Cycle News

Cycle News Issue 42 October 23

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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2019 HONDA MONKEY BIKE FIRST IMPRESSION P102 Monkey Evolution The original Monkey Bike in the 1961 Z100. O K—so how did we get here? Although the Monkey Bike is all-new for 2019, the bike itself can trace its birth back 1961 and the Tama Tech amusement park in Tokyo that ran from 1961 through to 2009. This was a Honda-owned site, so it gave the designers of Honda's latest little people mover—the 49cc Z100—a perfect place to call home. The idea behind the Z100 was to introduce motorcycle riding to a whole new range of people and remember, Honda was only 13 years old at the time, so they could afford to be a little experimental. The Z100 was an absolute smash hit, earning the nickname Monkey Bike simply due to the shape rid- ers cut while riding it. Such was the success that for 1964, we got the first production version in the CZ100 for Europe and Asia—but not the U.S. We had to wait until 1968, when the bike that start- ed a generation of humans on a lifelong two-wheeled track arrived in the Z50A. Essentially a shrunk dirt bike with front and rear lights, the Z50A had eight- inch wheels wrapped in knobby tires, an adjustable seat, and styling that stole the hearts of a generation. You could even fold the handlebars down and put the Z50A in the trunk to drive to your fav riding spot. Over the years, the American Z50A evolved more and more into a junior off-road bike than a bike adults could act like kids on. Eu- rope, meanwhile, got the Z50J, a bike more designed for quick trips around town than hitting the trails. In 1987, we got what was essentially the Grom of its day with styling ripped from Honda's road range, and in 1991 we even got a Monkey Bike Baja that looked like Honda's Baja 1000 racers with two massive headlights. American Honda's last official Monkey Bike was im- ported in 1998 in the ZB50, although the name "Honda Monkey Bike" has been continually used on 50cc bikes for the Japanese domestic market. The 1978 Monkey Bike is the closest in terms of overall aesthetic to what we have in 2019. A Baja Monkey? Hell yeah! That's what we got in 1991, and you can be sure there's probably some crazy custom bike builder out there already creating one out of the 2019 version.

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