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In contrast to the Honda Rebel 250, which offers very similar specification, the Nighthawk is considered to be an urban street-use bike, standard street motorcycle. The bike's lineage can be traced back to the Honda CM180/200 Twinstar of the late 1970s to early 1980s, it has the same bottom end and bore at 53mm with an increased stroke of 53mm ...
Honda CB350F Honda CB50R 2004. The CB Series is an extensive line of Honda motorcycles. Most CB models are road-going motorcycles for commuting and cruising. The smaller CB models are also popular for vintage motorcycle racing. [1] The related Honda CBR series are sport bikes.
Honda has made several different motorcycle designs with the designation CB250, beginning with the Honda Dream CB250 in 1968. Other Honda CB250 models include: Honda CB250 (1968–73) Honda CB250 G5 (1974–1976) Honda CB250T Dream (1977–1978) Honda CB250N Super Dream (1979–1981) Honda CB250RS (1980–1984) Honda CB250 Nighthawk (1982 ...
The Honda Nighthawk is the US model designation for some of Honda's CB series of motorcycles. This class includes: CB250; CB450SC; CB550SC; CB650SC; CB700SC; CB750 ...
Honda CB250 Nighthawk The Honda CMX250 , or Rebel 250 or Honda Peronist , is a 234 cc (14.3 cu in) cruiser -style motorcycle made by Honda on and off since 1985. It uses the same 234 cc (14.3 cu in) straight-twin engine as the Honda Nighthawk 250 standard .
The Honda CB250N and CB400N Super Dream are motorcycles manufactured by the Honda Motor Company from 1978 to 1986. The successor to the short lived Dream model, it had a series of revisions including a six-speed transmission and what Honda termed as European styling [6] which resembled the CB750F and CB900F. It was a popular model for Honda ...
The model was the successor to the ageing twin cylinder CB360 [5] [6] and the highly regarded, [7] but expensive for the 400 cc class, [8] four-cylinder CB400F.The CB400T has two fewer cylinders than its CB400F predecessor and although the press was initially skeptical of it, [7] [9] reviews stated that it was a worthwhile successor and more than capable of competing with contemporary rivals. [10]
The Honda Dream CB250 was a standard motorcycle made by Honda in 1968 and 1969 and sold only in Japan. It had a 249 cc (15.2 cu in) air-cooled, parallel twin, SOHC, four-stroke with a claimed 30 horsepower (22 kW) at 10,500 rpm. [2] It was Honda's first 250 cc capacity motorcycle with vertical cylinders, and a 5-speed transmission. [3]