Author Topic: New CRF 450 for 2019  (Read 8523 times)

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zebulon

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New CRF 450 for 2019
« on: July 24, 2018, 13:16:20 »
Honda Motor Europe is pleased to announce its off-road line-up for 2019, featuring upgrades across the entire range, and the addition of two brand new names to the CRF family.

The flagship CRF450R moto-crosser – and its cross-country sibling the CRF450RX – both benefit from a stronger shot of top-end power and torque; for the CRF250R, one year after a full model change, performance upgrades focus on bottom-end torque for even better drive out of slower speed corners. Two brand new models for 2019 bring even greater depth to the CRF family: the cross country-spec. CRF250RX and dual-purpose, fully road-legal CRF450L.

Model details:

CRF450L **NEW MODEL**

Using the CRF450R moto-crosser as a base, Honda’s new dual-purpose motorcycle has a tough, lightweight chassis built to find all the available grip, powered by an engine that delivers strong, usable power right from the bottom. While offering maximum enjoyment for the off-road hobby rider, the CRF450L is also fully street legal and street-ready, with sidestand, increased fuel tank volume and all-LED lighting. Durable, high quality parts and long service intervals – with a first major service at 32,000km – aim for a worry-free riding and ownership experience.

CRF450R

The CRF450R receives a major performance boost: 1.8kW more power and 2Nm more torque, plus stronger power delivery throughout the rev range thanks to a revised cylinder head, intake and exhaust. It also gets 3-level HRC Launch Control and durability upgrades. The chassis features revised suspension settings, redesigned front brake caliper, detailed weight-saving updates (shaving 0.9kg) and Renthal Fat Bar handlebar which sits on a new top yoke adjustable for four positions.

CRF450RX

Like the CRF450R moto-cross machine, the cross country CRF450RX receives a major boost of top-end power and torque for its engine, and 3-level HRC Launch Control. While still featuring 18-inch rear wheel and 8.5-litre fuel tank, the chassis now offers a revised rigidity balance, new suspension settings, plus Renthal Fat Bar handlebar with 4-way adjustability and new black rims.

CRF450L
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Jyrays

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #1 on: July 24, 2018, 13:33:53 »
I been looking it for quite sometime  VCIF_ThumbUp

 But  >:(

3.1 Engine
Peak power is 18.4kW, with peak torque of 32Nm

Based on the CRF450R, with first major service at 32,000km
EURO4 compliant, with electric start
Greater crank inertia improves drivability and feel for traction
6-speed gearbox

3.2 Chassis

Drawn from the 18YM CRF450R, with minor adaptations for its dual purpose role
Full LED lighting, increased fuel tank volume and sidestand
Larger radiator volume, plus electric fan
Styling closely mirrors that of CRF450R

Seat Height 940mm

Ground Clearance 315mm

Kerb Weight 130.8kg
Current: HONDA CRF1000L Tricolor DCT
Honda NC700X DCT
Past: Honda VFR 1200 X Crosstourer / Honda SLR 650 / HONDA XLV 1000 Varadero / Honda XR 650 R / KTM 640 LC4 / Honda CB1100 / Yamaha XJ 850 / Honda CB 500 1977...

zebulon

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #2 on: July 24, 2018, 13:39:25 »
Complete specs:

New model updates: Using the CRF450R moto-crosser as a base, Honda’s new road-legal dual-purpose motorcycle has a tough, lightweight chassis built to find all the available grip, powered by an engine that delivers strong, usable power right from the bottom. Durable, high quality parts and long service intervals aim for a worry-free riding and ownership experience.

 

Contents:

1 Introduction

2 Model overview

3 Key features

4 Technical specifications

 

1. Introduction

 

 

A true dual-purpose motorcycle should be many things; off-road it needs to be light weight, with quality suspension and handling ability that keeps life easy as the going gets harder. Its engine has to make good power and torque from the bottom up – the sort that is supremely usable, allowing the rider to find all the rear wheel grip possible, whatever the terrain.

 

All the attributes that make it great fun off-road also enable it to be really useful around town; narrow and nimble, a dual-purpose machine slips through gaps, soaks up the hits from rough roads and stays well ahead of traffic thanks to smart, low-gear acceleration. It also needs to be turn-key reliable, with sensible intervals between major service work.

 

Competition machines can make a solid base for dual-purpose adaptation. But there is much to consider. Race-level performance brings with it an intensive maintenance schedule, which is simply too much for many ‘hobby’ trail riders, who just want to push a button and go – and keep on going, Furthermore, a barely-disguised race bike can mean crucial road-going elements - lights, indicators, ignition switch - are not as user-friendly and durable as they should be.

 

Honda understands this, and with a desire to produce a dual-purpose bike that draws strongly on the fundamental performance of a race machine, yet with much more ‘normal’ service intervals and high-quality road ancillaries, has taken its CRF450R moto-crosser as the base to start from, and created the new CRF450L.

 

It is unmistakably a race-bred CRF – and looks it – but with the additions and modifications needed to make it both road legal and supremely useable in a trail environment. As such, the CRF450L is a complete package, as happy roosting trails as it is linking them up on-road. And with Honda engineering and build quality at its core, is sure to do so for years to come.

 



 

Mr M. Uchiyama, Large Project Leader (LPL) 19YM CRF450L:

 

“The CRF450L is about having maximum fun out on the dirt. It looks like a CRF450R because, really, it is – just a trail-friendly, road-legal version. That’s what the ‘L’ stands for – ‘legal’. It’s been engineered to deliver excellent handling feel, with linear engine torque that helps the rider make the most of the available grip in all conditions. AND, it contains its HRC-derived CRF technology within a real-world service schedule.”

 

 

2. Model Overview

 

The journey from full race to road legal trail was a detailed one for the CRF450L. Road legality required the engine to gain EURO4 compliance, while from a longevity and usability viewpoint, the power output and character, needed careful attention.

 

It’s still a CRF450R; just one that’s quieter, both mechanically from the chassis and engine, as well as its new exhaust. Both fuelling and ignition maps are now managed by 02 lambda sensor; compression ratio has been lowered and crank mass increased for improved drivability. The gearbox is a 6-speed – for longer legs on the road – and a cush drive has been added to the 18-inch rear wheel.

 

The plastics are lifted directly from the CRF450R and all lighting is LED, with the front headlight in particular throwing out a penetrating beam. Increased volume for the titanium fuel tank adds range and all the items that make the CRF450L ready to purchase as a licensed, road going machine – such as speedometer and horn – are present as standard.

 

 

3. Key Features

 

3.1 Engine

 

Based on the CRF450R, with first major service at 32,000km
EURO4 compliant, with electric start
Greater crank inertia improves drivability and feel for traction
6-speed gearbox
 

While the chassis was more straightforward to convert from its CRF450R moto-crosser specification to a dual-purpose performance level, the 449cc engine needed more consideration from Honda’s engineers. Requirements were several: the need for it to pass EURO4 emissions and noise regulations, and to be usable for a wide variety of riders in many differing situations both on and off-road.

 

While the fundamental architecture of the four-valve Unicam powerplant remains the same, many details have been changed to support the broader role: the crank’s mass has been increased, resulting in 13% more inertia which, for a trail rider, equals improved torque feel and response; valve timing has been revised to give the broader, smoother spread of power and torque; the gearbox is now 6-speed, rather than 5 for longer range use on tarmac; left and right engine covers wear outer covers to reduce noise;

 

Elsewhere, the ACG has been uprated, to provide the required electrical power for the LED lights and to maintain battery charge during lower-speed running. The battery itself is a high-volume unit.

 

 

Bore and stroke are unchanged from the CRF450R, at 96mm x 62.1mm, but the piston uses 3 rings instead of 2 for greater durability. Compression ratio is 12.0:1 (compared 13.5:1). The redesigned airbox feeds the PGM-FI, managed by a lambda sensor in the large-volume single exhaust (which replaces the ‘stubby’ dual-pipe design of the CRF450R). An Air Injection (AI) system and catalyser clean up the spent gases.

 

The four-valve Unicam cylinder head features a finger rocker arm on the inlet valves; valve lift is 7.7mm with 6.7mm exhaust valve lift. Inlet valve diameter is 38mm. The valve springs are oval in cross section and valve angle is 9° intake/10.5° exhaust.

 

The clutch spins 7 friction discs with a 2mm clutch plate efficiently dissipating heat; the springs generate a good, consistent connection. The front sprocket is a 13T, the rear 51T.

 

Peak power is 18.4kW, with peak torque of 32Nm. Important from the hobby trail-rider’s perspective is the engine’s reliability and gap between service intervals. And this is where the CRF450L’s build quality and design really stands out; it will go 32,000km between major strip downs, with an air filter oil and oil filter change every 1000km.

 

 

 

3.2 Chassis

 

Drawn from the 18YM CRF450R, with minor adaptations for its dual purpose role
Full LED lighting, increased fuel tank volume and sidestand
Larger radiator volume, plus electric fan
Styling closely mirrors that of CRF450R
 

Having received a ground-up redesign in 2016, the CRF450R’s chassis was a perfect place for the CRF450L to start out from, with changes to match the machine’s vastly broader usage range, and road legal mission.

 

Firstly, the tapered dual-spar aluminium beam frame was made slightly wider at the swingarm pivot points, to allow for the greater engine width resulting from the 6-speed gearbox. The headstock was modified to mount a steering lock and the aluminium swingarm injected with urethane to reduce noise. The rear subframe is the same, with mounting point adjusted to take the taillight and the right-exit single exhaust muffler.

 

Rake and trail are set at 28.5°/122mm with wheelbase increased 18mm from the CRF450R to 1500mm, for greater stability. Both the R and the L feature 22mm fork offset.Wet weight is 130.8kg; seat height is 940mm.

 

A 49mm Showa steel-sprung USD fork – adjustable for preload plus compression damping – is matched by a fully adjustable Showa rear shock, operated through Pro-Link. A 260mm wave-pattern disc delivers effective heat dissipation, power and feel from the two-piston brake caliper working it; a matching 240mm wave-pattern disc and single-piston caliper is at the rear.

 

Whereas the CRF450R machine uses a 19-inch rear wheel, the CRF450L’s is an 18-inch (to fit enduro-spec tyres), with the addition of a cush drive to absorb chain shock; a sealed 520 chain is protected by a plastic chain guard. The front wheel is a 21-inch and both rims are finished in black. Tyres are sized 80/100-21 front and 120/80-18 rear.

 

The CRF450L’s style draws fully on that of the CRF450R. Carried over are the rear mudguard, side panels and bash plate. Svelte side shrouds hide a larger radiator volume plus electric fan. All lighting (including the indicators and license-plate light) is LED; a speedometer, horn, brake-light switch and mirrors satisfy legal requirements while a sidestand adds convenience. The CRF450R employs a 6.3L titanium fuel tank; the CRF450L ups the volume 1.3L to 7.6L. The fuel cap also locks in place.

 

 

4. Technical Specifications

 

 

ENGINE

 

Type

Liquid-cooled 4-stroke single cylinder uni-cam

Displacement

449cc

Bore and Stroke

96.0mm x 62.1mm

Compression Ratio

12.0:1

FUEL SYSTEM

 

Carburation

PGM-FI Fuel injection

Fuel Tank Capacity

7.6 litres

ELECTRICAL SYSTEM

 

Ignition

Digital CDI

Starter

Electric

DRIVETRAIN

 

Clutch Type

Wet multiplate

Transmission Type

Chain

Final Drive

Chain

FRAME

 

Type

Aluminium twin tube

CHASSIS

 

Dimensions (L´W´H)

2,280mm x 825mm x 1,260mm

Wheelbase

1500mm

Caster Angle

28.5°

Trail

122mm

Seat Height

940mm

Ground Clearance

315mm

Kerb Weight

130.8kg

SUSPENSION

 

Type Front

49mm Showa steel-sprung USD fork

Type Rear

Showa monoshock using Honda Pro-Link system

WHEELS

 

Type Front

Aluminium spoke

Type Rear

Aluminium spoke

Tyres Front

80/100-21

Tyres Rear

120/80-18

BRAKES

 

Front

Single Disk

Rear

Single Disk

 

All specifications are provisional and subject to change without notice.

 VCIF_salut

 
Alone we go faster, together we go further

I do not ride fast, I ride far / I'm not lost, I'm just exploring

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Jyrays

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Jyrays

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #5 on: July 24, 2018, 14:15:09 »
3.1 Engine
Peak power is 18.4kW, with peak torque of 32Nm.
CRF250L has 18.2 kW???
Current: HONDA CRF1000L Tricolor DCT
Honda NC700X DCT
Past: Honda VFR 1200 X Crosstourer / Honda SLR 650 / HONDA XLV 1000 Varadero / Honda XR 650 R / KTM 640 LC4 / Honda CB1100 / Yamaha XJ 850 / Honda CB 500 1977...

zebulon

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #6 on: July 24, 2018, 15:00:15 »
No price for instance , and think we have to wait till autumn...

Yeah, it's what I've ridden elsewhere too  :( but more torque then 250... Wait & see & try ...
 VCIF_salut
Alone we go faster, together we go further

I do not ride fast, I ride far / I'm not lost, I'm just exploring

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superfunkomatic

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #7 on: August 16, 2018, 02:42:08 »

Yep. 25 HP on the little 250. So I'd assume that this bike is in the 40-45 HP range, which would be a blast to ride.
If the weight specs are right the 450 will be lighter than the 250L (about 325 lbs/147 kg).

3.1 Engine
Peak power is 18.4kW, with peak torque of 32Nm.
CRF250L has 18.2 kW???
2016 CRF1000L Africa Twin
2016 CRF250L
2008 Varadero (gonzo - one of my favorite bikes)

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superfunkomatic

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #8 on: August 16, 2018, 02:44:19 »

Price on the Honda.ca website says the bike is about $12,000 CDN. Ouch.

No price for instance , and think we have to wait till autumn...

Yeah, it's what I've ridden elsewhere too  :( but more torque then 250... Wait & see & try ...
 VCIF_salut
2016 CRF1000L Africa Twin
2016 CRF250L
2008 Varadero (gonzo - one of my favorite bikes)

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zebulon

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #9 on: August 16, 2018, 12:37:06 »

Price on the Honda.ca website says the bike is about $12,000 CDN. Ouch.


Something around 8000€, yeah, spicy  VCIF_a_008
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I do not ride fast, I ride far / I'm not lost, I'm just exploring

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Jyrays

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #10 on: August 19, 2018, 17:17:23 »

Price on the Honda.ca website says the bike is about $12,000 CDN. Ouch.


Something around 8000€, yeah, spicy  VCIF_a_008
KTM 690 is 10K euro...
Current: HONDA CRF1000L Tricolor DCT
Honda NC700X DCT
Past: Honda VFR 1200 X Crosstourer / Honda SLR 650 / HONDA XLV 1000 Varadero / Honda XR 650 R / KTM 640 LC4 / Honda CB1100 / Yamaha XJ 850 / Honda CB 500 1977...

superfunkomatic

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #11 on: September 08, 2018, 19:13:55 »

I love everything about this bike except the maintenance intervals. It's like a dirt bike - 1,000 kilometres. Yikes!
That could be every few weeks for valve checks and oil. Way too much maintenance for a dual sport bike.


Price on the Honda.ca website says the bike is about $12,000 CDN. Ouch.


Something around 8000€, yeah, spicy  VCIF_a_008
KTM 690 is 10K euro...
2016 CRF1000L Africa Twin
2016 CRF250L
2008 Varadero (gonzo - one of my favorite bikes)

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Two Plugs

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #12 on: September 11, 2018, 11:19:27 »
What a quite little moped...  ;D

No, thank you.  ;D 8)
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zebulon

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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #13 on: September 26, 2018, 00:23:11 »
Before we can see it....

Introducing the all-new 2019 #CRF450L, the bike so many have been waiting for. A true street-legal dirtbike that offers the reliability, refinement and quality of a Honda, along with the light weight, handling, and power of our best off-road machines. https://honda.us/2xua2RA



 VCIF_salut
« Last Edit: September 26, 2018, 00:43:32 by zebulon »
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Re: New CRF 450 for 2019
« Reply #14 on: September 26, 2018, 13:22:02 »
To my modest opinion... in a community which clearly focusses on the larger Honda adventure bikes (+1000cc) I don't see the relevance of a CRF450 and the amount of focus here....
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