The first Valkyrie used a simple formula well-known to American hot-rod
builders: take the frame and motor of a big, heavy car and chop away
everything you don’t need. That first iteration was built right here in
the USA from 1996-2003 and still has legions of fans. It used the
flat-six, liquid-cooled 1520cc motor and five-speed gearbox from the old
GL1500 Gold Wing (1988-2000), but with a different tube-steel chassis.
It weighed in at 682 pounds dry—much lighter than its touring brother.
Owner forums for the Valk are still active (hot topic: using a car tire
on the rear wheel), and one thing is clear: these folks love their
bikes. They handle well (for something so heavy), are comfortable,
reliable, smooth, fast and have a heck of a presence—for a while, it was
the biggest, baddest cruiser you could buy. “Surely, with this
motorcycle,” speculated Motorcycle.com’s Andy Saunders in 1997, “Honda
has reached the limit of cruiser size.” How quaint.
If anything, the new Valk is a Rune for the masses, as it uses much
the same formula, albeit for a broader audience. The frame, swingarm and
powerplant are all from the GL1800, but with lighter, more minimal
bodywork. A low 28.8-inch seat and blacked-out one-inch cruiser bars
scream “cruiser,” but an 45mm cartridge fork, twin-spar aluminum frame,
radial tires (130/60-19 in front, 180/55-17 in back), single-sided
Pro-Arm with linkage rear suspension and 310mm discs with four-piston
Nissin calipers (that look like what Honda used on its sportbikes from
the late ’90s to the mid 2000s) all scream out “sportbike.” After all,
the GL1800′s Large Project Leader, Masanori Aoki, came from the
sportbike side of Honda, developing bikes like the NSR250R and CBR600F3.
All that development nets a bike that weighs in at 750 pounds—154
pounds lighter than the GL1800. Heavier than the original Valk, perhaps,
but it does have a lot more power—the GL1800 makes over 100 ft-lbs of
torque at the wheel, and the number stays above 90 from 1500 to 5000
rpm—and a six-gallon tank, bigger than the ‘Wing’s.
Other features include removable passenger seat with grab rail,
included solo cover, black-out treatment on the frame and engine, LED
lighting (everywhere, including the headlight), a multi-function LCD
instrument cluster and those big shrouds covering the side-mounted
radiators (which duct heat away from the rider). The styling could be
controversial, but it is growing on me, and I actually really like that
big front wheel.
Pricing is not yet set, but Honda says it will be in the range of
$17,000, undercutting the F6B. It should be available in US dealers next
spring. I’m also really looking forward to riding one, but maybe not as
much as the many Valkyrie fans—Christmas may have come early for them.
Honda killed the old girl in 2004, but that year a limited-edition
custom called the Rune arrived—you may remember it. At $27,000, it was
kind of a legacy bike, a made-to-order custom designed more to showcase
the brand than to dominate the heavyweight cruiser market. Still, it was
good-handling and luxurious-feeling, something Editor Edge and I took
great pleasure in riding.
Another possible direction was the EVO6. Honda displayed this concept
bike at the 2007 Tokyo Motor Show, and it made a big splash—how can an
1800cc, six-cylinder sporting standard not? It was missing the clutch
lever and gearshifter—would the next Goldwing use an automatic
transmission?
As I write this, there are three hours left on American Honda Motor’s
embargo on posting photos or writing about its new Valkyrie—and I’m
amazed there’s nothing yet on the Internet. There’s been no speculation
about a new Valk that I could find, so you’re probably as surprised as I
was when I got these photos of the new model.
The first Valkyrie used a simple formula well-known to American
hot-rod builders: take the frame and motor of a big, heavy car and chop
away everything you don’t need. That first iteration was built right
here in the USA from 1996-2003 and still has legions of fans. It used
the flat-six, liquid-cooled 1520cc motor and five-speed gearbox from the
old GL1500 Gold Wing (1988-2000), but with a different tube-steel
chassis. It weighed in at 682 pounds dry—much lighter than its touring
brother. Owner forums for the Valk are still active (hot topic: using a
car tire on the rear wheel), and one thing is clear: these folks love
their bikes. They handle well (for something so heavy), are comfortable,
reliable, smooth, fast and have a heck of a presence—for a while, it
was the biggest, baddest cruiser you could buy. “Surely, with this
motorcycle,” speculated Motorcycle.com’s Andy Saunders in 1997, “Honda
has reached the limit of cruiser size.” How quaint.
No comments:
Post a Comment