Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 26 July 1

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

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/339119

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FEATURE VISITING CFMOTO'S FACTORY P84 one piston up/one down), chain cam-drive and a gear-driven counter-balancer to smooth out the vibes, represents the arrival of China's long-awaited debut middleweight motorcycle models - the first 'real' bikes to emanate from the world's largest motor- cycle market that is the People's Republic. As such, it's a first rung on the climb up the engine displace- ment ladder that's certain to fuel an increasingly irresistible attack on Western markets by Chinese manufacturers. There's no deny- ing that this is a pretty direct rip- off of a Kawasaki ER6n, design- wise, but the 650NK was the first customer motorcycle to come out of China with an engine larg- er than 250cc and, after visiting the modern, well-equipped CF- Moto factory in Hangzhou, 105 miles southwest of Shanghai, it's hard not to be convinced that this company is indeed a game changer. Back To The Future What we have here is history re- peating itself. Back in the early 1960s Japanese bikes were scorned as being cheap, cheer- ful, and not particularly desir- able small capacity 50cc-175cc runabouts. But Soichiro Honda changed all that, firstly with his drive to raise quality standards and reliability that his Japanese rivals had to match, then by ramping up the cubic capacity of his company's offerings to export customers. Thus in 1965 Honda's – and Japan's – first middleweight sportbike hit the showrooms, the CB450 'Black Bomber' parallel twin. That was followed four years later by what's generally recog- nized as the most significant mo- torcycle ever produced by any manufacturer – the four-cylinder overhead-cam disc-braked Hon- da CB750 – and the bike world would never be the same again. While CFMoto's range of mid- dleweights is by no means as much of a landmark as the first Honda four, it is for sure the mod- ern Chinese equivalent of the CB450, the first product from a Japanese manufacturer to dem- onstrate convincingly to Western customers that a Japanese bike could be fun as well as functional, sporty in addition to affordable. And the price is indeed the punchline, for in Australia for example the 650NK costs just 6000 Australian Dollars ($5650) (Left) Lots of green to make lots of green. (Above) CFMoto's naked version of its 650cc twin.

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