| A
HUMBLE START
If the
name Honda doesn't ring a bell with you, chances are you
spent the last 20 years or so working in a cave sorting
mushrooms for a living.
The
real Honda story?the one that's meaningful to us dirt
bike freaks?started here in the United States in 1959.
That's when Soichiro Honda opened up a tiny shop in Los
Angeles. His model line consisted of a number of street
bikes with fenders that looked like pelican beaks.
While
racers think of the more potent dirt bike, most
of America thinks of these units when the name
Honda is mentioned. From left to right:
ST-90, CT-90, CT70 and CT70H K1. |
At the
time his reception was anything but wonderful. His hard-working
salespeople were discouraged as they went around the country
trying to establish dealerships. People were riding Triumphs,
BSAs, Harleys and a wide assortment of British singles.
The
bike riders of that period were considered lunatic-fringe
outcasts. Bikers were divided into three basic groups:
(1) crazed outlaws; (2) racers; (3) a small handful of
people who actually used bikes for transportation and
touring. There was no such thing as trail riding. Why?
Because there were no such things as trail bikes.
All
bikes sold were street bikes; some lent themselves to
being stripped for racing and others were naturals for
being made into choppers. There were a few oddball small
bikes and scooters, like Cushmans and Mustangs, but the
bulk of the bikes sold here were big singles and four-stroke
twins.
YOU MEET THE NICEST PEOPLE ON A WHAT?
So here's
Mr. Honda, with a lineup of small-displacement bikes to
sell, and nobody wanted them. How bad was it?
At the
end of 1959, Honda had sold about 1700 units and had only
15 dealers. The books showed a cash loss of $54,000. At
that point, no one would have dreamed that this small
company would become the dominant force in American motorcycling.
Things were different in Japan, though. That same year
they were struggling like door-to-door sushi salesmen
in the U.S., they became the number-one motorcycle manufacturer
in the world, with unit sales of 500,000.

How many of these are still around? Left
to right: XL175, XL250 and the SL350 K2
|
Many
of Mr. Honda's advisors told him to write off the American
market and concentrate on Europe, where they appreciated
small, reliable, economical and inexpensive bikes. The
combined sales of all motorcycle brands in the U.S. were
a mere 60,000 units a year, and the image of bikers was
a few steps below ugly.
Honda was starting to win road races in Europe,
sales were going up everywhere, and more and more models
were being introduced, but the American market remained
stagnant.

Early on in their advertising, Honda featured
clean-cut people on pleasant little bikes, like
this kid on an ST70. Before Honda, people
though all bikers were greasy thugs. |
This
brought about one of the most famous advertising campaigns
of all time. The phrase "You meet the nicest people on
a Honda!" became a byword, as Honda saturated the market
with advertising.
The
ads showed smiling ladies on cute little bikes with businessmen
wearing suits, riding around with insane grins on their
faces. The image of the greasy-haired thug with unwashed
Levis was effectively being erased. People started to
think in two different directions: there were motorcycles
(ugh!) and then there were the cute little Hondas that
all the swell folks rode around.
Ah yes,
the bikes. Face it, those early Hondas were the elevator
music of motorcycling. They were slow, funny-looking and
boring to ride. But they were also dead-on reliable. Hondas
did not drip oil on your garage floor, they didn't fling
oil on your pants, the electrical systems were marvels
of reliability and the fit and finish were worlds superior
to every other motorcycle on the market.
You
didn't have to be a mechanical whiz to ride a Honda; all
you had to do was know where to put the gas. Check the
oil? Naw! Just ride the sucker. And if you parked it behind
the Buick for a month or so, it would still start easily
and sit there idling like a field mouse snoring.
They
were cheap, got great mileage and never broke. Even the
dealer network was different. Honda shops did not have
Sacramento Mile posters on the walls. They were not dark,
dank places with leaking cans of Castrol on the shelves.
Instead, they were bright, cheerful places with a lineup
of brightly colored little bikes on display.
Want
a test ride, sir?
No problem.
Try
the same thing at a Harley or a Triumph shop and they'd
fling you out the door in front of a passing bus.
IMMEDIATE RESPONSE
The
big push clearly worked. By 1963, Honda's U.S. sales were
up to 150,000 units. Things were on a roll, In 1961, some
genuinely nifty bikes appeared, with the racy names of
Hawk and Scrambler.
Small Hondas started appearing on the bumper racks
of campers and motor homes. Retired folks, who would never
consider themselves bikers, were buying Trail 50s and
Super Cubs by the carloads. They used these street-legal
bumblebees to flit around campgrounds and to wander out
to their favorite fishing spots.
Trail riding in the United States was born, and
these little bikes let it happen!
The
rest is history. Honda continued to bring out more and
better models, then real true dirt bikes. By the time
the dirt bike boom started (1968), Hondas were everywhere!
They were being raced in the desert, trail-ridden all
across the country, hammered in enduros and hyper-tuned
for TT tracks and scrambles.
During this period of rampant growth, certain Honda
models were landmarks... very important bikes that were
breakthroughs. To keep things even, Honda also produced
some real losers. So let's take a look in the past (completely
ignoring the street bikes and ATVs, simply because they
bore me) and have some fun.
FABULOUS '50s!

Sold by the boatload: the CA100T Trail 50, first
built in 1961. |
In 1961
the CA 100T Trail 50 (Trail Cub) appeared in school parking
lots, retirement villages and on the backs of motor homes
in droves. The tiny 50cc four-stroke engine was mated
to a three-speed with an automatic clutch. It looked like
a pair of pipe bombs glued together with the engine hanging
down low like an afterthought.
The
step-through frame let ladies with skirts ride it without
getting arrested, and acceleration and top speed just
about guaranteed no tickets.
During that same time, there was also a C110 Super
Sports Cub that looked more like a real motorcycle, even
though it shared most of the power train of the Trail
50. It had a high pipe and a gas tank in the normal location.
The manual clutch definitely gave it a more sporting nature,
but still, most any kid on a Schwinn could out-accelerate
it.

The hot
seller in 1968 was the little A50 MiniTrail 50. |
The
first real minibike from Honda made exclusively for the
dirt was the Z50 Mini-Trail in 1968. Looking much like
a deformed bug, the three-speed unit had fold-up handlebars
so the bike could be easily stuffed in the trunk of a
car.
With
a total sale of 450,000 units, the
Z50 still holds the record as American Honda's all-time
best-selling bike, and is responsible for introducing
off-roading to more youngsters than any other single model.
After a dozen years of virtually unchanged 50cc
trail bikes, in 1974 Honda brought out a stunning package,
the MR 50 Elsinore. It had real knobbies, a three-speed
gearbox, looked every inch like a miniature race bike
and, wonder of wonders, it was a two-stroke. A whole bunch
of happy kids learned how to trail ride on this tiny beauty.
SMALL STUFF: 60cc to 90cc

The first
of the minis to look like a real bike was the CT70
Scrambler in 1970. |
In the
late '60s, kids all over American smuggled bike magazines
into study hall and salivated over the ads for the Honda
Scramblers. The CL90 ( from 1967 to 1969) and the CL70
(from 1969 to 1973) housed overhead cam four-stroke singles
with four-speed gearboxes. Any kid lucky enough to have
one was Big Man On Campus.

This was the bike that found its way to the bumper
rack of countless motorhomes: the CT70 Trail,
built in 1972. |
Another innocuous trail bike became available in
1969. The CT70, known popularly as the trail 70, was yet
another unbreakable fat-tired machine. Powered by a 72cc
four-stroke with a three-speed auto clutch (or four-speed
manual clutch), this high-piped unit was a favorite of
hunters and fishermen, as well as fortunate kids.
Although the CT70 remained basically unchanged
from 1969 to its last year in 1982, it ranks as Honda's
third best selling model with over 380,000
units sold.

The SL70
Motosport was considered a serious mini in 1971. |
A fabulous
small play bike was introduced in 1971, called the SL70
Motosport. It was a genuine small motorcycle, with a tube
frame and all the right stuff, including a four-speed
gearbox. Numerous versions of this jewel were made through
1976, although it took on the XL designation in 1974.
| 
Hoo-hah! The XR75; every kid had one,
or wanted one.
|
The
most popular bike of the mid-70s was the famed XR75 mini-bike.
While it has some flaws, like the footpeg mounts, it was
largely a bullet-proof bike that would survive the thrashing
of the most ham-fisted kid. Doting fathers spent small
fortunes turning the reliable XRs into unreliable high-revving
machines. It was not uncommon to see and extra two grand
or more sunk into hop-up parts. By 1979, the XR75 grew
into the XR80.

Here's one for the ages: the XR80 is still
the same basic unit from 1979 to this date, except
for suspension and graphic changes. That tells
you the original package was right on target. |
From
1964 through 1986, Honda produced an almost endless line
of Trail 90s, all with the prefix, CT. All of them had
frames that wiggled like fishing worms and the limpest
chrome shocks ever seen this side of a cheap screen door.
For over 20 years, very little changed on the CT, except
for a displacement increase to 110cc in 1980.
HAPPY 100s?
Following through on a theme of natural progression.
Honda built larger versions of all the small bikes. A
staggering variety of 100cc dirt bikes (yes, and street
bikes) started in 1970 and continue today. Honda figured
out early in the game how to capture customers at the
introductory levels and it paid off.
Of the
bewildering number of models, a few stand out and a few
more are confusing as to why they existed at all. Example:
in 1970 they made a CL100 Scrambler and an SL100 Motosport.
The Scrambler had a high pipe and low fenders, while the
Motosport had high fenders and a low pipe. You figure
it out.
The
delightful XR100 debuted in 1981. More of these great
units were bought for girlfriends and wives than any other
bike we know of. The 100 was large enough to allow a full-sized
person to ride it comfortably, yet mellow enough for a
beginner to learn on.
In 1980
a real racing minibike was brought out to head-to-head
with the YZ80: the CR80R Elsinore. Blood-red, the mini-Elsinore
had a six-speed box and a punchy two-stroke engine.
The
1983 and 1984 model years saw a genuine 60cc mini racer
that looked just like the big bikes. Named the CR60R,
this astonishing bike featured a six-speed gearbox and
had plenty of beans. It was not for the beginner and a
number of learning riders got some wide eyes and unexpected
wheelies on the CR.
125s TO GO!
Probably no single article in the history of Dirt
Bike Magazine generated as much hate mail as did my
test report on the 1973 SL125. The title to the story
said it all: "The SL125 Turtle Chaser?Honda's Inoffensive
Little FooFoo Bike?"
Popular
stuff: SL-70K, SL100 K3 and the SL125
|
The
first paragraph of the test no doubt had readers scrambling
for a pen and paper to tell us off. It read: "Yup, the
125 Honda is the pokiest bike we have tested to date.
It's probably the slowest full-sized dirt bike in existence.
Word has it that even the SL100 will blow its doors off."
The
test report was even more caustic: "If you put a wrench
on the engine twice a year, it will last forever and ever.
One reason for this is because it's gutless. As a rule,
the more horsepower the engine develops, the higher the
wear factor. Since the SL125 develops no power, there
is no wear. Clever, those Honda fellers."
It got
worse as we ragged on the bike: "We asked American Honda
what the factory claims in the way of horsepower. 'Honda
doesn't claim any horsepower,' was the reply. We found
that alarmingly accurate."
THE TRIALS FIASCO
Someone told all of the Japanese manufacturers
that trials was the hot ticket in 1973, so Honda brought
out a TL125 Trials bike. It sold like stale bread. But
then, so did all of the other trials bikes from Japan.
There are still some of them in warehouses and dealerships
from the mid-'70s, unsold.
THE SHOCKER!
After a mind-numbing series of hopelessly dull
street and Scrambler (?) 125s, Honda made up for
it all with a staggeringly good bike, the 1973 CR125M
Elsinore. Everybody raved about it: "Testing Honda's
20-Horsepower Feather!" screamed the cover lines

The 125 Elsinore was an astonishing breakthrough
and made everyone else re-think their racing machines. |
The
baby Elsinore sold for $749 and I had this to say
about the bike: "We suspect it'll be around 1000 bucks
. . . even if it were 1200 bucks, it would be the bike
to buy. And the reason is simple: it is the best . . .
125 you can buy, regardless of price." This was back when
only the most exotic 125s were in the one thousand dollar
range.
For
its day, the specs were awesome: 7.1 inches of fork travel
and 4.1 at the rear, 19.7 hp@8000 rpm, 188 pounds with
a half-tank of gas, a six-speed close-ratio gearbox and
brakes that actually worked.
Only
a few flaws were evident: the swing-arm pivots were junk
plastic and had to be replaced with bronze bushings, the
shocks faded in 20 minutes and the gearbox lost second
gear every now and then. But other than those, it did
everything in a brilliant fashion.
My quote
in the last paragraph of that test was strong enough to
get us in big trouble with other manufacturers: "Honda
is left with only one problem: How are they going to make
enough of them? The rest of the manufacturers are left
with another problem: What can they do to justify the
existence of their offerings?"
In 1974,
Honda built a semi-sort of an enduro bike, the MT125 Elsinore.
It looked right, the specs read right and, on paper, would
make a great enduro bike. Unfortunately, it was not much
faster than a melting iceberg and was discontinued after
two more years. No one missed it.
For
1981 the 125 Elsinore got water cooling. It also got slower,
heavier and single-shocked. For half of the season the
1980 bikes outran it.
The
125 Elsinore evolved slowly until 1982, when the legendary
"Elsinore" name was dropped and the bikes simply became
known as CRs. In 1984, another highlight in the CR line
was introduced. This 125 had KYB forks and shocks, unlike
the Showa units normally used by Honda.
It's
no secret that the reason Honda uses Showa forks and shocks
is because they own controlling interest in that company.
It's also no secret that Showa never made a truly great
shock, up to this very day. We have no idea why they used
the KYB suspenders for this one year only, but they worked
. . . and the bike worked!
A few
of the early 125s came through with a faulty ATAC system,
but most of them were delivered with the right setup and
nothing could stay with them in 1984. In 1985, it was
back to Showa and shock woes.
The
1987 CR125?wow! Disc brakes at both ends, case induction,
cartridge forks, a blistering motor, scalpel-sharp turning
and styling that was a decade ahead of everything else.
Sure it shook and shuddered at high speeds over bumps,
but remember, this powerhouse was built for MX.
The
'88 and '89 CR125 undoubtedly had the best 125cc mill
ever offered to the public up to that time, and became
a standard.
BEYOND THE SMALL STUFF
After the almost bewildering offering of small
bore machines, let's take a look the larger offerings,
from 160 to 600cc, starting with the 160-200cc machines.
In 1966,
Honda built a tight, decent bike called the CL160 Scrambler.
A number of them received light modifications and were
competitive in the 200 Class in enduro and scrambles work.
This high-piped unit was as close to unbreakable as any
bike ever made.

High pipes and higher revs were the trademark CL175
Scrambler in 1973. |
By 1969
Honda sensed the demand for a larger, more refined machine
and released the CLI75. Honda responded to the surge in
off-road riding with a high-fendered CL175 in the same
year.
Dirt
bikers wanted an even more off-roadworthy mount in this
size class and Honda gave them the SL175 in 1970. It used
the strong, high-revving CL175 twin and had contemporary
dirt bike styling for the period.
The
Honda stepped on their corporate pecker with the XL175
in 1973. It was a real pile, leading me to run a photo
of a large white pig right next to the bike in a pigpen.
The subtitle of the test, in rather large type, said,
"AT $2.98 A POUND, THIS IS EXPENSIVE PORK."
Still, a lot of folks loved the XL175. I hated
it. Not only was it hopelessly slow, it was also the only
four-stroke we ever tested that fouled plugs regularly.
The regular testers were unable to climb even moderate
hills. Some say that we got the legendary "lemon," but
we rode others and remained in the full yawn mode.
In 1975,
the MRI75 was released. A promising looking machine, the
MR was based on the immensely successful CR125. It tacked
the thrust of the CR and its six-speed gearbox. As a result,
it made a better play bike than an enduro racer
The
1979 XL185S proved to be a surprisingly good trail bike,
in spite of being laden with a dash like a jukebox.
Many a rider stripped it down, put on knobby tires and
ended up with a great street-legal trail bike.

The XR200 was a solid beginners bike in 1980, and
remains so to this day. |
Another highlight appeared in 1980. The XR200 turned
out to work well in the woods and for all-around trail
riding. It was a six-speed four-stroke single with no
bad manners and a deceptively good powerband. By
slapping on a set of decent shocks and good tires, a number
of "B" riders won enduros. For decades, the XR200 remained
a solid trail bike
THE MIDDLEWEIGHT CLASS?250cc
From
1959 through the mid '60s, most people thought of Hondas
as models with butt-ugly fenders and styling with names
like "Dream?" The styling was, indeed, a nightmare, a
variation of a dream.
The
first "real" 250 offered by Honda was the 1961 CL72 Scrambler,
or its more street-oriented brother, the CB72 Hawk. The
Scrambler became the recipient of knobbies, wider bars,
Snuff-Or-Not exhaust tips (little flappers placed in the
end of straight pipes that could be opened for racing
and closed for quiet street use), and getting a stripdown
for racing use.
This
247cc, four-speed, OHC, dual-carbed engine cranked out
lots of good power and, even better, emitted a throaty
rasp when you revved it high. I raced one in an enduro
in Ohio, and did pretty well until I hit a log and stuffed
my head into the mud. Back then, we didn't realize that
skinny chromed shocks and wimpy forks affected handling.
There were a handful of truly remarkable bikes
in the last 40 years, and one of the landmark machines
has to be the 1972 XL250 Motorport. This four-valve single
used a single overhead cam to operate its valves. It made
respectable power, but overall performance was marred
by serious heft. Nonetheless, the machine's dependability
and quietness gave it a mass cult following among woodsmen
and trail riders. The XL250, in it's many forms, continued
so be sold for many years.
IT CHANGED MOTOCROSS FOREVER!

Breakthrough! The 250 Elsinore set new standards
for all other bikes of that period.
Side note: the rider in the advertising
photo was none other than legendary desert ace,
J.N. Roberts. |
A milestone
happened in 1973, when the Honda CR250M Elsinore was released
to the public. And the public went wacko! This bike was
pure, unadulterated dynamite!
How
good was it? Well, in mid-1973, I sold my 501 Maico and
went out and bought a brand-new 250 Elsinore. Almost immediately,
I started actually winning motocross races in the 250
Junior class. Amazing!
This
sleek, lightweight beauty had a polished aluminum tank,
a raspy motor with bags of midrange punch, a slim midsection
and styling that had the riders of that era gasping and
reeling in circles. Not only that, the forks worked better
than anything Japan had ever offered and the shocks were
good for about 20 minutes?until they got hot.

The 250 Elsinores not only worked in motocross,
but started to win in the desert, as well.
Here, Mitch Mayes puts one through the paces at
the Ponderosa desert course in 1973. |
It weighed
in at a wafting light 214 pounds and had 7.1 inches of
travel up front, which was state-of-the-art at that time
in ancient dirt biking history. The dyno showed that the
Elsinore pulled a staggering rear wheel 28 horsepower,
about three more than anything else short of a flat-out
TT bike.
How
good was the 250 Elsinore? It was best answered when a
Honda rep, George Ethridge, was asked: "George, are you
guys trying to put everyone else out of business?"
"Nope," he replied, "we're just trying to make
them get a whole lot better."
THE TRIALS FLOP – 250 STYLE
Everybody babbled about how hot the sport of trials
was in 1975, and all of the major manufacturers brought
out 250 trials bikes. The purists in the sport continued
buying their Spanish bikes and made fun of anyone who
showed up on a Japanese trials bike, even though major
teams were fielded. The TL250 Trials by Honda, a trim
four-stroke, languished on the showroom floors like all
the rest. The "boom" turned out to be a bust, in spite
of all of the Japanese trials bikes being solid, reliable
units.
A
DECENT ENDURO BIKE
In 1976,
an enduro version of the Elsinore, the MR250, appeared
on the scene. It had a big 3.4-gallon tank, lights, quiet
muffler, real knobby tires, wide-ratio gearbox and shared
many of the same parts as the pure racing Elsinore. Many
enduro and desert riders modified the MRs with CR parts
and loved their mounts. Strangely, the MR was in production
only one year.
Time
passed (as it has a way of doing) and 1978 was suddenly
upon us. And with that year came the 1978 CR250R Elsinore
with the laydown shocks and long travel at both ends.
They called it the Red Rocket and, indeed, it was fast.
It looked sleek and very works-like and riders beat each
other with clubs to get the first ones on the showroom
floors. Honda also cranked up their national racing team
efforts at a crazed pace during this time frame, making
instant legends out of numerous riders.
A
BETTER THAN DECENT ENDURO BIKE
A very
solid bike appeared unexpectedly in 1979 and put a dent
in the XL sales. The XR250 was an enduro-ready bike with
less weight and clutter than the street-legal XL. The
only strange thing about it was the 23-inch front wheel,
a fad that lasted two short years. Still, the bike was
good and had plenty of potential for responding to minor
hop-ups. With a good pair of shocks and some weekend tuning,
they started winning enduros and hare scrambles.
In 1981,
a single-shocked version of this model was an instant
hit. Again, oddly, they went with an off-size wheel, this
time a 17-inch rear for some unexplained reason. It's
still a good bike that keeps getting better each year.
STRANGE THINGS
After three years of no-change, Honda went berserko
in 1981 and made one of the all-time flopperoos of the
'80s. The '81 Elsinore was water-cooled, single-shocked
and had more trick features on it than a space shuttle.
Unfortunately, it was also ill-handling and stalled easier
than a first-date proposal.
Next
year, they got better, but ran head-on into the 1982 Suzuki
RM250 and got plowed under the back 40 without the benefit
of a military funeral.
THE HANNAH YEARS
Bob
Hannah moved from Yamaha to Honda in 1983, and Honda moved
from a bland bike to a great one. The CR250R for '83 not
only did it right, they did it when all the other 250s
(with the sole exception of KTM's 250) stepped in a nuclear
cow-pie. Even Suzuki showed suicidal tendencies with their
'83 versions, turning last year's missile into a mistake.
Bad
news for 1985. In an attempt to come up with a bike to
compete against the punchy YZ250 powerband, they brought
out a CR250 that put out a nasty little burst right off
idle, then signed off and turned into a snail. It also
shook the steering head like a snake on a hotplate, stalled
easier than a window fan with a shoe stuck in it, had
a shock that faded riding to the starting line, confused
jetting, no horsepower, limp forks and a gearbox that
shredded gears like popcorn.
Aftermarket folks were able to turn it into a competitive
bike, but the cost was staggering; 1985 will not be remembered
fondly for a memorable 250CR.
In 1987,
Honda put it all together for a truly brilliant 250 racer.
The '87 CR had the best set of cartridge forks ever, including
current models. Disc brakes appeared at both ends, the
rear suspension was decent (and approached perfection
with an aftermarket shock) and the motor did it all, pulling
strong and smooth everywhere.
Whoops! The very next year, they screwed up the
1987 winner with a weak and confused Delta Link rear suspension,
harsh forks and a wretched shock. Back to the drawing
board.
Since the Hannah years, the CR 250s have been refined
steadily and have always had a seriously good motor, and
cursed with less than stellar suspension. A few years
ago, they rocked the world with the first production aluminum
frame for MXers with the CR line. They retain the rocket
red looks and incredible attention to detail.
ALMOST A BIG BIKE: 251cc THROUGH 450cc
From
1965 through 1968, a bike called the CL77 305 Scrambler
caught the fancy?and the not-so-fancy?of the public. Lots
of them got stripped down, Snuff-Or-Nots were jammed in
the exhaust tips and real knobby tires got wrapped around
the rims. With open pipes, it emitted a bloodcurdling
sound as the revs rose. The engine?a four-stroke twin?was
as reliable as a claw hammer and the performance was exhilarating.
Back then we never realized how truly bad they handled,
because we were having too much fun.
The
305 was replaced in 1968 with a much more serious version,
the CL350 Scrambler. Trimmer, slimmer and much more dirt-oriented,
this rig got stripped, hopped-up and tuned for racing
just about everywhere from the desert to the TT tracks
of the nation. And guess what? It did great. Many a Baja
event was won from the saddle of a 350 Scrambler.

Dismissed by many as nothing more than a heavy
playbike, the SL350 was a decent bike that you couldn't
break with a hammer. |
Even
though the 350 Scrambler hung around for another five
years, it was put on the back burner by the 1969 SL350
Motosport, a 325cc four-stroke twin that came with dirt
tires and styling. Many magazines wrote it off as yet
another overweight, useless Honda pseudo-dirt bike. However,
I went back to a national enduro in Ohio and saw several
of these units being used quite well in the water and
mud. Strip some of the junk off them, slip on some good
tires and shocks and they would go anywhere and keep on
running with little or no maintenance. They provided many
a rider with affordable fun and we gained a new respect
for the SL350.
BIGGER XLs

When
the XL350 came out in 1974, the engine builders
went nuts and had the boring bars working overtime. |
The
XL350 four-stroke single appeared in 1974. In stock trim,
it was ponderous. ill-handling and boring. But with some
clever work, many of them were turned into fine dirt bikes.
Some riders spent buckets of money on trick frames and
hyper engines, but as nice as these machines were to ride,
they were very unreliable when heavily tweaked.

A highly underrated bike, the XR350 (1983) was easy
to ride and would last forever if you changed the
oil often and did not overheat it. |
A single-shocked
pair of 350s were offered to the public in 1984, the XL
and XR 350. They were immediate hits and also filled out
Honda's four-stroke line completely. In the real world
of performance, though, the 250 was a superior bike in
most conditions.

Big and fast, the 1967 CB450 Super Sport Scrambler
gave the British bikes fits at the races. |
The
last vestiges of the bloated 1968 CL450 Scrambler hung
around until 1974 and the K6 model. It was a 444cc twin
four-stroke DOHC with huge chromed high pipes loaded with
excess weight and more chrome than a toaster plant.
FIRST BIG TWO STROKE

Bummer! The CR450R Elsinore offered in 1981,
did nothing right. |
For
years. the dirt biking public had been demanding a real
big-bore racer from Honda. Jeez, every other builder had
one why not Big Red? So, in 1981, they brought out?with
great fanfare?the CR450R Elsinore.A few magazines wrote
wonderful things about it: "cat-quick and grizzly-tough''
and ''... the best Open class MXer ever built ..." that
kind of stuff.
When
I tested a CR450R (actually a 431cc bike), I was shocked
and disappointed. The R came with a four-speed gearbox
that was always in the wrong place at the awkward time.
No combination of gearing let it work comfortably. It
stalled easily, moved around like rubber ice skates, shook
the steering head like someone had left out the bearings
and the rear end hopped around madly after the shock faded,
which took about eight minutes of hard riding. It also
had a front number plate that looked like a giant hangnail.
THE BIG FOUR STROKES

Here's the beast that started a revolution in Baja
and on the fire-roads of the world: the 1981
Baja XR500R. |
Two
important models were made available in 1979, the XR500
and the XL500S. Both were powered by a 498cc four-valve
single and both had another strange front wheel: a 23-incher.
They were heavy, but powerful, and both received all sorts
of modifications.
Many
XL owners stripped their bikes down and kept the license
plate on it, using it for day-to-day, transportation,
as well as trail riding. It was one of the few street-legal
bikes that could cruise comfortably with high speed traffic.

Like many people, I bought and built an XR500 into
something fast and unreliable. |
In 1981,
the XR500 got the single shock treatment and I bought
one to use as a Project Bike. It got a C&J frame,
every engine mod available and the best suspension components
available. We built it so hyper that all it did was blow
up.
I'd
fix it, then blow it up and fix it and blow it up again,
until I got sick of looking at it.

Honda gave people the XR600 in 1985, so we didn't
have to spend a fortune hopping-up the engine.
But we all did anyway. |
Honda got the boring bar out and made the XL500
into the XL600R in 1983. Some riders loved 'em and others
hated 'em, but they sure made an impact. By 1985 you could
buy a 600cc XR.
Al Baker
and a few others learned how to modify the 600s for relatively
low bucks and turned more than a few into Baja winners.
With good suspension parts and thoughtful engine tuning,
the XR remained heavy, but had enough pure horsepower
to work well at GPs and cross-country racing. A steady
evolvement of the big XR continues to this very day and
they are still tall, fast, heavy and reliable bikes.
FINALLY, A GOOD BIG BORE TWO-STROKE
A proper
big-bore racer finally appeared in 1982. The ill-fated
450 was happily gone and a decent CR480R replaced it.
In spite of still being handicapped with a four-speed
box, it was an excellent bike and got even better in 1983,
when they refined it greatly and slipped in a five-speeder.

Big difference! The CR500 (1984) was a very
fast, powerful bike. |
After a few solid years, the big Honda CR turned
weird in 1984. The Ping King appeared, designated the
CR500R. No one could get rid of the detonation, it stalled
constantly, restarted when it felt like it and shook like
a Slinky toy at high speeds over rough ground.
Once
the CR500 got water-cooled, the very next year, it became
a much better bike and has been getting small improvements
right up to 2001.
THE DOMINATING FOUR STROKES
The
90s saw the continuing evolution of the XR600 (and its
street legal brother the XL 650), but the wildly successful
XR400 became the bike of choice for untold thousands of
riders.
We saw
the last of the XR600 last year, and of course, Honda
brought out the mighty XR650 two years ago.
|