Japanese magazine, Young Machine never ceases to
impress, and the render experts are back with another digitally created
motorcycle that is strikingly remarkable. In their latest creation, the
Japanese magazine has imagined a cafe racer, christened GB1000TT, which draws
styling cues from the CB4 Interceptor concept motorcycle. The motorcycle
displays Honda’s latest Neo Sports Café design that set the theme for the new
generation CB1000R, CB650R, CB300R and the CB150R ExMotion.
The retro theme gets a modern touch with elements
such as LED headlight, single-sided swingarm, Ohlins suspension and Brembo
brakes. The CB4 Interceptor concept inspired fascia receives the addition of
the round headlight from the CB1000R. The illuminator is cocooned inside a
semi-fairing design. The top of the fairing gets a compact wind-deflector with
a tinted finish while the sides receive a winglet style setup that adds a
sporty look to the package. The front blinkers have been integrated into the
fairing design.
A clip-on style handlebar offers forward leaning
ergonomics that are a typical cafe-racer trait. The fuel tank recesses further
enhance the retro styling with offering a good amount of space to lock-in the
knees. A rider-only saddle follows the tank while the pillion seat is replaced
with a rear cowl. Close inspection reveals the similarity between the split
style saddle on the CB1000R and the cafe racer render.
The motorcycle rides on wire-spoke wheels that get a
cross-spoke design to enable the installation of tubeless tyres. A similar
style is seen on wire-spoke wheels from BMW Motorrad and Ducati. Do note that
Honda uses a similar cross-spoke wheel design on its X-ADV adventure scooter.
The single-sided swingarm gives the concept cafe racer a proper exotic look
while the rear tyre hugger mounted number plate provides the tail with a clean
appearance.
Shock absorption department is handled by
upside-down telescopic forks at the front while at the rear is a monoshock –
both imagined with Ohlins sourced hardware. Stopping power comes from Brembo
sourced callipers that grab twin discs at the front and a single disc at the
rear.
The most exciting bit, however, is the engine on the
rendered motorcycle. Young Machine has created the cafe racer with a
twin-cylinder motor instead of the in-line four-pot engine that was seen on the
CB4 Interceptor Concept and the CB1000R. The magazine has imagined the
motorcycle with a parallel twin-cylinder engine and the only product in Honda’s
portfolio to feature that setup is the Africa Twin. The litre-class Africa Twin
gets a 270-degree crank that gives it a V-Twin character in a parallel-twin
cylinder format.
We believe that Honda would retain the 998cc, in-line
four-cylinder, liquid-cooled, DOHC motor from the CB1000R that delivers a
healthy 143 bhp of power at 10,500 rpm and 104 Nm of peak torque at 8,250 rpm.
It should be noted that Honda has not made any announcement about a semi-faired
cafe racer. If the motorcycle turns into reality, it would be a homage to the
GB series from the yesteryear.