First Ride: 2011 Honda CBR600F

The return of the renowned CBR600F or just a full-faired Hornet?

Posted: 10 March 2011
by Ben Cope

You probably know someone that has, at one stage in their biking life, owned a Honda CBR600F. First launched in 1987, it has been the bedrock of middleweight Honda sales, but, unlike the VFR or NC models, it never really got cult status. It’s never been ‘a must own’ and yet tens of thousands of us have owned one.

Now, 24 years later, the CBR600F is back but it’s got to fight harder than ever to sell as well as it has in the past.  Honda’s 600cc range runs like this: The CBF600, the CB600F Hornet, the CBR600RR and now the CBR600F has to muscle its way into that line-up.

The outright success of every CBR600F model to date has been down to the fact the bikes are easy to get on with, capable, versatile and value for money. They strike a chord with those of us who want performance, comfort and looks without looking to shave 0.3 seconds off their time to the greasy bacon sandwich stop on a Sunday morning. On the flip side, if it’s capable but boring, well, no-one wants that.
The fact is, the CBR600F sits slap-bang in the middle of the CB600F Hornet and CBR600RR in terms of performance, comfort and price.

Sat on the bike, its seat height is identical to the Hornet, but the reach to the bars not quite as far as the CBR600RR. The result is a riding position that, even just pulling away, feels more relaxed, less knees and elbows than the CBR600RR. There’s definitely a feeling of being sat ‘in’ the CBR600F and not perched on it.

The area infront of you feels spacious and not clustered. There’s plenty of room to tuck in behind the screen should you want to, but I hazard a guess that most CBR600Fs will spend the majority of their life with a tankbag strapped to the tank, carrying the essentials for that daily commute or cross-europe trip. There’s no need to tuck in on the CBR600F, the standard screen is plenty big enough. At 90mph, sat largely upright, life’s pretty good behind the bubble of air behind the screen. It’s certainly more comfortable than you would be on a CBR600RR or a naked Hornet. After a day’s riding I got off the bike, ache-free. No pain in my wrists, no tense areas between my shoulders.

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I ride a 2004 CBR600f4i (Canadian edition of the 600f with one piece seat) ... I only wish Honda Canada would bring this across the pond as when my 04 comes ready to expire, I have no idea what I'll be replacing it with.

Posted: 23/03/2011 at 05:28

As an admirer of the Honda CBR600F series who came into motorcycles too late to own one new, my fingers are frantically crossed to see this hit the states likewise. Too bad most bike manufacturers have us Americans pegged: seems like most of us these days just want gaudy showtoys and arguably aren't into riding for it's own sake. People look at me cross-eyed when I say that I really do enjoy taking my CBR250ABS on long trips and ask me if I seriously plan on bringing THAT to trackdays ('cuz why else would you own a CBR?'), but of course when the weather dips below 60 degrees (or god forbid, 50!) it seems like I'm one of the only ones still riding! Sad stuff...

Of course even if it does come here, at an estimated ~10,000 dollar pricepoint it might have some trouble duplicating the runaway success of the old CBR600Fs regardless. I would miss not having an analog Tach as well... while I'm still dreaming, right?

Posted: 13/12/2011 at 21:56

I've owned my cbr 600f for about 2 months now and love it!
I used to own a triumph Daytona 955 and was unsure how I would get on with a 600. The honda build quality is so good and the power delivery so smooth. Sure it doesn't have the same torque as the triumph but it still pulls well from lower speeds in top gear. I find I concentrate much more on having the right gear for any given situation, which is no bad thing. The bike is so sharp in the handling department too. I can't imagine how good the rr must be.
In a nut shell; smooth, beautiful, perfect power for the road, comfortable and great build quality. Oh and more than capable of the occasional track day!

Posted: 25/03/2013 at 13:41

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