Everybody looks at the pipes -- marketing shots like that only encourage it -- but the tank and seat are glorious exercises in proportion and form.
Part of it is its size; there's something about tiny bikes that gets me going. It was a 408cc conversion of a particularly petite 350 for a start. But it's just so compact and tight and beautiful and complex like a tiny little wristwatch. Seeing that 1966 Honda RC181, it's got a similar sort of feel to it. You step up beside it and its miniature, the size of my bike. Low and narrow and not a millimetre wasted anywhere.
Interesting to note that the CB400F was designed by Shoichiro Irimajiri -- who, when 10 years younger, was one of the guys working on those Honda GP multis.
Ducati 916 hands down winer of the best looking modern sports bike ever
hmmm I will put this on price scale
SRX6
GSX750 Pop-up Katana
Bimota VDue
Anything HARRIS based
Lazareth VMax
Suzuki BKing Supercharge HUD Prototype
Reactor Online. Sensors Online. Weapons Online. All Systems Nominal.
what I want to finnish up with should look lke this
To be old and wise, first you must be young and stupid.
Now this is what I do not get - why are the big 4 not putting out 4 cylinder bobbed/drag style bikes like that in the USA - surely they would sell well. There appears to be an obsession with the dang gutless big bore V twin thing.
Also I am surprised none of them have come out with a say 2000cc inline four (or 6) drag styled bike for the US market. Man would that haul arse!
I suppose there is the B-King - but thats well - big and fat and fuggly. I'm thinking lean, long and mean.
Very nice
My pick would be this highly modified 78/79 Suzuki GS1000
http://i251.photobucket.com/albums/g...e46/img001.jpg
Political correctness: a doctrine which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd from the clean end.
Can't believe no one has put one of these up!![]()
916
Speed Triple
Duc Hypermotard
MV
I'm so confused.
Still like an F4 but would have to be simply the basic red and silver. Not a blinged out one.
I had a blue one like the picture. The attention to detail on it was amazing. Under the seat was a handbook and tool kit in a liitle 'made to fit' tool tray that rested on the frame rails. Not just an afterthought like other bikes of the time.
It was also great to ride and had a character to it missing from modern Hondas.
Modern Honda designers should be regularly beaten with parts from a 400/4 to remind them of what they have lost.
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