy

neat old Chevy

my CB650C and a nice CB750 Super Sport

my CB650C and a nice CB750 Super Sport

<Bull City Rumble 2013>

<Bull City Rumble 2013>

<Bull City Rumble 2013>

<Bull City Rumble 2013>

The 2013 Honda CB1100!!! A Psyco Road Test & Review!

2013 Honda CB1100

2013 Honda CB1100

Today, I went for a fantastic ride on a great motorcycle! The motorcycling press has waxed semi-poetic (some get it & some don’t) about the new 2013 Honda CB1100, and when I finally saw one live & in the flesh at the Charlotte International Motorcycle Show, I captioned the picture, “finally the retro bike we’ve all been waiting for.” Well after riding it I can definitely say it is the retro looking bike that I was waiting for.

<13 CB100 florence honda>

In the Florence Honda showroom.

Yes, I have lusted over so many motorcycles over the years, but no matter what I have logged more miles on Hondas than any other brand.  I have actually owned, a CL125, XL500S, a 99 750 Nighthawk, and personally put over 100,000 miles on a 1980 CB750F. I sold the 750F after buying the Nighthawk which is the only new motorcycle I have ever owned. Oh yeah, I just remembered a few weeks ago I bought an 80 CB650 project bike that I’ll get back to work on soon.

Let me go ahead and give you my little disclaimer, this motorcycle was loaned to me for review by my former employer Rusty Davis at Florence Honda in Florence S.C. We parted company on good terms when I was ready to get out of working on motorcycles for a living, and I still consider him to be a friend and will tell anyone if you want a good deal on a Honda motorcycle, atv, or generator Florence Honda is the place to go.

Enough nostalgic fluff let’s get down to my impressions of the CB1100. First of all it is not a modernized version of the original SOHC Honda CB750, The engine bears a remarkable resemblance to the DOHC CB750/900/1100 fours of the early eighties. But it is much smoother with almost no perceptible vibration even if you touch the engine directly while it is running. The power delivery is turbine like and smooth. Yes my old 750 had a 10 & ½ grand redline instead of 8500 rpm but I didn’t miss the extra revs one bit today.

To me the styling is more like the mighty CBX especially the shape of the tank, side covers and that broad comfortable seat. Homage to the Hondas of the 60s shows up in the tank badges which would not look out of place on a CA160 Honda Benly. The four into one exhaust pipes look like the typical aftermarket headers most of us installed on the old Hondas back in the day. I wish they could have mimicked the sexy pipes found on the old CB400F. Of course the fit & finish of all components was typical Honda, that is flawless.

<cb1100 exhaust>

Two big analog gauges flank a small digital display that handles all of the idiot light functions. Now I love technology & tend to be an early adopter whenever possible but give me a good old analog tachometer that is easy to read day and night, when I’m flogging a motorcycle.

CB1100 Speedometer & Tachometer

CB1100 Speedometer & Tachometer

The best part about it is that it is not some super-sized pig of a bike. The seat height is actually lower than my old 750F was, and though this bike weighs in at over 500 pounds it felt very light & nimble at parking lot speeds. The fuel injected engine is responsive and ready to go time you hit the button.

<Motopsyco on the 2013 CB1100>

Motopsyco on the 2013 CB1100

Motopsyco on the 2013 CB1100

The chassis is a basic steel frame with a 41mm fork & pair of chrome shocks on the rear. Nice looking 18 inch wheels on both ends with conservative but competent steering geometry serve up decent handling when you want to dance a little back roads boogie. You can’t follow the latest liter bike repli-racers around a road course but for just plain fun riding at a surprisingly swift pace the big CB works very well.

After circling the parking lot a few times to get used to the surprising light steering and easy to modulate brakes, I rolled into the traffic on Palmetto Street in Florence and headed west a mile or two and turned onto Meadors Road. This two lane road has a few nice long sweeping curves at the end closest to Palmetto, but once you get past the golf course & it’s accompanying housing development it is an arrow straight 2 lane for the next few miles. The big wide bars, and the big wide easy to use mirrors made flicking through the traffic easy even when some bitch in a beater Yaris turned right across two lanes of traffic just to get in front of me. Not a problem, bleed a little speed with the predictable brakes, check my six in the mirrors, checked the right lane to make sure there was room, got back on the gas and just zoomed around her. You can’t slow a fast man down! I didn’t get to a really tight & technical twisty road with it but I can tell you with utmost confidence just from the few fast sweepers I rode that the handling is there and the ground clearance is superb.

Motopsyco on the 2013 CB1100 playing in traffic

Motopsyco on the 2013 CB1100 playing in traffic

The experience was rather sublime, sitting in a comfortable up right position, with the engine’s torque smoothly available at all times, and it just felt so right. I really hated to give this one back at the end of the ride.

<Motopsyco on the 2013 CB1100>

In the world of retro bikes there is a bit of a paradox, the tendency is to try to replicate, or in the case of some companies maintain the character (read design flaws) of an earlier time. Even Honda got into this with the old Shadow ACE deliberately unbalancing the engine so that it would shake & vibrate to mimic the archaic engine design of the other Brand H. People have forgotten that Honda more than any other company put America on two wheels and they did it with smooth reliable motorcycles that didn’t vibrate, require excessive maintenance, and were fast and powerful. People bought the original CB’s & Gold Wings because they were so smooth, perfectly functional and superior to everything else in the world at that time. This means that to make a truly retro Honda it had to be as close to perfect as possible, with no “character flaws” allowed.

<honda CB1100 review>

Back from the ride!

For the most part however I feel that this bikes biggest competition will not be from the other brand new retro bikes but from the earlier versions of itself. The old CB Hondas are still so good that even in the 21st. century, it’s hard for their devotees to imagine anything better. Trust me on this one folks; you need to ride the new CB1100, it’s that good.  A good original 83 CB1100F can fetch over five thousand dollars if you can find one at all, that makes this new CB1100 seem like a fair deal at $9999 ($10,500 w/ ABS). It has all of the things you loved about the old Hondas wrapped up into good looking thoroughly modern fuel injected package that runs even smoother than legendary Hondas of yesteryear.

UN-RESTORED 1976 Gold Wing

This is Rusty’s all original UN-RESTORED 1976 Gold Wing

I would like to thank Rusty & the crew at Florence Honda for letting me borrow this motorcycle for testing & would like to mention that Rusty is ready to retire and that Florence Honda is up for sale. If you have the scratch and are interested in purchasing a fully operational motorcycle dealership, give him a call at (843) 669 7056.

Until next time

Peace Y’all

Psyco