Honda Magna: Difference between revisions
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{{Original research|date=May 2021}} |
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==1st Generation VF750C (1982-1986)== |
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{{Infobox Motorcycle |
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|name = Honda Magna |
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|image = Honda Magna close-up.jpg |
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|aka = |
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|manufacturer = [[Honda]] |
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|parent_company = |
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|production = |
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|model_year = 1982–2003 |
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|predecessor = |
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|successor = |
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|class = [[Types of motorcycle#Cruiser|Cruiser]] |
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|engine = [[Overhead camshaft#Dual overhead camshaft|DOHC]] [[Multivalve|4-valve]] 90° [[V4 engine|V-4]] |
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|top_speed = |
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|power = |
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|torque = |
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|transmission = |
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|suspension = |
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|brakes = |
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|tires = |
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|rake_trail = |
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|wheelbase = |
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|length = |
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|width = |
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|height = |
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|seat_height = |
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|dry_weight = |
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|wet_weight = |
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|fuel_capacity = |
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|oil_capacity = |
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|fuel_consumption = |
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|turning_radius = |
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|climbing_ability = |
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|related = [[Honda Sabre V4]], Honda Interceptor |
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}} |
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The '''Honda Magna''' is a [[Types of motorcycle#Cruiser|cruiser]] motorcycle made from 1982 to 1988 and 1994 to 2003 and was the second [[Honda]] to use their new [[V4 engine]] shared with the [[Honda Sabre|VF750S Sabre]] and a few years later a related engine was fitted to the [[Honda VF and VFR|VF750F 'Interceptor']], the later models used a retuned engine from the [[Honda VFR750F|VFR750F]] with fins added to the outside of the engine. The engine technology and layout was a descendant of Honda's racing V4 machines, such as the NS750 and NR750. The introduction of this engine on the Magna and the [[Honda Sabre V4|Sabre]] in 1982, was a milestone in the evolution of motorcycles that would culminate in 1983 with the introduction of the Interceptor V4.<ref name=Holmstrom1>Holmstrom (2000)</ref> The V45's performance is comparable to that of [[Honda Valkyrie|Valkyries]] and Honda's 1800 cc V-twin cruisers. However, its mix of performance, reliability, and refinement was overshadowed by the more powerful 1,098 cc "V65" Magna in 1983. |
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Though criticized for its long-distance comfort and lauded mainly for its raw acceleration,<ref name=Bartels1>Bartels (1997)</ref><ref name=Mayersohn1/> the Magna was the bike of choice for Doris Maron, a Canadian grandmother and accountant-turned-traveler who toured the world solo by motorcycle. She made the trek without the benefit of the support crew that usually accompanies riders in adventures depicted in such films as [[Long Way Round]].<ref name=Lawrence1>Lawrence (2006)</ref><ref name=Canwest1>Canwest (2009)</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www2.canada.com/vancouversun/news/travel/story.html?id=519ff754-79d1-4c8d-a445-e5ec1509b2c1 |title= Motorcycling grandmother travels the world |last1= Lawrence |first1= Leah |date= 18 July 2006 |website= www2.canada.com |publisher= The Vancouver Sun |access-date= 6 October 2013 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120509223750/http://www2.canada.com/vancouversun/news/travel/story.html?id=519ff754-79d1-4c8d-a445-e5ec1509b2c1 |archive-date= 9 May 2012 }}</ref> |
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The 1982 [[Honda]] V45 Magna was sold in 1982 and was available in either Candy Maroon or Candy Imperial Blue, but for the gas tank and side covers only. The headlight, instruments, and fenders were chrome like many other bikes at the time. The front disc brake had straight grooves. The speedometer had a 85 mph (135 kph) limit. The engine was a 748cc DOHC 4-valve liquid-cooled V-4 linked to a 6-speed transmission and a shaft drive. (1982 starting SN JH2RC071*CM000033) |
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The Honda Magna of years 1982–1988 incorporated a number of unique features into a cruiser market dominated by V-twin engines. The V4 engine configuration provided a balance between torque for good acceleration and high horsepower. The 90-degree layout produced less primary vibration, and the four cylinders provided a much smoother delivery of power than a V-twin. Good engine balance, plus short stroke and large piston diameter allowed for a high redline and potential top speed. |
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The 1983 V45 Magna was available in one of two colors and the headlight, instruments, and fenders were chrome. The gas tank and side covers were the basic color (maroon or black). The front disc brake grooves were curved. The speedometer had a 150 mph (240 kph) limit. The engine was a 748cc DOHC 4-valve liquid-cooled V-4 linked to a 6-speed transmission and a shaft drive. (1983 starting SN JH2RC071*DM100011) |
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Besides the engine configuration, the bike had water-cooling, a six-speed transmission for good economy at highway speed, and common on other middleweight bikes for Honda in the early 1980s, shaft drive. While the shaft drive is very convenient with virtually no maintenance required (and no oil getting slung around), it also robbed some power from where it was more evidently lacking on in town or lower speed riding. It also had features like twin horns, hydraulic clutch, and an engine temperature gauge. A coil sprung, oil bath, air preload front fork with anti-dive valving was an improvement, although the Magna did not benefit from the linkage based single shock that was on the Sabre and Interceptor. |
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The US government imposed tarriff rate hikes for foreign-built motorcycles in order to combat their rise is sales in North America, and to aid the domestic motorcycle manufacturers, namely [[Harley-Davidson]]. So for 1984 Honda responded by reducing the engine size for the 750's, and the Magna became the VF700C. |
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The V-65 Magna and other large-displacement Hondas were assembled in the [[Marysville Motorcycle Plant]] in Ohio for US delivery and in Japan for other markets.<ref name=Mayersohn1>Mayershon (1985)</ref> In 2008, Honda announced plans to close the plant, their oldest in North America, in 2009, which had been still making [[Honda Gold Wing|Gold Wings]] and [[Honda VTX series|VTX cruisers]].<ref name=Hannah1>Hannah (2008)</ref> |
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''Specifications:'' |
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== {{Anchor|V42|V45}} 1982–1984 V45 (VF750C) Magna, 1984–1986 V42 (VF700C) Magna == |
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* Engine: dohc 4-valve 90-degree V-four |
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{{More footnotes needed|section|date=July 2009}} |
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* Displacement: 748cc |
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{{Infobox Motorcycle |
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* Transmission: 6-speed |
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|name = 1982–1983 V45 |
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* Seat height: 32.0 in. |
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|image = |
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* Final Drive: Shaft |
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|aka = VF750C V45 |
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* Cooling: Liquid |
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|manufacturer = |
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* Brakes: Dual Disc-Front, Drum-Back |
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|parent_company = |
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|production = |
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|model_year = 1982–1983 |
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|predecessor = |
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|successor = 1984 VF700C Magna |
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|class = |
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|engine = {{cvt|748|cc|abbr=on}}, |
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|bore_stroke = {{cvt|70|x|48.6|mm|abbr=on}} |
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|compression = 10.5:1 |
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|top_speed = |
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|power = |
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|torque = |
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|transmission = 6-[[Gear train|speed]], straight-cut Gears, multi-plate wet clutch, shaft drive. |
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|suspension = Front: [[Telescopic fork|telescopic]] anti-dive travel: 5.5in,<br />Rear: [[swingarm]], travel: 3.9in |
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|brakes = Front: Dual 10.8in [[Disc brake|disc]]<br />Rear: 6.25in [[Drum brake|drum]] |
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|tires = Front: 110/90-18 Rear: 130/90-16 |
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|rake_trail = 30° / 4.1 in |
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|wheelbase = 60.6 in |
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|length = |
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|width = 29 in |
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|height = |
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|seat_height = 30 in |
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|dry_weight = |
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|wet_weight = |
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|fuel_capacity = 3.7 US gallons, including 1 gallon reserve. |
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|oil_capacity = 3.1 U.S. quarts; 2.9 litres |
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|fuel_consumption = |
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|turning_radius = |
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|climbing_ability = |
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|related = |
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}} |
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{{Infobox Motorcycle |
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==2nd Generation VF700C and VF750C (1987-1988)== |
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|name = 1984 VF700C |
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|image = |
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|aka = VF750C V45 |
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|manufacturer = |
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|parent_company = |
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|production = |
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|model_year = 1984 |
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|predecessor = |
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|successor = 1985 VF700C Magna |
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|class = |
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|engine = {{cvt|748|cc|abbr=on}}, |
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|bore_stroke = {{cvt|70|x|45.4|mm|abbr=on}} |
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|compression = 10.5:1 |
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|top_speed = |
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|power = |
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|torque = |
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|transmission = 6-[[Gear train|speed]], straight-cut Gears, Multi-plate wet clutch, shaft drive. |
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|suspension = Front: [[telescopic fork|telescopic]] anti-dive, travel: 5.5in,<br />Rear: [[swingarm]], travel: 3.9in |
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|brakes = Front: Dual 10.8in [[Disc brake|disc]], Rear: 6.25in [[Drum brake|drum]] |
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|tires = Front: 110/90-18 Rear: 130/90-16 |
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|rake_trail = 30° / 4.1 in |
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|wheelbase = 60.6 in |
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|length = |
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|width = 29 in |
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|height = |
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|seat_height = 30 in |
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|dry_weight = |
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|wet_weight = |
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|fuel_capacity = 3.7 US gallons, including 1 gallon reserve. |
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|oil_capacity = 3.1 U.S. quarts; 2.9 litres |
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|fuel_consumption = |
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|turning_radius = |
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|climbing_ability = |
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|related = |
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}} |
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{{Infobox Motorcycle |
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Various mechanical and cosmetic changes were introduced over the years, but the basic core of the Magna remained the same. In 1987, the 700cc engine produced 80 bhp @ 9500 rpm, with torque being 46 ft/lb's @ 7500 rpm. In 1988, the Magna grew back to its original size of 748cc. |
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|name = 1985–1986 VF700C |
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|image = |
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|aka = VF700C V42 |
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|manufacturer = |
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|parent_company = |
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|production = |
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|model_year = 1985–1986 |
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|predecessor = |
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|successor = 1987 VF700C Magna |
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|class = |
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|engine = {{cvt|698|cc|abbr=on}}, |
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|bore_stroke = {{cvt|70|x|45.4|mm|abbr=on}} |
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|compression = 10.5:1 |
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|top_speed = |
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|power = |
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|torque = |
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|transmission = 6-[[Gear train|speed]], straight-cut Gears, multi-plate wet clutch, shaft drive. |
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|suspension = Front: [[Telescopic fork|telescopic]] anti-dive travel: 5.5in<br />Rear: swingarm, travel: 3.9in |
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|brakes = Front: Dual 10.8in [[Disc brake|disc]], Rear: 6.25in [[Drum brake|drum]] |
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|tires = Front: 110/90-18 Rear: 140/90-15<ref>[http://v4musclebike.com/articles/magnandy/Owners%20Manuals/VF700C%2085%20Owners.pdf Manuals] v4musclebike.com {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170517025055/http://v4musclebike.com/articles/magnandy/Owners%20Manuals/VF700C%2085%20Owners.pdf |date=2017-05-17 }}</ref> |
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|rake_trail = 30° / 4.1 in |
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|wheelbase = 60.6 in |
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|length = |
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|width = 29 in |
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|height = |
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|seat_height = 28 in |
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|dry_weight = |
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|wet_weight = |
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|fuel_capacity = 3.7 US gallons |
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|oil_capacity = 3.1 U.S. quarts; 2.9 litres |
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|fuel_consumption = |
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|turning_radius = |
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|climbing_ability = |
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|related = |
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}} |
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=== 1982–1984 VF750C and VF700C === |
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The 1987 V45 Magna was available in either Black or Candy Bourgogne Red (1988 dropped Blue in favor of Black), the air cleaner cover was wrinkle black with a "V45" emblem, and the "MAGNA" tank decal was silver. The exhaust system was now an upswept 4-into-4 set of pipes, truely unique in the cruiser world. Although the exhaust pipes were a beautiful sight, they were not friendly to the use of saddlebags as they were too high. The rear wheel was a solid aluminum disc and the chin fairing was color-matched. The second generation was also the first to have the lower seat height of a mere 27.8 inches, more than 4 inches lower than its predecessor. A total of 16,000 units were built for the 1987 model year, while only 3500 were built for 1988. (1987 starting SN JH2RC280*JA100001) |
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The 1982 V45 Magna has a round chrome headlight and fenders. The headlight is a sealed beam type. The front [[disc brake]]s have straight grooves, dual piston calipers, and TRAC anti-dive. The [[speedometer]] reads 80 mph and the tachometer indicates a 10,000 rpm redline. The engine is a {{cvt|748|cc|abbr=on}} [[Overhead camshaft#Dual overhead camshaft|DOHC]] [[Multi-valve#Motorcycles|16-valve]] [[Radiator (engine cooling)|liquid-cooled]] 90-degree V-4 linked to a six-speed transmission with a hydraulically actuated wet-plate clutch and shaft drive. The compression is 10.5:1. The 1982 V45 covered 1/4 mile in 12.08 seconds at 108.82 MPH.<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Honda Magna V-45 |date=May 1982 |publisher=Cycle World Magazine. |page=47}}</ref> |
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''Specifications:'' |
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The 1983 V45 Magna is the same as the 1982 model with few differences. Early in the model year, the headlight was changed to a non-sealed beam unit with a replaceable halogen bulb. The front disc brake grooves are curved. The speedometer reads to {{convert|150|mph|km/h|abbr=on}} but the redline on the tachometer is unchanged. (1983 starting SN JH2RC071*DM100011) |
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* Engine: dohc 4-valve 90-degree V-four |
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* Displacement: 700cc and 748cc |
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* Transmission: 6-speed |
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* Wet weight was 529 lb's. |
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* Seat height: 27.8 in. |
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* Final Drive: Shaft Cooling: Liquid |
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* Brakes: Single Disc-Front, Drum-Back |
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The US government imposed tariff rate hikes for foreign-built motorcycles over 700 cc in order to combat their rise in sales in North America, and to aid the domestic motorcycle manufacturers, namely [[Harley-Davidson]]. So for 1984 Honda responded by reducing the engine size for the VF750s to 698 cc by decreasing stroke on all of their 750cc engines, so the Magna became the VF700C in the USA. A side effect of this change was a higher-revving engine (redline now 10,500rpm) with similar power figures as the 750s. In 1984 rev limiters within the CDI units were added as well to help prevent over-revving that was fairly common with the earlier 750 models. The headlight changed from round chrome to a rectangular chrome housing. The seats were changed to a wider & lower 2 piece design in an attempt to improve rider comfort. The rear shocks also changed to eliminate the extra fluid reservoir. The wheels were different as well now being an "open" 5-spoke wheel like Honda's VT500s but with chrome the way around the rim's lip but were the same size. Honda only made the VF700 for 1984, 1985, 1986, and 1987, then back to the VF750 after that. In the first part of 1984, some Magnas were still VF750s though 1984 750s were more common with Interceptors (VF750F). |
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==3rd Generation VF750C (1994-2003)== |
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Models from 1982 to 1984 were unique in their use of a larger primary fuel tank and smaller sub-tank. The sub-tank is located directly behind the left side cover, well below the level of the carburetor banks and has a low-fuel sensor incorporated into the body. Owing to the low seat height (much lower than in a standard street bike) and cruiser styling of the bike, the main tank is relatively small. Because the bottom end of the sub-tank is so low, all bikes in this family have a fuel pump to get the fuel up into the carburetors. In practice, the fuel pump adds more complexity to a carbureted bike which otherwise doesn't need pressure-fed fuel. |
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The 'Power Cruisers' category that had been occupied by the [[Kawasaki]] [[Kawasaki Eliminator|Eliminator]]'s and the [[Yamaha]] [[V-Max]], (as well as the 1980's Magna's), was bolstered in 1993 with the Magna 750. As an early release 1994 model, Honda sought to capture the market for powerful cruisers by lifting the engine from the [[Honda VFR|VFR750]] and slotting it in a cruiser chassis. The engine itself was beautified by the addition of chrome and some extra fins, and by the chromed 4 into 4 exhaust. The seat was kept very low, at 28 inches, with the passenger seat being detachable. The all new frame was complemented by 41mm forks, dual shocks, and a single disc on the front. A drum brake was used on the rear. A few internal changes were made to the VFR engine for use in the Magna, including a different crankshaft, a 5 speed transmission and chain driven cams. Smaller carbs were also utilized. The changes resulted in a stronger mid-range pull, and a very broad band of power. Power is 78.2bhp@9000rpm, with torque of 48.2ft/lb's@7250rpm. |
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=== 1985–1986 VF700C === |
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The design of the 3rd generation Magna remained relatively unchanged over its lifetime. The tank decal was changed in 1995, and a miniture fairing was available on 1995 and 1996 Deluxe models. The only practical way to tell the year of a Magna from a distance is by its paint scheme, but even that is not a given since only a few colours were rotated through use. The most distinctive paint scheme was a "scalloped" design found on mid-late 1990's models. |
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For the 1985 and 1986 models, the sub-tank was dropped in favor of a slightly larger and wider main tank. Again because the reserve level of the tank was below the carburetors, the requisite fuel pump and series of fuel lines – although changed – were kept. Also for 1985 and 1986 the previously chrome, round rear fender became a painted single-piece unit much wider and taller like more classic cruisers which allowed for a wider rear tire. 1985 and 1986 saw new wheels too. Some of the trim around the Magna was changed as well, like the addition of a passenger back rest, smaller side covers, slightly lower seat and footpeg positions, brighter instrument cluster, slightly larger airbox covers, lighter front brake rotors, an improved radiator (now with a shut-off valve to greatly ease servicing), new exhaust, and the engine had silver case covers instead of the black prior years had. These engines also had silver aluminum covers over the engine's shaft-drive output while prior years used black plastic covers, the engines were otherwise the same VF700 as 1984 with identical gear ratios and all. |
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2004 saw the demise of the Magna, along with other Honda stablemates such as the V-Twin [[Honda Shadow|Shadow]] ACE and Shadow Spirit, as well as the 6-cylinder [[Honda Valkyrie|Valkyrie]]. All these bikes have a strong following in their respective categories, and their current owners are saddened at the huge loss. However, just as the Magna was discontinued for a number of years between the 2nd and 3rd generations, there is a possibility that a 4th generation is waiting in the wings that would satisfy enthusiasts' desires. This would include dual-disc brakes up front and a single in the rear, extended range between refueling stops, a better stock seat, and upgraded styling. It has been suggested that the current iteration of the [[Honda VFR|VFR800]] with [[VTEC]] would make an ideal candidate, while other adherents would like to see the return of the V65 in Magna guise. |
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In 1986 some of the parts around the Magna now had the "Magna Bird" emblem present on the airbox covers, the driver seat, and the passenger backrest. For only 1986 the engines had unique cylinder heads, the rear heads now featured a new cosmetic bolt-on piece and while all previous VF700s/VF750s used head bolts and more square valve covers 1986s were revised with line-bored camshaft journals thus taking different camshafts and valve covers. The new valve covers allowed for easier valve-rocker adjustment which would normally be a difficult procedure, but because of the shape head bolts had to be replaced with head studs so 1986 models have chrome acorn nuts where zinc-plated headbolts once were. These were the only changes from 1985 to 1986, the following years of Magnas would be quite different. |
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''Specifications:'' |
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{{clear}} |
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* Engine Type: 748cc liquid-cooled 90° V-4 |
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* Bore and Stroke: 70mm x 48.6mm |
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* Compression Ratio: 10.8:1 |
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* Valve Train: DOHC; 4 valves per cylinder |
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* Carburetion: Four 34mm CV |
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* Ignition: Solid-state digital |
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* Transmission: 5-speed |
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* Final Drive: O-ring-sealed chain |
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* Front Suspension: 41mm cartridge fork; 5.9 inches travel |
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* Rear Suspension: Dual shocks with 5-way spring preload adjustability; 3.9 inches travel |
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* Front Brake: 1-piston caliper, 12.4-in. disc |
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* Rear Brake: Single-leading-shoe drum |
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* Front Tire: 120/80-17 tubeless |
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* Rear Tire: 150/80-15 tubeless |
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* Wheelbase: 65.0 inches |
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* Rake/trail: 32o/5.2 in. |
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* Seat Height: 28.0 inches |
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* Dry Weight: 504.8 pounds |
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* Wet weight: 539 lbs. |
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* Fuel Capacity: 3.6 gallons, including 0.8-gallon reserve |
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* Quarter mile acceleration: 12.71 sec., 102.9 mph |
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* 200-yard top-gear acceleration from 50 mph, terminal speed: 73.0 mph |
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== {{Anchor|V65}} 1983–1986 V65 (VF1100C) Magna == |
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{{Infobox Motorcycle |
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|name = 1983–1986 V65 |
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|image = |
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|aka = VF1100C |
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|manufacturer = |
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|parent_company = |
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|production = |
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|model_year = 1983–1986 |
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|predecessor = |
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|successor = |
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|class = |
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|engine = {{convert|1098|cc|cuin|abbr=on}}<ref name=Mayersohn1/> |
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|top_speed = |
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|power = {{convert|116|bhp|kW|abbr=on}} (claimed)<ref name=Mayersohn1/><ref name=CW1982/> |
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|torque = {{convert|70|lbft|abbr=on}} @ 7,500 rpm (claimed)<ref name=CW1982>{{Citation|title=Honda V65 Magna |magazine=[[Cycle World]] |pages=48–55 |date=April 1983}}</ref><ref name=Scott1>{{cite book|last=Scott|first=Ed|title=Honda : V45 & V65, service, repair, performance|year=1984|publisher=Clymer Publications|location=Arleta, Calif.|isbn=0-89287-384-1|edition=1st}}</ref> |
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|transmission = 6-[[Gear train|speed]], shaft drive<ref name=Mayersohn1/> |
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|suspension = |
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|brakes = |
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|tires = Front M110/90-18 [[Tubeless tire|tubeless]]: Rear M140/90-16 tubeless<ref name=Scott1/> |
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|rake_trail = |
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|wheelbase = {{convert|62.8|in|mm|abbr=on}}<ref name=Mayersohn1/> |
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|length = {{convert|89.8|in|mm|abbr=on}}<ref name=Scott1/> |
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|width = {{convert|31.9|in|mm|abbr=on}}<ref name=Scott1/> |
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|height = {{convert|47.6|in|mm|abbr=on}}<ref name=Scott1/> |
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|seat_height = |
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|dry_weight = {{convert|540|lb|kg|abbr=on}}<ref name=Scott1/> |
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|wet_weight = {{convert|590|lb|kg|abbr=on}}<ref name=Mayersohn1/> |
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|fuel_capacity = |
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|oil_capacity = |
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|fuel_consumption = |
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|turning_radius = |
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|climbing_ability = |
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|related = |
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}} |
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The large displacement {{convert|1098|cc|cuin|abbr=on}} '''V65 Magna''' attracted attention as Honda's entry in the 1/4 mile wars between manufacturers at the time, causing Suzuki to respond with the [[Suzuki Madura|1200 Madura]] (which had a 1/4 mile time of 11.66 s at 115.7 mph), and going up against such competition as the [[Suzuki GS series|Suzuki GS1150E]] (10.47 s at 128 mph).<ref name=Ford1>Ford (1985)</ref> The V65 lay somewhere between these two in performance, posting a quarter mile time of 11.29 s at {{convert|119.2|mph|km/h|abbr=on}}.<ref name=Mayersohn1/> |
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==Magna Siblings== |
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The 1983 V65 Magna was tested at a top speed of {{convert|139|mph|abbr=on|order=flip}}.<ref name=CWApril1983>{{Citation|title= Honda V64 Magna; From the Folks Who Brought Us VHD, TRAC, FOIL, and CVCC Comes TBBYES (The Baddest Bike You've Ever Seen)|magazine=[[Cycle World]] |publisher=[[Hachette Filipacchi Media U.S.]] |issn=0011-4286 |location=Newport Beach, California |date=April 1983 |volume=22 |issue=4 |pages=49–55}}</ref> In a 1983 ''[[Popular Mechanics]]'' achieved a top speed of {{convert|140.11|mph|abbr=on|order=flip}}, ranking it third of four motorcycles tested, less than {{convert|2|mph|abbr=on|order=flip}} slower than the [[Kawasaki GPZ1100]] and [[Suzuki GS series|Suzuki GS1100s]].<ref name=Hill1983>{{Citation|last=Hill |first=Ray |date=December 1983 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=m9gDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA91 |access-date=July 4, 2015 |magazine=[[Popular Mechanics]] |pages=91– |title=We Test The World's Fastest Superbikes}}</ref> |
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===1984-1985 Honda Magna V30=== |
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In spite of this, the V65 Magna appeared from 1986 to 1989 in the ''[[Guinness Book of World Records]]'' as the fastest production motorcycle with a "design speed" of {{convert|173|to|176|mph|abbr=on|order=flip}}.<ref name=Guinness1986>{{Citation|title= The Guinness book of records |first1= Alan |last1= Russel |first2= Norris D. |last2= McWhirter |publisher= [[Guinness Superlatives]] |year= 1986 |isbn= 978-0-85112-439-1 |url-access= registration |url= https://archive.org/details/guinnessbookofre00ster}}</ref><ref name=Guinness1989>{{Citation |title= The Guinness book of records, 1989 |first1= Donald |last1= McFarlan |first2= David A. |last2= Boehm |publisher= [[Guinness Superlatives]] |year= 1988 |isbn= 978-0-8069-0276-0 |url-access= registration |url= https://archive.org/details/guinnessbookofwo00dona_0 }}</ref> During this period the production motorcycle with the fastest tested speed was the {{convert|151|-|158|mph}} [[Kawasaki GPZ900R]].<ref name=Brown2006>{{Citation|pages=214–215 |last=Brown |first=Roland |title=The Ultimate History of Fast Motorcycles |publisher=Parragon |year=2006 |location=Bath, UK |isbn=1-4054-7303-7}}</ref><ref name=Krens2001>{{Citation |title=The Art of the Motorcycle |editor-last=Krens |editor-first=Thomas |editor-link=Thomas Krens|author=Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Field Museum of Natural History, Museo Guggenheim Bilbao |publisher=Guggenheim Museum |year=2001 |isbn= 978-0-8109-6912-4 }}</ref><ref name=Walker2006>{{Citation |title=Motorcycle: Evolution, Design, Passion |author-link= Mick Walker (motorcycling) |first=Mick |last=Walker |publisher=JHU Press |year=2006 |isbn= 978-0-8018-8530-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AHSlknpjrgAC |pages=172, 174–5}}</ref> |
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The 1984 Honda Magna V30, designated VF500C'84 (VF500CL'84 in California), was sold in 1984. Two colors were available: Candy Andromeda Red and Black. The "HONDA" fuel tank logo was straight, not curved in this first year. The headlight was chrome and rectangular. The horns were round. The chrome exhaust system was a 4-into-2. It had a chain drive. The engine was a 498cc DOHC 4-valve liquid-cooled V-4 linked to a 6-speed transmission.(Starting SN JH2PC1317EM000004 (California))(Starting SN JH2PC1300EM000028 (excl. California)) |
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== {{Anchor|V30}} 1984–1985 V30 (VF500C) Magna == |
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The 1985 VF500C V30 Magna was sold in one of two colors: Black or Candy Wineberry Red. The "HONDA" gas tank logo was curved. The headlight was chrome and rectangular. The horns were round. The chrome exhaust system was a 4-into-2. It had a chain drive. The engine was a 498cc DOHC 4-valve liquid-cooled V-4 linked to a 6-speed transmission. |
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{{Infobox Motorcycle |
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(Starting SN JH2PC130*FM100001) |
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|name = 1984–1986 V30 – PC08 |
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|image = Honda VF500C 84.jpg |
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|caption = 1984 Honda Magna V30 |
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|aka = VF500C |
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|manufacturer = Honda |
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|parent_company = |
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|production = |
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|model_year = 1984–1986 |
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|predecessor = V45 |
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|successor = |
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|class = [[Types of motorcycles#Cruiser|Cruiser]] |
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|engine = |
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|bore_stroke = {{Convert|60|×|44|mm|abbr=on}} |
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|compression = 11.0:1 |
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|top_speed = |
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|power = |
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|torque = |
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|transmission = 6-[[Gear train|speed]] transmission, wet clutch, automatic cam-chain tensioners, self-adjusting hydraulic clutch |
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|suspension = Front: leading axle, air adjustable fork, 37 mm tubes, 6.3 in. travel. Rear: dual shock absorbers, 4.3 in travel |
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|brakes = Front hydraulic, single [[Disc brakes|disc]], twin piston caliper |
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|tires = Front 100/90-18 Rear 130/90-16 |
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|rake_trail = 35.1° / 4.4 in. |
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|wheelbase = {{cvt|58.4|in|abbr=on}} |
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|length = |
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|width = |
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|height = |
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|seat_height = {{cvt|29.9|in|abbr=on}} |
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|dry_weight = |
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|wet_weight = |
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|fuel_capacity = 3.7 gallons / 14 liters |
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|oil_capacity = 2.6 qt / 2.46 liters |
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|fuel_consumption = |
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|turning_radius = |
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|climbing_ability = |
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|related = |
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}} |
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The Honda VF500 is one of Honda's second generation [[V4 engine|V4]] motorcycle engines produced in a series of motorcycles designated with [[Honda VF and VFR|VF and VFR]] initials. For 1984–1986, Honda produced the 498 cc, V4 DOHC VF500 for the VF500C Magna V30 (1984/85) and its sister bike, the [[Honda VF500F|VF500F]] (1984–86). This engine is an evolution of Honda's original domestic market 400 cc engine, originally deemed too small and underpowered for certain markets - notably the United States and Europe. Focusing on adding power and versatility to its motorcycle offerings, Honda bored the original 400 cc motor and improved its power and performance. The engine is almost entirely identical to the version in the Interceptor [[Honda VF500F|VF500F]] sport bike, and while Honda sold the VF500C Magna in the United States, it advertised it as the "most powerful midsize custom in the world".{{Better source needed|reason=Personal website of Joep Kortekaas, a self published author. See [[WP:SPS]]|date=November 2013}}<ref>{{cite web |
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| title = Honda VF500 Magna print ad |
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| url = http://www.vf750fd.com/blurbs/brochures/honda/1984/vf500c_magna/1984_vf500c_magna_3.jpg |
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| access-date = 2008-01-08 |
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}}</ref> |
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This standard motorcycle was introduced as a balanced bike that was just as enjoyable yet easier to ride in town than its larger Magna siblings, with good power and a broad torque band. Thanks to its V4 design, power in the ''500'' engine is not peaky and ample torque can be found throughout the rev band, and the six-speed transmission ratio was unique to this bike versus the ratio on the VF500F.{{Better source needed|reason=Personal website of Joep Kortekaas, a self published author. See [[WP:SPS]]|date=November 2013}}<ref name="vf750fd.com">{{cite web |
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''Specifications:'' |
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| title = Honda VF500 Magna and Interceptor |
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| url = http://www.vf750fd.com/vf750f/vin_5.html |
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| access-date = 2008-01-08 |
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}}</ref> The engine produced between 64 and 68 horsepower, and combined with its low weight and low center of gravity, the bike was lauded by critics as an easy to ride and entertaining motorcycle.{{Better source needed|reason=Personal website of Joep Kortekaas, a self published author. See [[WP:SPS]]|date=November 2013}}<ref name="vf750fd.com"/> |
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The Magna had no shaft drive like its larger siblings, but a traditional chain drive.{{Better source needed|reason=Personal website of Joep Kortekaas, a self published author. See [[WP:SPS]]|date=November 2013}}<ref name="vf750fd.com"/> |
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* Engine: dohc 4-valve 90-degree V-four |
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* Displacement: 498cc |
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* Transmission: 6-speed |
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* Final Drive: Chain |
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* Cooling: Liquid |
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* Brakes: Single Disc-Front, Drum-Back |
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=== Specifications === |
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===1983-1986 Honda Magna V65=== |
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* Standing-start quarter mile - 12.9 sec at 103 mph |
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A year after the introduction of the V45 Magna & Sabre, came the V65 Magna; an 1100cc V-Four producing more power than any other Honda at the time. The engine was universally praised for its broad range of massive power. The V65 engine did not share any parts with the V45, but the designs were very similar, just on a larger scale. The engine achieved perfect primary balance, and its narrow dimensions belied its capacity. The riding position was a little too relaxed for long trips, but on short hops it was quite comfortable. Suspension was almost sport-bike-taut, possibly to deal with the shaft drive effect. Power in 1983 was 105bhp, with torque of 68.86ft/lb's. Wet weight was 574lb's. |
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* 0–60 in 3.9 seconds |
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* 60–0 in 120.6 feet |
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==== Changes by year ==== |
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''Specifications:'' |
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* The "HONDA" fuel tank logo was straight in 1984, and curved up in 1985 |
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Facts from Cycle Magazine, July 1984{{Better source needed|reason=Personal website of Joep Kortekaas, a self published author. See [[WP:SPS]]|date=November 2013}}<ref name="vf750fd.com"/> |
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* Engine: dohc 4-valve 90-degree V-four |
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{{clear}} |
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* Displacement: 1098cc |
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* Transmission: 6-speed |
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* Seat height: 32.0 in. |
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* Final Drive: Shaft Cooling: Liquid |
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* Brakes: Dual Disc-Front, Drum-Back |
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== {{Anchor|Super Magna}} 1987–1988 Super Magna (1987 V42 (VF700C) Magna and 1988 V45 (VF750C) Magna) == |
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---- |
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{{No footnotes|section|date=July 2009}} |
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{{Infobox Motorcycle |
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|name = VF700C Magna, VF750C V45 Magna |
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|image = HondaSuperMagna1.jpg |
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|caption = 1987 Honda Super Magna, Canadian-export model |
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|aka = Super Magna |
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|manufacturer = Honda |
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|parent_company = |
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|production = Unknown |
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|model_year = 1987–1988 |
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|predecessor = 1986 VF700C Magna |
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|successor = 1994 VF750C Magna |
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|class = Cruiser |
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|engine = {{cvt|699|cc|abbr=on}} (1987) / {{cvt|748|cc|abbr=on}} (1988) |
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|top_speed = |
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|power = |
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|torque = |
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|transmission = 6-[[Gear train|speed]], [[shaft drive]] |
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|suspension = 39 mm non adjustable [[Motorcycle fork|fork]], dual coil over shocks |
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|brakes = Single [[Disc brake|disc]] front, [[Drum brake|drum]] rear |
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|tires = Front: 100/90-19 tubeless, Rear: 150/80-15 tubeless |
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|rake_trail =55°/ 152mm (6.0 in) |
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|wheelbase = {{cvt|1660|mm|abbr=on}} |
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|length = {{cvt|2360|mm|abbr=on}} |
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|width = {{cvt|810|mm|abbr=on}} |
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|height = {{cvt|1155|mm|abbr=on}} |
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|seat_height = {{convert|27.8|in|mm}} |
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|dry_weight = |
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|wet_weight = |
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|fuel_capacity = {{cvt|13|L|abbr=on}} |
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|oil_capacity = |
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|fuel_consumption = |
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|turning_radius = |
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|climbing_ability = |
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|related = |
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}} |
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Various mechanical and cosmetic changes were introduced over the years, but the basic core of the Magna remained the same. The second generation Magna of 1987–1988 was dubbed the Super Magna by aficionados of the bike, though it was not an official Honda name. In 1987, the 699 cc engine produced {{convert|80|bhp|kW}} @ 9,500 rpm, with torque being {{convert|46|lbft|N.m|abbr=on}} @ 7,500 rpm. In 1988, the Magna grew back to its original size of 748 cc. |
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In countries other than the US, the Magna continued as a 750. The Magna V-four has endured through the first and second generations of the VF and VFR Interceptors - both come and gone by 1988. Like the original 750 Sabre and VF 750, this 750 Magna engine uses a 360-degree crankshaft and chain-driven double-overhead camshafts. Thus, the VF750C unit is technologically quite different from Honda's last V-four sport bike engine, the VFR750 Interceptor, which had gear-driven overhead cams and a 180-degree crankshaft. |
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==External Links== |
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The Super's cams are also line-bored (a feature first seen in the Euro 1985 VF1000F & F-II, and 85/86 VF1000R, 1986 VF500F, 1986 VF700C Magna), which greatly reduced the premature cam wear that plagued the earlier models, together with changed oil ducts. |
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* [http://www.magnariders.com Magna Riders Association] |
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* [http://www.magnaownersoftexas.org Magna Owners of Texas (MOOT)] |
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The 1987 V45 Magna was available in either Candy Wave Blue or Candy Bourgogne Red (1988 dropped Blue in favor of Black). For 1987, the fake airbox covers were wrinkle black with a "Magna" emblem. The fake airbox emblem changes to "V45" for the 1988 model. |
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* [http://100megsfree4.com/honda/h0700/magna750.htm 1st and 2nd Generation Magna] |
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The 1987 Super Magna had a silver, grey and black Honda "wing" tank decal on the Candy Wave Blue tanks, and a silver, black, and red decal on the Candy Bourgogne Red tanks. The 1988 model had a silver "MAGNA" tank decal. |
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The exhaust system was now an upswept 4-into-4 set of pipes, truly unique in the cruiser world. Although the exhaust pipes were a beautiful sight, they were not friendly to the use of saddlebags as they were too high. The rear wheel was a solid [[aluminum disc]]. The chin fairing was unfinished black plastic for the 87, and color-matched for the 88. The second generation was also the first to have the lower seat height of a mere {{convert|27.8|in|mm}}, more than {{convert|4|in|mm}} lower than its predecessor. The production numbers of 1987 and 1988 Magnas have never been released by Honda. |
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In 1987 the Super Magna came in red or blue - about 16,000 total were built |
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In 1988 the Super Magna came in red or black - about 3500 total were built |
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{{clear}} |
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==1994–2003 (VF750C) Magna== |
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{{More footnotes needed|section|date=July 2009}} |
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{{Infobox Motorcycle |
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|name = 1994–2003 VF750C |
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|image = 1999vf750c.jpg |
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|caption = 1999 Honda Magna with aftermarket saddle and exhaust. |
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|aka = VF750C |
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|manufacturer = Honda |
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|parent_company = |
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|production = |
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|model_year = 1994–2003 |
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|predecessor = |
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|successor = |
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|class = |
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|engine = {{convert|748.8|cc|abbr=on}} [[Radiator (engine cooling)|liquid-cooled]] 90° [[V4 engine|V-4]] |
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|bore_stroke = {{convert|70|x|48.6|mm|abbr=on}} |
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|compression = 10.8:1 |
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|top_speed = {{convert|120|mph|abbr=on}}<ref name="MCN1"/> |
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|power = {{convert|87|bhp|kW|abbr=on}} (rear wheel)<ref name=MCN1/> |
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|torque = {{convert|51.3|ftlb|Nm|abbr=on}} (at rear wheel)<ref name="MCN1"/> |
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|transmission = 5-speed, O-ring chain |
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|suspension = Front: 41 mm cartridge fork; 150 mm travel, Rear: Dual shocks with 5-way spring preload adjustability; {{convert|3.9|in|mm}} travel |
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|brakes = Front: 2-piston caliper, {{convert|12.4|in|mm}} disc. Rear: Single-leading-shoe drum |
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|tires = Tubeless, Front: 120/80-17, Rear: 150/80-15 |
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|rake_trail = 32°, {{convert|5.2|in|abbr=on}} |
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|wheelbase = {{convert|65.0|in|abbr=on}} |
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|length = |
|||
|width = |
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|height = |
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|seat_height = {{convert|28.0|in|abbr=on}} |
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|wet_weight = {{convert|550|lb|abbr=on}}<ref name="MCN1"/> |
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|fuel_capacity = {{convert|3.6|usgal|abbr=on}} |
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|oil_capacity = {{convert|3.3|USqt|abbr=on}} |
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|fuel_consumption = |
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|turning_radius = |
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|climbing_ability = |
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|related = |
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}} |
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<!-- Magna 750 7/99<ref name="MCN1" /> |
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Engine: V-4 <ref name="MCN1"/> |
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Transmission 5<ref name="MCN1"/> |
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power @rear wheel 76.3 <ref name="MCN1"/> |
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torque 46.5 <ref name="MCN1"/> |
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wet weight 550 <ref name="MCN1"/> |
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avg fuel mileage 33.5 <ref name="MCN1"/> |
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top speed 120 <ref name="MCN1"/> |
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0-60 4.37<ref name="MCN1"/> |
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0-100 mph 11.77 <ref name="MCN1"/> |
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0-1/4 mi 12.49 mph @ 105.65 mph<ref name="MCN1"/> |
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braking 60-0 116.5<ref name="MCN1"/> |
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power/wt ratio 1:7.21 <ref name="MCN1"/> |
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--> |
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The Magna 750 was launched in 1993 as an early release 1994 model. Honda sought to capture the market for powerful cruisers by lifting the engine from the [[Honda VFR|VFR750]] and slotting it in a cruiser chassis. The engine itself was beautified by the addition of chrome and some extra fins, and by the chromed 4 into 4 exhaust. The seat was kept very low, at 28 inches, with the passenger seat being detachable. The all new frame was complemented by 41 mm forks, dual shocks, and a single disc on the front. A drum brake was used on the rear. A few internal changes were made to the VFR engine for use in the Magna, including a different crankshaft, a 5-speed transmission and chain driven cams. Smaller carbs were also utilized. The changes resulted in a stronger mid-range pull, and a very broad band of power. |
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The design of the 3rd-generation Magna remained relatively unchanged over its lifetime. The tank decal was changed in 1995, and a miniature fairing was available on 1995 and 1996 Deluxe models. |
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2004 saw the demise of the Magna, along with other Honda stablemates such as the V-Twin [[Honda Shadow|Shadow]] ACE and Shadow Spirit, as well as the 6-cylinder [[Honda Valkyrie|Valkyrie]]. |
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<gallery> |
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File:Honda Magna Red 1995.jpg |
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File:1995 Honda Magna gas tank red.jpg |
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File:1995 Honda Magna red instrument cluster.jpg |
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</gallery> |
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{{clear}} |
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==1994–2003 (VT250C) Magna== |
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{{Infobox Motorcycle |
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|name = 1994–2003 VT250C |
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|image = 1995HondaMagna250.jpg |
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|caption = 1995 Honda Magna with aftermarket exhaust |
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|aka = VT250 |
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|manufacturer = Honda |
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|parent_company = |
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|production = |
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|model_year = 1994–2003 |
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|predecessor = |
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|successor = |
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|class = |
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|engine = {{cvt|250|cc|abbr=on}} [[Radiator (engine cooling)|liquid-cooled]] 90° V-2, |bore_stroke = {{convert|60.0|x|44.1|mm|in|abbr=on}} |
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|compression = 11.0:1 |
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|power = |
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|torque = |
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|transmission = 5-[[Gear train|speed]], final drive: O-ring-sealed chain, multiple wet plate coil spring clutch |
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|suspension = Front: [[Telescopic fork|telescopic]], Rear: [[swingarm]] |
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|brakes = Front: Hydraulic disc, Rear: Mechanical leading / trailing shoe |
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|tires = Tubeless, Front: 120/80–17 61S, Rear: 150/80–15M/C 70S |
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|wheelbase = 1,620 mm |
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|length = 2,315 mm |
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|width = 845 mm |
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|height = 1,055 mm |
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|seat_height = {{convert|28.0|in|mm}} |
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|dry_weight = |
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|fuel_capacity = {{cvt|11|L|abbr=on}} (plus reserve {{cvt|2.9|L|abbr=on}} (0.77 US Gallons) |
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|oil_capacity = 2.1 Litres (after oil & filter change) |
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|fuel_consumption = |
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|turning_radius = |
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|climbing_ability = |
|||
|related = |
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}} |
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{{clear}} |
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==Notes== |
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{{reflist|30em|refs= |
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<ref name=MCN1>{{Citation |title=Performance Index Winter '12/'13 Edition |periodical=Motorcycle Consumer News |url=http://www.mcnews.com/mcn/technical/2013JanPerfIndx.pdf |publisher=BowTie |date=January 2013 |access-date=2016-09-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161229193923/http://www.mcnews.com/mcn/technical/2013JanPerfIndx.pdf |archive-date=2016-12-29 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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}} |
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==References== |
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{{refbegin}} |
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* {{Citation |last=Bartels |first=Billy |publisher=Motorcycle.com |title=First Impression: 1997 Honda 750 Magna |date= February 20, 1997 |url=http://www.motorcycle.com/manufacturer/honda/first-impression-1997-honda-750-magna-15058.html }} |
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* {{Citation|last=Canwest News Service |periodical=Calgary Herald |date=January 29, 2009 |title=Motorcycling grandma chronicles second leg of worldwide tour |url=http://www2.canada.com/travel/middle-east/motorcycling+grandma+chronicles+second+worldwide+tour/1227546/story.html?id=1227546 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150521030953/http://www2.canada.com/travel/middle-east/motorcycling%2Bgrandma%2Bchronicles%2Bsecond%2Bworldwide%2Btour/1227546/story.html?id=1227546 |archive-date=May 21, 2015 }} |
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* {{Citation |
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|last=Carrithers |first=Tim |title=Smart money: 1993-2004 Honda Magna 750.(MC GARAGE)(Product/service evaluation) |periodical= Motorcyclist |date=March 2009 |page=102 }} |
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* {{Citation |last=Cherney |first=Andy |title=Honda Magna 750: Heavy-Hitting Middleweight Motorcycle; Honda Magna 750cc – Road Test & Review |publisher=Motorcycle Cruiser |url=http://www.motorcyclecruiser.com/roadtests/honda_magna_750/index.html |access-date=2009-07-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120719060241/http://www.motorcyclecruiser.com/roadtests/honda_magna_750/index.html |archive-date=2012-07-19 |url-status=dead }} |
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* {{Citation |last=Farnsworth |first=Clyde H. |title=U.S. RAISES TARIFF FOR MOTORCYCLES |periodical=The New York Times. |location=New York, N.Y. |date=April 2, 1983 |page=1 |id={{ProQuest|424627452}} }} |
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* {{Citation |
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|last1=Ford |first1=Dexter |last2= Karr |title=1985 muscle bike buyer's guide |periodical=Hot Rod |date=February 1985 |pages=82(3) |first2= Jeff |volume=38 }} |
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* {{Citation |
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|last=Hannah |first=James |title=Honda to end motorcycle production in US |agency=Associated Press |newspaper=[[Boston Globe]] |date= February 27, 2008 |url=http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2008/02/27/honda_to_end_motorcycle_production_in_us/ }} |
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* {{Citation |
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|last= Holmstrom |first= Darwin |title=The Complete Idiot's Guide to Motorcycles |edition=2nd |publisher=Alpha Books |year=2001 |isbn=0-02-864258-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p9EyBoTaKy0C&pg=PA321 |page=321 }} |
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* {{Citation |
|||
|last=Holmstrom |first=Darwin |title=1983 Honda V45 Interceptor |periodical= Motorcyclist |date=June 2000 |page=146 }} |
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* {{Citation|last=Lawrence |first=Leah |periodical=The Vancouver Sun |title=Motorcycling grandmother travels the world; An Edmonton woman sold everything she owned to finance her trip through Asia, Europe and South America |date=July 18, 2006 |url=http://www2.canada.com/vancouversun/news/travel/story.html?id=519ff754-79d1-4c8d-a445-e5ec1509b2c1 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120509223750/http://www2.canada.com/vancouversun/news/travel/story.html?id=519ff754-79d1-4c8d-a445-e5ec1509b2c1 |archive-date=May 9, 2012 }} |
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* {{Citation |last=Mayershon |first=Norman |title=Brute Bikes; Charging through California's Gold Country on the fastest big-bore cruisers being built, our crew test the limits of the machines, the roads and the riders. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=deMDAAAAMBAJ&q=popular+mechanics&pg=PA106 |periodical=Popular Mechanics |date=December 1985 |pages=106–9, 139, 142–3 }} |
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* {{Citation |periodical=Motorcycle Consumer News |title=V-Max, Lean And Mean Machines; 1994 Honda Magna and 1993 Yamaha |date=September 1993 }} |
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* {{Citation |periodical=Motorcycle Consumer News |title=1999 Honda Magna |date=July 1999}} |
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* {{cite book|last=Scott|first=Ed|title=Honda : V45 & V65, service, repair, performance|year=1984|publisher=Clymer Publications|location=Arleta, Calif.|isbn=0-89287-384-1|edition=1st}} |
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{{refend}} |
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==External links== |
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{{Commons category|Honda Magna}} |
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[[Category:Honda motorcycles|Magna]] |
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Latest revision as of 06:58, 22 November 2024
This article possibly contains original research. (May 2021) |
Manufacturer | Honda |
---|---|
Class | Cruiser |
Engine | DOHC 4-valve 90° V-4 |
Related | Honda Sabre V4, Honda Interceptor |
The Honda Magna is a cruiser motorcycle made from 1982 to 1988 and 1994 to 2003 and was the second Honda to use their new V4 engine shared with the VF750S Sabre and a few years later a related engine was fitted to the VF750F 'Interceptor', the later models used a retuned engine from the VFR750F with fins added to the outside of the engine. The engine technology and layout was a descendant of Honda's racing V4 machines, such as the NS750 and NR750. The introduction of this engine on the Magna and the Sabre in 1982, was a milestone in the evolution of motorcycles that would culminate in 1983 with the introduction of the Interceptor V4.[1] The V45's performance is comparable to that of Valkyries and Honda's 1800 cc V-twin cruisers. However, its mix of performance, reliability, and refinement was overshadowed by the more powerful 1,098 cc "V65" Magna in 1983.
Though criticized for its long-distance comfort and lauded mainly for its raw acceleration,[2][3] the Magna was the bike of choice for Doris Maron, a Canadian grandmother and accountant-turned-traveler who toured the world solo by motorcycle. She made the trek without the benefit of the support crew that usually accompanies riders in adventures depicted in such films as Long Way Round.[4][5][6]
The Honda Magna of years 1982–1988 incorporated a number of unique features into a cruiser market dominated by V-twin engines. The V4 engine configuration provided a balance between torque for good acceleration and high horsepower. The 90-degree layout produced less primary vibration, and the four cylinders provided a much smoother delivery of power than a V-twin. Good engine balance, plus short stroke and large piston diameter allowed for a high redline and potential top speed.
Besides the engine configuration, the bike had water-cooling, a six-speed transmission for good economy at highway speed, and common on other middleweight bikes for Honda in the early 1980s, shaft drive. While the shaft drive is very convenient with virtually no maintenance required (and no oil getting slung around), it also robbed some power from where it was more evidently lacking on in town or lower speed riding. It also had features like twin horns, hydraulic clutch, and an engine temperature gauge. A coil sprung, oil bath, air preload front fork with anti-dive valving was an improvement, although the Magna did not benefit from the linkage based single shock that was on the Sabre and Interceptor.
The V-65 Magna and other large-displacement Hondas were assembled in the Marysville Motorcycle Plant in Ohio for US delivery and in Japan for other markets.[3] In 2008, Honda announced plans to close the plant, their oldest in North America, in 2009, which had been still making Gold Wings and VTX cruisers.[7]
1982–1984 V45 (VF750C) Magna, 1984–1986 V42 (VF700C) Magna
[edit]This section includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (July 2009) |
Also called | VF750C V45 |
---|---|
Successor | 1984 VF700C Magna |
Engine | 748 cc (45.6 cu in), |
Bore / stroke | 70 mm × 48.6 mm (2.76 in × 1.91 in) |
Compression ratio | 10.5:1 |
Transmission | 6-speed, straight-cut Gears, multi-plate wet clutch, shaft drive. |
Suspension | Front: telescopic anti-dive travel: 5.5in, Rear: swingarm, travel: 3.9in |
Brakes | Front: Dual 10.8in disc Rear: 6.25in drum |
Tires | Front: 110/90-18 Rear: 130/90-16 |
Rake, trail | 30° / 4.1 in |
Wheelbase | 60.6 in |
Dimensions | W: 29 in |
Seat height | 30 in |
Fuel capacity | 3.7 US gallons, including 1 gallon reserve. |
Oil capacity | 3.1 U.S. quarts; 2.9 litres |
Also called | VF750C V45 |
---|---|
Successor | 1985 VF700C Magna |
Engine | 748 cc (45.6 cu in), |
Bore / stroke | 70 mm × 45.4 mm (2.76 in × 1.79 in) |
Compression ratio | 10.5:1 |
Transmission | 6-speed, straight-cut Gears, Multi-plate wet clutch, shaft drive. |
Suspension | Front: telescopic anti-dive, travel: 5.5in, Rear: swingarm, travel: 3.9in |
Brakes | Front: Dual 10.8in disc, Rear: 6.25in drum |
Tires | Front: 110/90-18 Rear: 130/90-16 |
Rake, trail | 30° / 4.1 in |
Wheelbase | 60.6 in |
Dimensions | W: 29 in |
Seat height | 30 in |
Fuel capacity | 3.7 US gallons, including 1 gallon reserve. |
Oil capacity | 3.1 U.S. quarts; 2.9 litres |
Also called | VF700C V42 |
---|---|
Successor | 1987 VF700C Magna |
Engine | 698 cc (42.6 cu in), |
Bore / stroke | 70 mm × 45.4 mm (2.76 in × 1.79 in) |
Compression ratio | 10.5:1 |
Transmission | 6-speed, straight-cut Gears, multi-plate wet clutch, shaft drive. |
Suspension | Front: telescopic anti-dive travel: 5.5in Rear: swingarm, travel: 3.9in |
Brakes | Front: Dual 10.8in disc, Rear: 6.25in drum |
Tires | Front: 110/90-18 Rear: 140/90-15[8] |
Rake, trail | 30° / 4.1 in |
Wheelbase | 60.6 in |
Dimensions | W: 29 in |
Seat height | 28 in |
Fuel capacity | 3.7 US gallons |
Oil capacity | 3.1 U.S. quarts; 2.9 litres |
1982–1984 VF750C and VF700C
[edit]The 1982 V45 Magna has a round chrome headlight and fenders. The headlight is a sealed beam type. The front disc brakes have straight grooves, dual piston calipers, and TRAC anti-dive. The speedometer reads 80 mph and the tachometer indicates a 10,000 rpm redline. The engine is a 748 cc (45.6 cu in) DOHC 16-valve liquid-cooled 90-degree V-4 linked to a six-speed transmission with a hydraulically actuated wet-plate clutch and shaft drive. The compression is 10.5:1. The 1982 V45 covered 1/4 mile in 12.08 seconds at 108.82 MPH.[9]
The 1983 V45 Magna is the same as the 1982 model with few differences. Early in the model year, the headlight was changed to a non-sealed beam unit with a replaceable halogen bulb. The front disc brake grooves are curved. The speedometer reads to 150 mph (240 km/h) but the redline on the tachometer is unchanged. (1983 starting SN JH2RC071*DM100011)
The US government imposed tariff rate hikes for foreign-built motorcycles over 700 cc in order to combat their rise in sales in North America, and to aid the domestic motorcycle manufacturers, namely Harley-Davidson. So for 1984 Honda responded by reducing the engine size for the VF750s to 698 cc by decreasing stroke on all of their 750cc engines, so the Magna became the VF700C in the USA. A side effect of this change was a higher-revving engine (redline now 10,500rpm) with similar power figures as the 750s. In 1984 rev limiters within the CDI units were added as well to help prevent over-revving that was fairly common with the earlier 750 models. The headlight changed from round chrome to a rectangular chrome housing. The seats were changed to a wider & lower 2 piece design in an attempt to improve rider comfort. The rear shocks also changed to eliminate the extra fluid reservoir. The wheels were different as well now being an "open" 5-spoke wheel like Honda's VT500s but with chrome the way around the rim's lip but were the same size. Honda only made the VF700 for 1984, 1985, 1986, and 1987, then back to the VF750 after that. In the first part of 1984, some Magnas were still VF750s though 1984 750s were more common with Interceptors (VF750F).
Models from 1982 to 1984 were unique in their use of a larger primary fuel tank and smaller sub-tank. The sub-tank is located directly behind the left side cover, well below the level of the carburetor banks and has a low-fuel sensor incorporated into the body. Owing to the low seat height (much lower than in a standard street bike) and cruiser styling of the bike, the main tank is relatively small. Because the bottom end of the sub-tank is so low, all bikes in this family have a fuel pump to get the fuel up into the carburetors. In practice, the fuel pump adds more complexity to a carbureted bike which otherwise doesn't need pressure-fed fuel.
1985–1986 VF700C
[edit]For the 1985 and 1986 models, the sub-tank was dropped in favor of a slightly larger and wider main tank. Again because the reserve level of the tank was below the carburetors, the requisite fuel pump and series of fuel lines – although changed – were kept. Also for 1985 and 1986 the previously chrome, round rear fender became a painted single-piece unit much wider and taller like more classic cruisers which allowed for a wider rear tire. 1985 and 1986 saw new wheels too. Some of the trim around the Magna was changed as well, like the addition of a passenger back rest, smaller side covers, slightly lower seat and footpeg positions, brighter instrument cluster, slightly larger airbox covers, lighter front brake rotors, an improved radiator (now with a shut-off valve to greatly ease servicing), new exhaust, and the engine had silver case covers instead of the black prior years had. These engines also had silver aluminum covers over the engine's shaft-drive output while prior years used black plastic covers, the engines were otherwise the same VF700 as 1984 with identical gear ratios and all.
In 1986 some of the parts around the Magna now had the "Magna Bird" emblem present on the airbox covers, the driver seat, and the passenger backrest. For only 1986 the engines had unique cylinder heads, the rear heads now featured a new cosmetic bolt-on piece and while all previous VF700s/VF750s used head bolts and more square valve covers 1986s were revised with line-bored camshaft journals thus taking different camshafts and valve covers. The new valve covers allowed for easier valve-rocker adjustment which would normally be a difficult procedure, but because of the shape head bolts had to be replaced with head studs so 1986 models have chrome acorn nuts where zinc-plated headbolts once were. These were the only changes from 1985 to 1986, the following years of Magnas would be quite different.
1983–1986 V65 (VF1100C) Magna
[edit]Also called | VF1100C |
---|---|
Engine | 1,098 cc (67.0 cu in)[3] |
Power | 116 bhp (87 kW) (claimed)[3][10] |
Torque | 70 lb⋅ft (95 N⋅m) @ 7,500 rpm (claimed)[10][11] |
Transmission | 6-speed, shaft drive[3] |
Tires | Front M110/90-18 tubeless: Rear M140/90-16 tubeless[11] |
Wheelbase | 62.8 in (1,600 mm)[3] |
Dimensions | L: 89.8 in (2,280 mm)[11] W: 31.9 in (810 mm)[11] H: 47.6 in (1,210 mm)[11] |
Weight | 540 lb (240 kg)[11] (dry) 590 lb (270 kg)[3] (wet) |
The large displacement 1,098 cc (67.0 cu in) V65 Magna attracted attention as Honda's entry in the 1/4 mile wars between manufacturers at the time, causing Suzuki to respond with the 1200 Madura (which had a 1/4 mile time of 11.66 s at 115.7 mph), and going up against such competition as the Suzuki GS1150E (10.47 s at 128 mph).[12] The V65 lay somewhere between these two in performance, posting a quarter mile time of 11.29 s at 119.2 mph (191.8 km/h).[3]
The 1983 V65 Magna was tested at a top speed of 224 km/h (139 mph).[13] In a 1983 Popular Mechanics achieved a top speed of 225.49 km/h (140.11 mph), ranking it third of four motorcycles tested, less than 3.2 km/h (2 mph) slower than the Kawasaki GPZ1100 and Suzuki GS1100s.[14]
In spite of this, the V65 Magna appeared from 1986 to 1989 in the Guinness Book of World Records as the fastest production motorcycle with a "design speed" of 278 to 283 km/h (173 to 176 mph).[15][16] During this period the production motorcycle with the fastest tested speed was the 151–158 miles per hour (243–254 km/h) Kawasaki GPZ900R.[17][18][19]
1984–1985 V30 (VF500C) Magna
[edit]Manufacturer | Honda |
---|---|
Also called | VF500C |
Predecessor | V45 |
Class | Cruiser |
Bore / stroke | 60 mm × 44 mm (2.4 in × 1.7 in) |
Compression ratio | 11.0:1 |
Transmission | 6-speed transmission, wet clutch, automatic cam-chain tensioners, self-adjusting hydraulic clutch |
Suspension | Front: leading axle, air adjustable fork, 37 mm tubes, 6.3 in. travel. Rear: dual shock absorbers, 4.3 in travel |
Brakes | Front hydraulic, single disc, twin piston caliper |
Tires | Front 100/90-18 Rear 130/90-16 |
Rake, trail | 35.1° / 4.4 in. |
Wheelbase | 58.4 in (1,480 mm) |
Seat height | 29.9 in (760 mm) |
Fuel capacity | 3.7 gallons / 14 liters |
Oil capacity | 2.6 qt / 2.46 liters |
The Honda VF500 is one of Honda's second generation V4 motorcycle engines produced in a series of motorcycles designated with VF and VFR initials. For 1984–1986, Honda produced the 498 cc, V4 DOHC VF500 for the VF500C Magna V30 (1984/85) and its sister bike, the VF500F (1984–86). This engine is an evolution of Honda's original domestic market 400 cc engine, originally deemed too small and underpowered for certain markets - notably the United States and Europe. Focusing on adding power and versatility to its motorcycle offerings, Honda bored the original 400 cc motor and improved its power and performance. The engine is almost entirely identical to the version in the Interceptor VF500F sport bike, and while Honda sold the VF500C Magna in the United States, it advertised it as the "most powerful midsize custom in the world".[better source needed][20]
This standard motorcycle was introduced as a balanced bike that was just as enjoyable yet easier to ride in town than its larger Magna siblings, with good power and a broad torque band. Thanks to its V4 design, power in the 500 engine is not peaky and ample torque can be found throughout the rev band, and the six-speed transmission ratio was unique to this bike versus the ratio on the VF500F.[better source needed][21] The engine produced between 64 and 68 horsepower, and combined with its low weight and low center of gravity, the bike was lauded by critics as an easy to ride and entertaining motorcycle.[better source needed][21]
The Magna had no shaft drive like its larger siblings, but a traditional chain drive.[better source needed][21]
Specifications
[edit]- Standing-start quarter mile - 12.9 sec at 103 mph
- 0–60 in 3.9 seconds
- 60–0 in 120.6 feet
Changes by year
[edit]- The "HONDA" fuel tank logo was straight in 1984, and curved up in 1985
Facts from Cycle Magazine, July 1984[better source needed][21]
1987–1988 Super Magna (1987 V42 (VF700C) Magna and 1988 V45 (VF750C) Magna)
[edit]This section includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (July 2009) |
Manufacturer | Honda |
---|---|
Also called | Super Magna |
Production | Unknown |
Predecessor | 1986 VF700C Magna |
Successor | 1994 VF750C Magna |
Class | Cruiser |
Engine | 699 cc (42.7 cu in) (1987) / 748 cc (45.6 cu in) (1988) |
Transmission | 6-speed, shaft drive |
Suspension | 39 mm non adjustable fork, dual coil over shocks |
Brakes | Single disc front, drum rear |
Tires | Front: 100/90-19 tubeless, Rear: 150/80-15 tubeless |
Rake, trail | 55°/ 152mm (6.0 in) |
Wheelbase | 1,660 mm (65 in) |
Dimensions | L: 2,360 mm (93 in) W: 810 mm (32 in) H: 1,155 mm (45.5 in) |
Seat height | 27.8 inches (710 mm) |
Fuel capacity | 13 L (2.9 imp gal; 3.4 US gal) |
Various mechanical and cosmetic changes were introduced over the years, but the basic core of the Magna remained the same. The second generation Magna of 1987–1988 was dubbed the Super Magna by aficionados of the bike, though it was not an official Honda name. In 1987, the 699 cc engine produced 80 brake horsepower (60 kW) @ 9,500 rpm, with torque being 46 lb⋅ft (62 N⋅m) @ 7,500 rpm. In 1988, the Magna grew back to its original size of 748 cc.
In countries other than the US, the Magna continued as a 750. The Magna V-four has endured through the first and second generations of the VF and VFR Interceptors - both come and gone by 1988. Like the original 750 Sabre and VF 750, this 750 Magna engine uses a 360-degree crankshaft and chain-driven double-overhead camshafts. Thus, the VF750C unit is technologically quite different from Honda's last V-four sport bike engine, the VFR750 Interceptor, which had gear-driven overhead cams and a 180-degree crankshaft.
The Super's cams are also line-bored (a feature first seen in the Euro 1985 VF1000F & F-II, and 85/86 VF1000R, 1986 VF500F, 1986 VF700C Magna), which greatly reduced the premature cam wear that plagued the earlier models, together with changed oil ducts.
The 1987 V45 Magna was available in either Candy Wave Blue or Candy Bourgogne Red (1988 dropped Blue in favor of Black). For 1987, the fake airbox covers were wrinkle black with a "Magna" emblem. The fake airbox emblem changes to "V45" for the 1988 model.
The 1987 Super Magna had a silver, grey and black Honda "wing" tank decal on the Candy Wave Blue tanks, and a silver, black, and red decal on the Candy Bourgogne Red tanks. The 1988 model had a silver "MAGNA" tank decal.
The exhaust system was now an upswept 4-into-4 set of pipes, truly unique in the cruiser world. Although the exhaust pipes were a beautiful sight, they were not friendly to the use of saddlebags as they were too high. The rear wheel was a solid aluminum disc. The chin fairing was unfinished black plastic for the 87, and color-matched for the 88. The second generation was also the first to have the lower seat height of a mere 27.8 inches (710 mm), more than 4 inches (100 mm) lower than its predecessor. The production numbers of 1987 and 1988 Magnas have never been released by Honda. In 1987 the Super Magna came in red or blue - about 16,000 total were built In 1988 the Super Magna came in red or black - about 3500 total were built
1994–2003 (VF750C) Magna
[edit]This section includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (July 2009) |
Manufacturer | Honda |
---|---|
Also called | VF750C |
Engine | 748.8 cc (45.69 cu in) liquid-cooled 90° V-4 |
Bore / stroke | 70 mm × 48.6 mm (2.76 in × 1.91 in) |
Compression ratio | 10.8:1 |
Top speed | 120 mph (190 km/h)[22] |
Power | 87 bhp (65 kW) (rear wheel)[22] |
Torque | 51.3 ft⋅lb (69.6 N⋅m) (at rear wheel)[22] |
Transmission | 5-speed, O-ring chain |
Suspension | Front: 41 mm cartridge fork; 150 mm travel, Rear: Dual shocks with 5-way spring preload adjustability; 3.9 inches (99 mm) travel |
Brakes | Front: 2-piston caliper, 12.4 inches (310 mm) disc. Rear: Single-leading-shoe drum |
Tires | Tubeless, Front: 120/80-17, Rear: 150/80-15 |
Rake, trail | 32°, 5.2 in (130 mm) |
Wheelbase | 65.0 in (1,650 mm) |
Seat height | 28.0 in (710 mm) |
Weight | 550 lb (250 kg)[22] (wet) |
Fuel capacity | 3.6 US gal (14 L; 3.0 imp gal) |
Oil capacity | 3.3 US qt (3,100 ml) |
The Magna 750 was launched in 1993 as an early release 1994 model. Honda sought to capture the market for powerful cruisers by lifting the engine from the VFR750 and slotting it in a cruiser chassis. The engine itself was beautified by the addition of chrome and some extra fins, and by the chromed 4 into 4 exhaust. The seat was kept very low, at 28 inches, with the passenger seat being detachable. The all new frame was complemented by 41 mm forks, dual shocks, and a single disc on the front. A drum brake was used on the rear. A few internal changes were made to the VFR engine for use in the Magna, including a different crankshaft, a 5-speed transmission and chain driven cams. Smaller carbs were also utilized. The changes resulted in a stronger mid-range pull, and a very broad band of power.
The design of the 3rd-generation Magna remained relatively unchanged over its lifetime. The tank decal was changed in 1995, and a miniature fairing was available on 1995 and 1996 Deluxe models.
2004 saw the demise of the Magna, along with other Honda stablemates such as the V-Twin Shadow ACE and Shadow Spirit, as well as the 6-cylinder Valkyrie.
1994–2003 (VT250C) Magna
[edit]Manufacturer | Honda |
---|---|
Also called | VT250 |
Engine | 250 cc (15 cu in) liquid-cooled 90° V-2, |
Bore / stroke | 60.0 mm × 44.1 mm (2.36 in × 1.74 in) |
Compression ratio | 11.0:1 |
Transmission | 5-speed, final drive: O-ring-sealed chain, multiple wet plate coil spring clutch |
Suspension | Front: telescopic, Rear: swingarm |
Brakes | Front: Hydraulic disc, Rear: Mechanical leading / trailing shoe |
Tires | Tubeless, Front: 120/80–17 61S, Rear: 150/80–15M/C 70S |
Wheelbase | 1,620 mm |
Dimensions | L: 2,315 mm W: 845 mm H: 1,055 mm |
Seat height | 28.0 inches (710 mm) |
Fuel capacity | 11 L (2.4 imp gal; 2.9 US gal) (plus reserve 2.9 L (0.64 imp gal; 0.77 US gal) (0.77 US Gallons) |
Oil capacity | 2.1 Litres (after oil & filter change) |
Notes
[edit]- ^ Holmstrom (2000)
- ^ Bartels (1997)
- ^ a b c d e f g h Mayershon (1985)
- ^ Lawrence (2006)
- ^ Canwest (2009)
- ^ Lawrence, Leah (18 July 2006). "Motorcycling grandmother travels the world". www2.canada.com. The Vancouver Sun. Archived from the original on 9 May 2012. Retrieved 6 October 2013.
- ^ Hannah (2008)
- ^ Manuals v4musclebike.com Archived 2017-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Honda Magna V-45". Cycle World Magazine. May 1982. p. 47.
{{cite magazine}}
: Cite magazine requires|magazine=
(help) - ^ a b "Honda V65 Magna", Cycle World, pp. 48–55, April 1983
- ^ a b c d e f Scott, Ed (1984). Honda : V45 & V65, service, repair, performance (1st ed.). Arleta, Calif.: Clymer Publications. ISBN 0-89287-384-1.
- ^ Ford (1985)
- ^ "Honda V64 Magna; From the Folks Who Brought Us VHD, TRAC, FOIL, and CVCC Comes TBBYES (The Baddest Bike You've Ever Seen)", Cycle World, vol. 22, no. 4, Newport Beach, California: Hachette Filipacchi Media U.S., pp. 49–55, April 1983, ISSN 0011-4286
- ^ Hill, Ray (December 1983), "We Test The World's Fastest Superbikes", Popular Mechanics, pp. 91–, retrieved July 4, 2015
- ^ Russel, Alan; McWhirter, Norris D. (1986), The Guinness book of records, Guinness Superlatives, ISBN 978-0-85112-439-1
- ^ McFarlan, Donald; Boehm, David A. (1988), The Guinness book of records, 1989, Guinness Superlatives, ISBN 978-0-8069-0276-0
- ^ Brown, Roland (2006), The Ultimate History of Fast Motorcycles, Bath, UK: Parragon, pp. 214–215, ISBN 1-4054-7303-7
- ^ Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Field Museum of Natural History, Museo Guggenheim Bilbao (2001), Krens, Thomas (ed.), The Art of the Motorcycle, Guggenheim Museum, ISBN 978-0-8109-6912-4
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Walker, Mick (2006), Motorcycle: Evolution, Design, Passion, JHU Press, pp. 172, 174–5, ISBN 978-0-8018-8530-3
- ^ "Honda VF500 Magna print ad". Retrieved 2008-01-08.
- ^ a b c d "Honda VF500 Magna and Interceptor". Retrieved 2008-01-08.
- ^ a b c d "Performance Index Winter '12/'13 Edition" (PDF), Motorcycle Consumer News, BowTie, January 2013, archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-12-29, retrieved 2016-09-15
References
[edit]- Bartels, Billy (February 20, 1997), First Impression: 1997 Honda 750 Magna, Motorcycle.com
- Canwest News Service (January 29, 2009), "Motorcycling grandma chronicles second leg of worldwide tour", Calgary Herald, archived from the original on May 21, 2015
- Carrithers, Tim (March 2009), "Smart money: 1993-2004 Honda Magna 750.(MC GARAGE)(Product/service evaluation)", Motorcyclist, p. 102
- Cherney, Andy, Honda Magna 750: Heavy-Hitting Middleweight Motorcycle; Honda Magna 750cc – Road Test & Review, Motorcycle Cruiser, archived from the original on 2012-07-19, retrieved 2009-07-13
- Farnsworth, Clyde H. (April 2, 1983), "U.S. RAISES TARIFF FOR MOTORCYCLES", The New York Times., New York, N.Y., p. 1, ProQuest 424627452
- Ford, Dexter; Karr, Jeff (February 1985), "1985 muscle bike buyer's guide", Hot Rod, vol. 38, pp. 82(3)
- Hannah, James (February 27, 2008), "Honda to end motorcycle production in US", Boston Globe, Associated Press
- Holmstrom, Darwin (2001), The Complete Idiot's Guide to Motorcycles (2nd ed.), Alpha Books, p. 321, ISBN 0-02-864258-9
- Holmstrom, Darwin (June 2000), "1983 Honda V45 Interceptor", Motorcyclist, p. 146
- Lawrence, Leah (July 18, 2006), "Motorcycling grandmother travels the world; An Edmonton woman sold everything she owned to finance her trip through Asia, Europe and South America", The Vancouver Sun, archived from the original on May 9, 2012
- Mayershon, Norman (December 1985), "Brute Bikes; Charging through California's Gold Country on the fastest big-bore cruisers being built, our crew test the limits of the machines, the roads and the riders.", Popular Mechanics, pp. 106–9, 139, 142–3
- "V-Max, Lean And Mean Machines; 1994 Honda Magna and 1993 Yamaha", Motorcycle Consumer News, September 1993
- "1999 Honda Magna", Motorcycle Consumer News, July 1999
- Scott, Ed (1984). Honda : V45 & V65, service, repair, performance (1st ed.). Arleta, Calif.: Clymer Publications. ISBN 0-89287-384-1.