Honda CB125F review
Motorcycle Test by Wayne Vickers – Images RbMotoLens
Cheap. As. Chips. That is the first thing that comes to mind. It’s hard to ignore.
So I went to work researching the important stuff. Maccas large fries cost $4.10 and have an average of 100 chips in a serve. Some quick math and more googling told me that you’ll get around 25 large fries servings into a well stacked regular household bucket. And apparently you’ll fit 5 buckets into a standard wheelbarrow. So for the asking price of the CB125F you can either buy 7 wheelbarrows* of Maccas large fries… or you can have your very own CB125F.
It’s $3,800-ish ride away incidentally. Crazy. Which is a bit over 1,200 boxes of 10 nuggets in case you’re interested. Though, cheap as nugs really doesn’t have the same ring to it does it.
Once you wrap your head around that price you then need to judge the bike accordingly. Let’s be honest, it’s not the most stylish, the fastest, or most powerful thing on the market. It’s not going to rip skids or pull 4th gear wheelies. That’s not the brief here. Being cheap to buy and run as well as being easy to ride around town – that’s the brief. And objectively there’s no denying that it meets the brief.
Now given that I was seeing between 2 and 3 litres per hundred kilometres when riding around at full throttle everywhere, I’d confidently say the 12 litre tank will get you 400 plus kays before needing a refill. And that’s leaving a bit in the tank for reserve. It doesn’t just run on the smell of petrol. It would probably run if you simply kept saying the word petrol repeatedly.
It’s small, it’s light (at 115 kg it’s actually really, really light), it has a super low seat height so would be a great entry bike for a smaller/lighter rider keen to learn on something cheap around town. Maybe commute to Uni or work – that sort of thing.
It will get to 100 km/hr.. eventually. I managed to see 110 on the speedo. On a slight downhill. With a tail wind. But really it’s best to be thinking of it as a suburban ride. It’s fine for anything up to 80 km/h zones and will keep up with traffic when pulling away from the lights.
That little 124 cc fuel injected single certainly won’t upset the neighbours either. Super quiet. It’s a fairly flat power delivery with no noticeable peaks or dips. It will rev out (and needs to if you take it on the highway!), but you’ll need to give that throttle a decent twist as it’s quite a slow throttle – which means that it’s very user friendly for less experienced riders.
Brakes aren’t particularly amazing but they work. The feel is ok but they aren’t the most powerful stoppers ever. They’re a linked system that will engage some front (disc) brake when you tap the rear (drum) on, but being under 250cc they don’t need to come with ABS. So they don’t.