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Jeff, Performance is power to weight ratio. The CB will get you up and going 0 to 60 faster than your R3 and with a few modifications ( pipe and flash) the bike will be within a few tenths in the 1/4 mile The CB is a nice bike, if you're looking for throttle ripping performance you have the wrong bike
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(08-07-2015, 11:57 AM)4 Paws_imp Wrote: Never be in the sport bike class.
There is a reason it's lovingly called a "geezer glide".
White Dog - I live close to that drag strip, quite familiar with some of the characters who have run There over the decades.
Thompson was probably the most well known back in the 60's when I was running there. I also remember Ernie "The Farmer" Beswick from the north who came down. dumped his oil on the return to the pits after each run--just let it run out on the dirt as he was being towed back to the pits. Alan Starr, the owner at that time, did not like that. Ronnie Sox was the local hero at Piedmont. Darrell Kersey had a mean 55 Chevy with 6-2's. I particularly liked "The Wicked 6" but could never find out what engine he had but speculation it was a modified GMC truck engine. He could do that as he ran in Gas Class. There were many other "visitors" but their names escape me. Dang that was 50 years ago!
(08-07-2015, 11:57 AM)4 Paws_imp Wrote: Never be in the sport bike class.
There is a reason it's lovingly called a "geezer glide".
White Dog - I live close to that drag strip, quite familiar with some of the characters who have run There over the decades.
"Sport bike" same thing as "Crotch Rocket?"
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If speed is your priority keep the Rocket III or look elsewhere, the CB won't do it for you. There are plenty of comfy bikes that have much more power than the CB. Rider magazine voted the Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT as their 2015 Motorcycle of the Year. I thought seriously about getting a Ninja 1000 before my CB1100, and as much as I like it, twisting the throttle on it doesn't thrill me as much as my '08 Concours 14, which has around 138 hp at the rear wheel.
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The CB is a beautiful, well- designed machine and a fine backroad 'momentum' bike once up to speed, but is never going to be an outright performance bike. It would cost $5000 or more to make it even close to what you are looking for. IMHO, buy the CB for what it is, enjoy it, and buy a 10 year old Fireblade/ CBR 1000 for $5000 for hooning, and you'll be done.
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It's fast enough for me. If I remember right my original CB750 had 56 hp...my dream Z900 was in the 80's....so it does just what I want it to do....doesn't pull your arms off, but fast enough.
I test rode a CB1000R before I bought it....it definitely didn't fit my "senior" body type and I couldn't imagine when and where I would need that much power. I'm past riding wheelies and doing burn outs ;-)
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(08-08-2015, 01:36 AM)offroadfx4_imp Wrote: It's fast enough for me. If I remember right my original CB750 had 56 hp...my dream Z900 was in the 80's....so it does just what I want it to do....doesn't pull your arms off, but fast enough.
I test rode a CB1000R before I bought it....it definitely didn't fit my "senior" body type and I couldn't imagine when and where I would need that much power. I'm past riding wheelies and doing burn outs ;-)
If I only still had my 1970 442.....sigh.
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The CB1100 doesn't pull your arms off, but with intake/exhaust mods I certainly have to hang on. I'd say acceleration is on par with my old Suzuki GS650F. So the CB1100 is not a true sports bike but pretty exciting nevertheless.
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(08-08-2015, 01:36 AM)offroadfx4_imp Wrote: It's fast enough for me. If I remember right my original CB750 had 56 hp...my dream Z900 was in the 80's....so it does just what I want it to do....doesn't pull your arms off, but fast enough.
I test rode a CB1000R before I bought it....it definitely didn't fit my "senior" body type and I couldn't imagine when and where I would need that much power. I'm past riding wheelies and doing burn outs ;-)
Having been there and done that, I know that on the street, nobody but a show off with a little willy complex needs it. Chasing horsepower is a fools errand. As laughable as watching folks drive their Ferrari, Lamborghini, etc. around in Houston traffic. Total waste of unnecessary performance.
Now, if you are into track days, that is a different story...
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Thanks a lot guys, the bullet bike thing just isn't for me. I'm old enough to not want to wear a "straight-billed" hat over my ears, and have gauged earings, however; I just sort of assumed this may be a "wolf in sheeps clothing" sorta bike, as older inline 4 cruisers used to seam fast, and maybe they really weren't, and I just haven't realized 20+ years have passed since then.
But at the end of the day, I really would love a machine that looks identacle to this, but would be able to stretch my arms out like a spaghetti noodle. Thanks again for possibly saving me from getting a bike that just wasn't quite what I was looking for, I still want to take a spin on one if givin the opportunity though, just to see for myself.
(08-08-2015, 04:10 AM)DGShannon_imp Wrote: (08-08-2015, 01:36 AM)offroadfx4_imp Wrote: It's fast enough for me. If I remember right my original CB750 had 56 hp...my dream Z900 was in the 80's....so it does just what I want it to do....doesn't pull your arms off, but fast enough.
I test rode a CB1000R before I bought it....it definitely didn't fit my "senior" body type and I couldn't imagine when and where I would need that much power. I'm past riding wheelies and doing burn outs ;-)
Having been there and done that, I know that on the street, nobody but a show off with a little willy complex needs it. Chasing horsepower is a fools errand. As laughable as watching folks drive their Ferrari, Lamborghini, etc. around in Houston traffic. Total waste of unnecessary performance.
Now, if you are into track days, that is a different story... 
Having been there and done that, I know that on the street, nobody but a show off with a little willy complex needs it. Chasing horsepower is a fools errand. As laughable as watching folks drive their Ferrari, Lamborghini, etc. around in Houston traffic. Total waste of unnecessary performance.
Now, if you are into track days, that is a different story...  I'm into straight-line accelerion, and drag strips for sure, "my playground" for both motorcycles and cars.
I actually really love my rocket3, but it has a messed up 2nd gear, and will cost over 3K to fix, which led me to the dealer that had one of these CB's. Although I'd never consider my rocket3 with full exhaust, better flowing air inlet, and reflashed ecu "slow" I would absolutely love to do this to it http://carpenterracing.com/sbp_TRIII.htm, but the cost of that and fixing the trans could buy me a brand new rocket, soooooo..
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(08-08-2015, 05:21 AM)jeffskar_imp Wrote: Thanks a lot guys, the bullet bike thing just isn't for me. I'm old enough to not want to wear a "straight-billed" hat over my ears, and have gauged earings, however; I just sort of assumed this may be a "wolf in sheeps clothing" sorta bike, as older inline 4 cruisers used to seam fast, and maybe they really weren't, and I just haven't realized 20+ years have passed since then.
But at the end of the day, I really would love a machine that looks identacle to this, but would be able to stretch my arms out like a spaghetti noodle. Thanks again for possibly saving me from getting a bike that just wasn't quite what I was looking for, I still want to take a spin on one if givin the opportunity though, just to see for myself.
(08-08-2015, 04:10 AM)DGShannon_imp Wrote: (08-08-2015, 01:36 AM)offroadfx4_imp Wrote: It's fast enough for me. If I remember right my original CB750 had 56 hp...my dream Z900 was in the 80's....so it does just what I want it to do....doesn't pull your arms off, but fast enough.
I test rode a CB1000R before I bought it....it definitely didn't fit my "senior" body type and I couldn't imagine when and where I would need that much power. I'm past riding wheelies and doing burn outs ;-)
Having been there and done that, I know that on the street, nobody but a show off with a little willy complex needs it. Chasing horsepower is a fools errand. As laughable as watching folks drive their Ferrari, Lamborghini, etc. around in Houston traffic. Total waste of unnecessary performance.
Now, if you are into track days, that is a different story... 
Having been there and done that, I know that on the street, nobody but a show off with a little willy complex needs it. Chasing horsepower is a fools errand. As laughable as watching folks drive their Ferrari, Lamborghini, etc. around in Houston traffic. Total waste of unnecessary performance.
Now, if you are into track days, that is a different story... I'm into straight-line accelerion, and drag strips for sure, "my playground" for both motorcycles and cars.
I actually really love my rocket3, but it has a messed up 2nd gear, and will cost over 3K to fix, which led me to the dealer that had one of these CB's. Although I'd never consider my rocket3 with full exhaust, better flowing air inlet, and reflashed ecu "slow" I would absolutely love to do this to it http://carpenterracing.com/sbp_TRIII.htm, but the cost of that and fixing the trans could buy me a brand new rocket, soooooo..
I think that's a good idea. The engine is de-tuned by design. Rather than shooting for peak hp numbers, Honda decided to configure the intake and cams to deliver power lower in the rpm ranges, where most people ride. The CB11 has an impressive amount of grunt at the low end. You'd definitely have to ride one to appreciate it.
Additionally, it has a 112 mph speed limiter built into the ECU, so in stock form a whole lot more power at the top end wouldn't really be usable. It actually bounces off the limiter on a 1/4 mile run. (the speed limiter can be removed with a reflash of the ECU).
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