
Honda CB300R: an easy, light weight bike
The Hindu
Flat out performance is where the Honda CB300R punches way above its weight
At first, all that appears to have changed is the paint job, with the CB now getting two new colour schemes. A closer look shows the design of the exhaust muffler is a little different and the bike now gets a golden coloured USD fork. The LCD display also looks similar, but it now has a gear position indicator. That is helpful on this bike, because it has such short gearing that you will easily find yourself in the top three gears even in city traffic.
As before, Honda has placed the horn switch where you would normally expect to find the indicator button and this will be a non-stop source of irritation. Thankfully, the bike now gets a side stand, down engine, kill feature which was something missed on the earlier model.
The 286cc, 4 valve liquid-cooled engine architecture is the same as before, but the engine is now BS6 compliant. Power is now up by 0.6hp for a total of 31.1hp, although this is now produced at 1,500rpm higher, at 9,000rpm.
Peak torque has not changed, but the bike gets a slip-assist clutch for its 6-speed gearbox.
The little CB is an absolute blast in the city with its decently light clutch and energetic acceleration. It can also be calm and relaxed because its super short gearing means you can also lazily ride around at nice low speeds in higher gears. Fuel efficiency is pretty decent as well and our city and highway figures were quite close to each other, which is probably another effect of the short gearing.
Flat out performance is where this bike punches way above its weight. The surge from 6,000-9,000rpm is surprisingly peppy and this bike is quicker than many will expect. Top speed will be somewhere around an indicated 150kph, but the real fun is in the acceleration. The CB shot from 0-100 in under 6.6 seconds in our test, which is way quicker than any other bike that claims this kind of power.
The big secret to the Honda’s fun performance and super agile nature is its weight. At 146kg, it is 1kg lighter than before, which makes it exactly the same as a TVS Apache RTR 160 4V. To give you a sense of perspective, the latest generation KTM 250 Duke weighs well over 160kg and that is without fuel. That means this bike is nearly 30 kilos lighter and that is incredible.

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