The CB1100 Community Forum
Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - Printable Version

+- The CB1100 Community Forum (https://cb1100forum.net/forum)
+-- Forum: Honda CB1100 Discussions (https://cb1100forum.net/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=5)
+--- Forum: Accessories/Modifications (https://cb1100forum.net/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=8)
+--- Thread: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust (/showthread.php?tid=8608)

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - Cormanus - 02-07-2019

Only way to have them, PB! Big Grin


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - Desert viper_imp - 02-07-2019

Your bike looks great Peter! Don’t know about the lens GoldOxide


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - Frulk_imp - 02-07-2019

I’ve always thought that the motor in Peters bike was the best looking one. Some black and some chrome to offset it vs. the all silver motor. That CB looks like you could ride it in comfort for long days in the saddle. What racks are those?


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - peterbaron - 02-07-2019

(02-07-2019, 09:51 AM)Frulk_imp Wrote: I’ve always thought that the motor in Peters bike was the best looking one. Some black and some chrome to offset it vs. the all silver motor. That CB looks like you could ride it in comfort for long days in the saddle. What racks are those?

Blush, rear rack is OEM accessories + Givi, side racks and panniers are SW Motech


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - GoldOxide_imp - 02-07-2019

(02-07-2019, 07:37 AM)Desert viper_imp Wrote: Your bike looks great Peter! Don’t know about the lens GoldOxide

Dee Vee - the headers looked black to me, like anodized. Wasn't sure.

- - -

Anyway, fully toned done all dark I find pretty hard to get right. But once there, it won't change unless you want it to.


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - peterbaron - 02-07-2019

(02-07-2019, 11:54 AM)GoldOxide_imp Wrote:
(02-07-2019, 07:37 AM)Desert viper_imp Wrote: Your bike looks great Peter! Don’t know about the lens GoldOxide

Dee Vee - the headers looked black to me, like anodized. Wasn't sure.

- - -

Anyway, fully toned done all dark I find pretty hard to get right. But once there, it won't change unless you want it to.

Dee Vee - the headers looked black to me, like anodized. Wasn't sure.

- - -

Anyway, fully toned done all dark I find pretty hard to get right. But once there, it won't change unless you want it to.
All pics look bit dark, therefore brown headers became black...unless GO forgot to remove his sunglasses Tongue


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - Bazbro_imp - 03-02-2019

I'm having to disagree regarding the look of the Moriwaki and Pipemaster silencers (sorry Cormanus!).
I think Honda got the look absolutely correct with the original CB750 silencers - shaped to 'cling' to the 'bike, the lower one tucked in and under nicely and with the neat protector plate on the outside. They looked just perfect.
I'm afraid that the Moriwaki and Pipemaster ones look just like I would have to make them, without the requisite metalworking skills to 'shape' the silencers. Just bolting four straight megaphones is not, for me, aesthetically right.
The Wyvern seems to be the best compromise between the Honda CB750 original, but in an affordable package.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder and cost is a big consideration too, but my preferences are 1. Wyvern, 2. Pipemaster and 3. Moriwaki


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - Cormanus - 03-02-2019

You maybe surprised, Bazbro, but I agree with you. I’ve always thought it a great pity that the 2010 CB1100 did not have a 4 into 4 system nodding to the original CB750. The Wyvern is as near as it gets, but there’s something visually not quite right about it. I’m not sure what it is.


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - Bazbro_imp - 03-02-2019

Ha! And I agree with you too, Cormanus! They're still not quite right!

The big pity is that Honda themselves have not done an "official" 50th Anniversary Edition of the CB1100, along the lines of the K17 Wyvern kit.

And I still think the lines of the CB1100 are far too anodyne and uninspiring. Too gentle and unadventurous - almost like a plastic toy. Don't get me wrong - the CB1100 is an attractive 'bike, but it should be and could be, so much MORE than it is.

But, as ever, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. I'm standing by to be shot to pieces! Smile


RE: Honda CB1100 with Pipemasters 4 into 4 Polished Stainless SteelExhaust - baxtercat_imp - 03-03-2019

Baz, no shooting from me, but I think your observations raise interesting questions about the bike's esthetics. Seems to me there are at least two main factors to this: 1. what Honda's designers were attempting to do, and how well they accomplished it and 2. where our ideas of "right" come from. Most of us of a certain age I think had certain elements of the older bikes, and CBs specifically, "imprinted" onto our brains at an early age, such that our youthful bike lust combined with the look of the object of our lust to leave us with a permanent sense of "that's what a bike should look like." I was imprinted with the K look, people younger than me with the F or 80s or 90s designs. This is not to say that we can't appreciate older or newer designs, just that a certain look becomes a yardstick of evaluation for us. If you care about looks.

What about Honda and the CB11? Clearly they could have produced a more authentically retro bike, even something like a reproduction bike, if they chose to and they thought there was a market for it. The CB4 prototype came much closer in its details: solid rotors, gaitors, the breadloaf seat, matching paint on headlight shell and fork ears, the rounded tank, fender stays, 4 into 4 and even the header clamps with cooling fins all contribute to a more late 60s feel. Leaving these things off the CB11 and including other styling cues contributes to the more generalized, less period specific CB look we got. There are other, more historically ambiguous cues, like black paint on some of the engines or the filler cap or cast vs spoked wheels, and then outright gestures towards the contemporary, like the brushed aluminum chain guard or side covers or LCD display. The fact that each newer version of the CB11 plays around with adding and subtracting cues (tank shape, what parts are chrome, reservoir shocks etc) suggests the designers are not just freshening things up, but still seeking a new balance between retro and not-too-specific retro/contemporary, with perhaps different generational buyers being emphasized with the different iterations (and, more starkly, the decision to make an EX and RS version or all black version). Triumph and Kawasaki and anyone else making a "retro" bike is playing the same game, and it's interesting to see which details and combination of details each believes will deliver for their intended audience. But you are right to note that it is very fine details, like the precise bend of the original 4 into 4 or the finish of an aluminum engine case, that makes all the difference to a buyer of a certain age.