Honda Neo Sports Café Concept Shown In Paris
After the 1000, it's the turn of the 650
While most of the motorcycle world’s attention was turned on the Intermot scene in Cologne, Honda decided instead to take advantage of the Paris Motorshow platform to unveil yet another Neo Sports Café concept. After introducing the CB1000R last year, this time we’re getting a suspected replacement for the CB650F.
In November 2017, the Neo Sports Café introduced a new visual language for Honda’s naked bikes. The styling was dramatically different—the arrow-shaped cowl was replaced with a massive round headlight with a distinct circle LED light and the wide radiator at front of the engine. The lines of the silhouette were made softer and rounder, giving the model a bit of a retro vibe. Honda wasted no time: shortly after it was unveiled as a concept, the model landed in showrooms, ready to hit the road.
This year, it’s the CB650’s turn to receive a similar treatment and the F will be replaced by the new R. The design contrast is even more dramatic on the smaller displacement model. It loses its cowl as well, replaced by the now-signature round LED headlight. Though the wheelbase remains more or less the same length, the model’s silhouette is shorter and more compact. At the front, the fork looks significantly longer
We suspect the engine will be the same 649cc inline four already in use in the current CB650F, if the block tilted at 60-degree and the four-swooping exhaust pipes aren’t enough of a giveaway, with the difference that the new CB650R is getting a dual exhaust tip.
If the timeline for the introduction of the Honda CB1000R last year is any indication, we could possibly see the CB650R on the market as early as Spring 2019. Whether a toned-down, production-ready model will be shown in Milan at EICMA remains to be seen.
Source: Honda
Gallery: Honda Neo Sports Café Concept CB650R
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
Turning A Vintage Honda Motorbike Into a Go-Fast Sleeper? Sign Us Up
Piaggio's 25-Year-Old Scooter Idea Somehow Still Makes Sense Today
This ADV Scooter Comes Packed With Features And Is Under $2,000. We'll Never See It
Who Steals Motorcycles From A Riding School In Spring? Someone In Alaska, Apparently
Honda Is Bringing The CB1000F To The US. Clearly, It Wants To Print Money.
Harley's Stock Has Only Risen Since Indian Motorcycle's Attack Ad Campaign
Behold, This Is What Honda's 2026 Suzuka 8 Hours Entry Looks Like. Sanrio Fans Rejoice!