Honda CBR series
The Honda CBR models are a series of Honda sport bikes introduced in 1983.[1] They were among the earliest all-enclosed motorcycles.[2] With the exception of the single-cylinder CBR125R, CBR150R, CBR250R, and CBR300R, all CBR motorcycles have inline engines.
Single-cylinder
- CBR125R (2004–2016)
- CBR150R (2002–present)
- CBR250R (2011–2013, international; 2011–2021, Japan/Malaysia; 2011–2020)
- CBR300R (2015–2023)
Inline-twin
- CBR250RR (2017–present, Indonesia/Japan/Hong Kong/Macau/Thailand/Malaysia only)
- CBR450SR Aero Sport (1989–1994, Brazil only)
- CBR400R (2013–present, Japan/Singapore only)
- CBR500R (2013–present)
Inline-four
- CBR250F (1986)
- CBR250R Hurricane (1987-1989)
- CBR250RR Fireblade (1990-2000)
- CBR400F
- CBR400R Aero
- CBR400RR "Babyblade"
- CBR500F (1986–1993)
- CBR500R Four (2025–present)
- CBR600F Hurricane/600F2/600F3/600F4/600F4i (1987–2006)
- CBR600F (2011–2013)
- CBR600RR (2003–present)
- CBR650F/CBR650R (2014–present)
- CBR750 Super Aero (1987–1988)
- CBR900RR Fireblade (893 cc: 1992–1995; 919 cc: 1996–1999)
- CBR929RR Fireblade (2000–2001)
- CBR954RR Fireblade (2002–2003)
- CBR1000RR Fireblade (2004–2019)
- CBR1000RR-R Fireblade (2020–present)
- CBR1000F Hurricane (1987–1999)
- CBR1100XX Super Blackbird (1996–2007)
See also
References
- ^ "HONDA CBR". autoevolution. Retrieved March 3, 2026.
- ^ Vandenheuvel, Cornelius (1997). Pictorial History of Japanese Motorcycles. Osceola, Wisconsin: Motorbooks International Publishers. p. 134. ISBN 0760304106.
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