02-11-2014, 03:23 AM
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Design Disadvantages of the CB1100
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02-11-2014, 03:33 AM
Scarlett Johannson's design flaws include a slight bump in her nose, and she's an inch or two too short. But I hear the 2014 Deluxe model includes some major upgrades.
02-11-2014, 04:12 AM
(02-10-2014, 05:50 PM)Guth_imp Wrote:(02-10-2014, 01:04 PM)calamarichris_imp Wrote: Everything designed by the hand of man has its advantages and disadvantages. As PeeWee Herman says, "Everyone I know in life has a big but(t)...": Hmm... thanks Guth. I'm looking for the balance, symmetry, quietness, and smoothness of an I-4; also conservative engineering (therefore I don't mind extra weight), a long service life. I like the simplicity of air-cooling, because all the additional plumbing, gaskets, & O-rings wear out more quickly than aluminum cooling fins do. And when those little gaskets start leaking, sometimes they can damage other components. Your Hawk was as great a bike as my Superhawk was a POS. And it's not the number of bikes that makes for a wealth of experience. I know guys who buy a new bike every 18 months who still don't know the first thing about maintaining (heh--or riding) a bike well. I disagree about the Harley owners and crotch-rocketeers: I've met a few Harley guys (bikes always seem to be at home) who absolutely believe that Harleys are the best, fastest, only real bikes on the planet. (Nevermind that my little EX500 twin will walk away from every Harley but the V-rod.) And most of the sport-squids with whom I've ridden/spoken are under the mistaken impression that all their bikes will last at least 100,000 miles--it certainly helps their own resale value to believe that myth, because I seldom see one with 50K miles. Strange to me that you prefer a louder exhaust. I love a quiet bike. I used to get frustrated with everyone getting the loudest aftermarket exhaust possible, thinking they were "creating a bad name for motorcyclists", but that was a dumb thing to think. I've decided it's entirely to my benefit: I didn't spend a penny, and now I have a garage full of stealth bikes. It's true! I regularly travel at ~15 over the speed limit, and I never get tickets. LEO’s have become so utterly conditioned to equate speed with noise that I regularly ride past speed traps at illegal speeds, and the cops just nod at me. It’s as if all the other gazelles have voluntarily donned belled collars to let the lion know that dinner is on the way. My first bike was a '93 Harley Sportster. I rode it all over Colorado, all over California, and even out to Key West once. I put 70,000+ miles on it in less than 3 years, but it was stolen. I cracked the rear cylinder at about 50K, and it wept a little bit of oil, but that bike got 50mpg no matter how easy or hard I rode it. Fun little bike, until I rode a Japbike and got addicted to the power & efficiency. Peace & safe riding.
02-11-2014, 05:38 AM
(02-10-2014, 10:06 PM)The ferret_imp Wrote: Color me pessimistic, but I don't see you (Chris) being happy with a CB 1100 . Just a feeling. You come in being an acknowledged " card carrying Honda Hater" (see I did read every word of your valve adjustment procedure). You say you want to trade in an EX500 which is rather a milquetoast motorcycle ( but maybe a perfectly fine motorcycle, dont know, never ridden one) but you keep comparing the CB to your "mighty ZX9R " .You’re not pessimistic, Ferret, and you may be right. I no longer consider myself a Honda-hater (I created that valve adjustment guide nearly 10 years ago), but before my Superhawk experience (and being told by the Honda technician: “I’m surprised you got this many miles out of it! I’ve never seen a bike with that much.”) I always considered Honda’s reliability unimpeachable. You get an A+ for attention to detail and recall—I didn’t even remember mentioning that. Now I’m more of a bitter old grouch than a hater of one specific brand. When I was young, old guys would always badmouth the new bikes and talk about how their old Bonnevilles, BSAs, and Nortons were so much better, looks like I've finally become one of them. It’s not the technical advancement or high performance I’m looking for (god knows technical advancement has taken us backward into problems like electroplated cylinders.) It’s the efficiency and the longevity I’m after, but these things appear less a priority among the manufacturers than . Sorry if my boasts about my 9R threw a red-herring into the mix. I ride like an old man usually, and I’m not looking for another 9R, nor did I come here to badmouth the CB. I honestly assumed the CB would have the perfect balance of an I4—the advantages of a vertical twin, AND of the parallel twin. IMO, anything more than 100hp on two wheels is overkill. I bought that 9R when I was much younger, but now I can't bring myself to part with it. Thanks for the suggestions, but V-twins aren’t efficient enough for me, (and they’re too mechanically noisy, which is why I suspect most of them have aftermarket exhausts—loud pipes drown out the noise between your legs), and the Versis/650R are both vertical twins—basically just the latest version of my EX500, except that they commit the sin of electroplating cylinders in the top-half of the crankcase. For brevity’s sake, from now on, I’m just going to refer to these as disposabikes. The CBR1000 & Blackbird are both disposabikes. I don't mind milquetoast. Golly-heck, I like milquetoast, which is one of the reasons I was drawn to the CB. (02-10-2014, 10:58 PM)Dakota_imp Wrote: I thought that this would be an interesting thread titled "design..." yet there is not one bit of discussion on the actual bike engineering design. Three pages of nothing but meandering anecdotal blah blah blah. Thanks for the contribution. ![]() (02-10-2014, 11:32 PM)The Spaceman_imp Wrote: Here's my list of design failings of the CB: I4's are the most efficient engine design on a motorcycle period. I defy anyone to tell me of a more efficient platform. My hopes are flickering that this is just some journlistic poetic license, and a misprint in the service manual. I know you're just being silly, but you're also wrong on chains. Chains're the most efficient final drive for a motorcycle. Shafts & belts do have their advantages, but efficiency isn't one of them. I have a belt-driven bicycle, and even when it's adjusted perfectly and broken in, that belt is a serious power drain compared with a well-adjusted/lubricated chain.
02-11-2014, 06:14 AM
Chris, How did you find out about Sintered Cylinder sleeves on the CB1100? The only other person that mentioned sintered sleeves on the CB is the late Kevin Ash. The combustion chamber design on the cb1100 is a pentroof design which is a step forward. Also, the casting on the outside cylinder head has passage ways to make sure all cylinders are cooled down.
I always thought if the engine is aircooled the block would be a closed deck design but the CB1100 is an open deck, there must be a reason behind this. I really like the simplicity of this aircooled engine. I just installed Samco Hoses on my street triple R with 50K miles and it was a cuss to get to most of the hoses.... I bought the bike because it spoke to me and I didnt even bother to go into detail on how this bike was made... Just total attraction. The only down side to me personally is the speed govern.
02-11-2014, 06:14 AM
(02-11-2014, 02:15 AM)DAC_imp Wrote: The only disadvantages for an I4 that I know of came from reading Kevin Cameron (Cycle World.) He puts some people to sleep but he did one article comparing I4s to V4s, mainly in racing applications, and since I own a V4 Interceptor I was able to stay awake for that one. Thanks for that. I'm big Cameron (and Gordon Jennings) fan. I'd read that Cameron article a long time ago. Your "gross oversimplifications" are helpful, however, I disagree with the V4's central-location as an advantage. One of the reasons V's never really dominated the way I's did is the rearward weight bias. They couldn't get the engine far enough forward and even Honda wasn't able to keep it competitive against the I's. The only downside to Cameron's articles is they are more focused on racing. Racing frequently enhances design efficiency, but not always. For example, fuel economy is not a high priority among racers.
02-11-2014, 06:22 AM
Strange that Honda has been dominating Motogp with a V4 to everyone's surprise.
02-11-2014, 06:30 AM
I haven't kept up, but that's news to me. I was referring to 10-15 years ago, before all the F1-level computerized traction control started creeping into GP. Honda's the biggest wallet on the block, so they could probably dominate with a diesel engine in the current climate. But back before the computers, when the shape of the metal was the primary maker-or-breaker, those V4's were not dominating, even with Honda's money.
02-11-2014, 06:43 AM
(02-11-2014, 06:22 AM)redbirds_imp Wrote: Strange that Honda has been dominating Motogp with a V4 to everyone's surprise. Actually, I think the current Honda MotoGP engine is a V5. The Interceptor came out in '83 just after the Magna was introduced in '82. I drooled over both but was a college kid with just enough cash for tuition and an occasional pitcher of beer. (Okay, maybe more than occasional.) I made due with borrowing my buddies GS750e and my future brother-in-law's '82 750SC Nighthawk. I still have a soft spot for that GS - tight and nimble and could rev to the moon - the Nighthawk felt a little heavy and rubbery by comparison. Anyway, Honda was reportedly surprised by the market response to both those early V4 production bikes. They were trying to homologate the engine and bike for racing purposes and only wanted to to sell enough to get that done. The Interceptor went on to win Superbike for three or four years, I think, in the eighties. And they had to juice the production numbers of the street bikes to meet demand.
02-11-2014, 06:49 AM
The only design flaw is that the bike didn't come with a personal assistant to handle my daily chores, thus giving me a lot more time to ride it.
There are quite a few old dogs on this forum and I'm one of them, so if I trot out all my riding experience I won't be alone. Suffice to say this damned Honda is the most fun, cool, rideable, useable bike in my garage and truth be told I'd probably pick it as the ONE bike, if I had to. I've had the V-4 Hondas, the BMW boxers, the Harley sportsters and Big Twins, and quite a few singles. The I4 is of course (Spaceman's sarcasm aside) the most efficient engine design for a motorcycle. The CB1100's I4 is just superb. The powerband is flat as Kansas and it's pretty damn quick, too. I've riding the cuss out of this bike the last week and can't find anything wrong with it, other than, for real, the rear suspension. The shocks need to be better. They're not bad at all for a rider of my weight (150), solo, for freeway, around town, and moderate scratching. But get up to over 50-60 mph whilst cranked way into a bumpy corner, you will be wanting to do something about them. The easy fix is just slow down a bit in such turns. Other than that one complaint, I can't find a single thing that I consider a flaw. See my new thread: "What's Great About the CB1100?" |
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