Mileage (to date): 5951 | Economy: 58mpg | Power: 90.5bhp | Torque: 55.3lb-ft | Weight: 208kg | Price: £9,699 (£10,664 as tested)
Anyone who’s ridden Honda’s massive-selling CB500X will know it’s almost perfect all-round roadgoing ability. New riders and old hands alike enjoy the usable power, easy handling, comfort and frugal fuel economy. The only thing some people might argue is that it needs a little extra power for two-up riding and maybe some smarter electronic assistance.
Honda knows this too and it also knows that in a world of expanding middleweight adventure choices that it needed something a bit funkier than the (also brilliant but not that much more powerful) NC750X to take on Yamaha’s Ténéré 700 and Aprilia’s Tuareg 660.
If someone had told us that Honda’s middle step between the CB500X and Africa Twin would have the light weight of the CB500 and pretty much all the power (if not the torque) of the flagship Africa Twin at a price pretty much halfway between the two I think we’d have been pretty pleased. And that, as far as I can see is exactly what the new Transalp is. It has twice the power: weight ratio of the CB500X in a package weighing only a few kg more and pretty much exactly the same power: weight as the Africa Twin in a bike weighing 20kg less.
All-new engine is the same as the Hornet 750. It makes twice as much power as a CB500X and 90% as much as an Africa Twin
Which is very smart thinking on Honda’s part. A significant step-up in power for CB500X owners in a similar-sized package, but also potentially a practical step back for Africa Twin owners looking for something a little more road-focused and easily managed.
Honda knows its customers, and CB500X sales have shown that there are many of us looking for an adventure-styled bike that spends almost-if-not-all its time on the road.
And when those roads are covered in potholes, packed with trucks, delivery vans, cyclists and dawdling day-trippers, then the tall seats, pliant suspension and punchy twin cylinder engines of most adventure bikes make them ideal. They also let riders opt out of those main road problems too and enjoy some quiet, relaxing riding on the UK’s network of back lanes and minor roads criss-crossing the countryside. These roads are a long way from high-speed bike hedonism, but they are beautiful, quiet and surprisingly effective at getting from one side of the county to the other. Sat nav and phone apps has made them accessible without the frustration of getting lost.
‘Sorry I’m late, I came via a largely unused network of tracks and lanes only really accessible by mid-sized adventure bike’ etc
These roads are also usually even more knackered than the main roads which requires a different kind of bike. To enjoy the back lanes, we need a bike with the right balance of confidence, comfort and performance. To justify the cost of buying a new bike I’d also add that these days it needs to be useable for commuting too and able to bring something special to a weekend ride.
Which is why, when I saw the new Honda Transalp, it took about 38 seconds to realise this might be the answer to all the above. I like the long travel suspension and upright riding position to help explore the bumpy rural lanes but without the focus of a proper trail bike or the monster-truck dimensions of the adventure-flavoured superbikes. The Transalp looks like a bike for negotiating potholes and gravel on the deserted back lanes. I’ll leave the rooster-tail, back-wheel-outta-line ready-to-race fantasies to others.
Switchgear is shared with the Hornet 750 and is much more intuitive and easier to use than the Africa Twin/NT1100
The first 1000 miles of long-term testing are always interesting. Running a bike in gives chance to focus on the things that need a more relaxed riding style to explore.
Things like learning how the bike feels at lower speeds, how the controls feel, how quickly does it steer, how nimble is it in traffic? Plus, of course how economical can it be if you really need to eke out the miles?
None of this happens on a press launch, which tend to focus on how quickly a bike can get from one end of a 1000-hairpin Spanish B-road to the other. And once run-in this test will focus on those other things too. I like to run a bike in properly because at some point next year, some excited customer will buy this bike from a Honda dealer as a year-old used buy and expect that the previous owner loved it as much as they will and did everything by the book.
Optional low seat, tall screen (with winglets) and top box turn the Transalp into a very comfy commuter and tourer
So, what have we learned so far?
Firstly, the Transalp feels more like a road bike than Yamaha’s Ténéré 700 or Aprilia’s Tuareg (I haven’t ridden the latest Suzuki V-Strom yet). The standard seat is tall for a road bike but at six-foot tall in bike boots I can get both feet on the floor, even in the full textile kit required for a British summer.
The Transalp feels light and easily manageable, and it filters well through traffic. Balance at low speed is helped by the gyroscopic assistance of that 21-inch front wheel.
Low down power is smooth, but not especially strong, which works in its favour for slipping through urban chaos without endless clutch slipping and also when doing U-turns. There’s a bit more punch as you clear 5000rpm and another kick at 7000rpm to satisfy your sporty side.
The Transalp has tall gearing, especially in fifth and sixth that allows relaxed motorway cruising. 70mph needs a little over 4000rpm in top. There’s no intrusive vibration at those speeds through hands, feet or boy-bags, which is welcome for a long blast on a parallel twin. The tall gearing means that if you need to get a shift on or overtake something, it needs at least one downshift and a substantial crack of the throttle to make decent progress because, while there’s plenty of power up top, the best acceleration is a good few thousand rpm away from that lazy, touring cruising zone. The Transalp might make 90 percent of an Africa Twin’s power, but the 1100cc AT makes 50 per cent more torque allowing much lazier top-gear cruising.
You will however be grinning at the fuel pumps. The other benefit of running a bike in is that fuel economy is an obvious thing you can test. Sticking to an indicated 80mph maximum on a long motorway run gave an average of 65mpg with an average speed of 70mph door-to-door. Dropping the max indicated speed to 70mph brings 70mpg at an average speed of 66mph. Dropping the max indicated speed to 60mph only adds another couple of mpg and is much less comfortable on the road because you’re stuck in the inside lane among the trucks and caravans.
Twice the power of a CB500X but with an average of 66mpg it has almost exactly the same fuel economy. That’s progress.
How that compares with a typical Sunday thrash will be interesting now the first service has been done but those mpg figures are pretty good for an engine making 90bhp that is as useable and flexible as this one. The last Honda 750 making this kind of power and torque was the VFR750, which typically did around 45mpg. That’s progress.
Handling and suspension are very Honda-like. The suspension is soft and feels almost-but-not-quite underdamped at low-mid speeds. It soaks up potholes well and hints that it might get a bit wallowy at high speed, but somehow it never does.
Steering is light and accurate for a bike with a narrow trail tyre on a 21in front wheel and longer wheelbase than a BMW R1250GS. I’m still not convinced by Honda’s choice of tubed tyres for a bike so clearly designed for road use. You can’t plug a punctured tubed tyre and the ‘Slime’ type preventative sealants get mixed reviews online. I’m planning on trying these at some point in the summer. The brakes are strong but there’s a lot of fork travel to suck up the first half second.
Comfort is good enough for a bike with a relatively slender seat. 90 minutes on the motorway is fine but by the second hour I’m starting to shuffle around. I do a lot of motorway miles and so have the optional tall screen and wind deflectors fitted. This setup is as comfy as you’d hope at motorway speeds, but not so tall or wide that it obstructs my view in the rain.
This initial period has been all about getting familiar, so I haven’t played too much with the electronics or rider modes yet. That’s for next month.
Planning on doing a lot more of this in 2023
Twisty roads, long distance rambling and indulging the inner nerd.
3000 miles in three months probably tells you all you need to know about how much I’m enjoying the Transalp despite the weather being less than summery for most of it. The memorable highlights are a 700-mile motorway-free round trip to Lincolnshire and another of similar distance (and lack of motorways) to North Wales.
You need plenty of time to stay off the motorways and to remember that simply setting Google maps or TomTom to ‘avoid motorways’ doesn’t guarantee riding thrills. The Worcester ring road or A52 might not be motorways but you won’t be seeing them in any ‘top ten biking roads’ features in your favourite magazines.
That’s not the point for me though. In a world where many people plan journeys with Google or sat nav, all the routes those devices recommend tend to get busier and busier.
Only a fool in a car, van or truck would choose ‘no motorways’ and so when you do select that more of the journey is uncongested enough to make the most of a bike’s advantage. Get to the front of the queue and then enjoy the freedom until you hit the back of the next one. You’ll still have a few miles on major trunk roads linking the quieter sections but there more things to see, more challenges to keep your mind active and a lot more options when you need a break.
The motorway would have been quicker but where’s the fun in that?
It took seven and a half hours to do the 350 miles to Wrexham – about 90 minutes longer than Google was predicting on the motorways but, given that I’d allowed whole day to do it anyway, that wasn’t an issue.
The Transalp is a great bike for exploring because it’s as happy on a muddy B-road as it is flicking through traffic on a ring road or hoovering up a motorway. As capable of raising your heart rate on a scenic Welsh mountain pass as sitting on the A34 dual-carriageway for 35 miles clicking off the miles till the A272.
With a 200+ mile tank range and a riding position that spreads the load well enough to stay comfy all day it does a pretty good impression of a middleweight tourer. I tried the optional lower seat for a few weeks to see if that would make it feel even more like a road bike. At five-foot-ten I don’t have a problem with the standard 850mm seat height, and I can flat-foot on both sides as the soft suspension compresses. But swinging a leg over the bike on its side stand in full textile kit sometimes feels a bit clumsy and I was curious to see how the lower one felt. Fitting the lower seat loses 30mm and does make it easier to swing a leg over and you sit more ‘in’ the bike than ‘on’ it. Unfortunately for me, it puts my head too low for the optional tall screen my bike also has fitted meaning I’m looking through it rather than over it and, when most of your rides are in the rain that’s an issue. I’ll try the low seat and standard screen option at some point and report back.
Dunlop Trailmax Mixtour tyres are every bit as capable as the bike.
All those miles in the twisty bits of Lincolnshire and Wales demonstrate many things:
That last point was reinforced after a quick ride on Honda’s Hornet 750 which has the same engine as the Transalp but doesn’t have a fairing meaning top speed is limited by aerodynamics and Honda has geared it for acceleration rather than speed. The Hornet feels a lot livelier, with sharper acceleration right through the rev range, where the Transalp (which is geared for a top speed in excess of 130mph – about 30mph quicker than any Transalp will ever go) feels sharp and frisky in the first three gears, but progressively more sensible in the last three ratios. That’s fine by me and if you buy a Transalp you’ll be just as pleased with 65mpg and vibe-free motorway cruising (80mph is just 4500rpm in top gear) as keeping up with your mates on the B1183. As a road bike it’s a great compromise and if you bought your Transalp for track days my only question would be ‘what colour is the sky in your world?’
It goes even better without a photographer leaning over your shoulder.
That’s not to say that you won’t be breaking a few personal records on this bike. I surprised myself in early September by completing my 147-mile journey home from the BikeSocial office on the Transalp in 11 per cent less time than on any other bike. Because I’m a geek that works in a team of other geeks I may or may not keep a spreadsheet of all the test bikes I’ve ridden containing average speeds, mpgs and interesting observations about the journey. Obviously, should such a document exist, it could never be shared in case some of the data, seen in isolation might be thought to be incriminating.
In the last four years (including lockdown periods) I’ve ridden 41 different bikes on this route ranging from a Suzuki V-Strom 250 and Yamaha Tricity 300 scooter all the way up to a Ducati Panigale V4S, Honda FireBlade SP and Gold Wing. In truth, this trip on the Transalp was as much down to traffic conditions and my need to be home at a certain time and it wasn’t one of those trips when you feel slightly ashamed of what you’ve done at the end of it. I’m a grown-up and my riding these days is considered and responsible, but the fact that we got home in that time without stress is a tribute to the Transalp’s ability to cover ground quickly and safely. I should say at this point that good times on this journey are achieved through smart average speeds not big numbers on the dash. The worst legal outcome would have been a fixed-penalty notice and probably a speed awareness course.
The Transalp is never going to be a bike for high-speed bragging rights or bike-caff bullshit. It makes it easy to cover ground effectively but not so easy to get into trouble. Somehow you get to places more quickly than expected. Even on this trip it still averaged 53mpg which sounds great until you realise that’s 20 per cent more fuel than normal to knock 11 per cent off the journey time.
Suspension copes well with most things but occasionally gets overwhelmed by a rider forgetting he’s not riding a CBR.
There are a handful of niggles but no major problems. Not having a display for ambient air temperature or fuel range remaining seems a bit odd when the appropriate hardware is there to be measuring it. The dash offers plenty of data that seems highly unnecessary (the angle in degrees at which the twistgrip is open being the weirdest plus things like how much time has elapsed since you last reset the ‘how much time has elapsed’ button) instead of adding these two which I’d use a lot.
The headlight is disappointing on main beam too. Dip beam is ok, allowing 50mph on an unlit B-road. Main beam doesn’t really add anything to that – it’s almost not worth the extra switch.
And finally, the gearchange is a bit stiff, which combined with a slightly clumsy clutch feel (can’t think of a better way to describe it) makes gear changes feel like a chore rather than a pleasure.
But let’s end on a high. Returning from that Welsh trip, after six and a half hours on the road I hit the A272 which is what passes for a decent biking road in the south of England. It’s busy (4.45pm), greasy and there are new 50mph average speed cameras on the section just after Loomies towards Petersfield. The Transalp makes short work of the conditions, short work of the traffic and once home, unpacked and suitably lubricated I sleep better that night than I can remember for ages.
Don’t underestimate the brilliance of a Honda middleweight twin.
Optional low seat is 30mm lower, but it doesn’t work with the also-optional tall screen
In these colours you can see just how slick the Transalp’s design is. Someone in Honda’s design team needs a bonus this year.
The best thing about having a test bike for a long time is that you can test it in all weathers. Many a short-term test has been ruined by a spell of bad weather for what seems like the entire 10 days we have the bike – a recent experience with a Harley Road Glide was just such an experience.
My Transalp arrived in mid-June 2023 – just about the only dry month we had last year. Running it in was a sun-baked pleasure. The first service was done by the end of June and then… it started raining and has barely stopped since.
So, instead of racking up tales of life-at-crazy-lean-angles I’ve been able to evaluate just how good a modern bike can be when faced with a mischievous jet-stream. And here’s what I’ve learned.
The Honda’s fairing and screen (mine has the optional taller screen and mini-winglets) are superb at keeping the weather off. So much so, that it was only when I swapped the Transalp for my faithful Yamaha Fazer 1000 and a Kawasaki ZX-4RR test bike for a couple of weeks that I realised how leaky my recently acquired Oxford Mondial 2 suit was. My Fazer’s half-fairing usually seems pretty good at keeping the weather off but in 2023’s monsoons I had a soggy bottom, elbows and belly where previously, on the Transalp I’d been dry all summer and autumn.
In-between showers we’ve spent a lot of time exploring the c-roads and country lanes. How deep is that puddle? Are you feeling lucky punk?
The Honda’s power delivery and handling are well-suited to aquatic life too. Even in ‘Sport’ mode the Transalp’s power delivery is smooth, consistent and predictable. I haven’t bothered the traction control sensors or ABS in six months of slippery tarmac and despite the front tyre being narrow, tall and with a tread pattern designed to shift chunks of mud, not water, the Transalp steers as confidently as it accelerates and brakes, regardless of what’s happening at periscope depth.
Add in a riding position that gives such a great view ahead of the unfolding road conditions and you soon come to trust that this is a bike capable of seriously quick progress in miserable conditions. The Transalp feels like it’s working with you, not against you – responding to the most subtle of inputs but also forgiving the occasional bit of clumsiness and overbanding too.
As the weather turned colder (but drier and a bit of winter sunshine) the optional heated grips and 12v socket (for plugging in heated vest and gloves) have proved to be worth the money.
Riding position is shaped like a human, optional top box is shaped like a suitcase. Both work really well.
All the above might sound a little dull to those who see biking as a thrill-a-minute rollercoaster of man-versus-bucking-bronco. Not true. Being on a bike that feels this easy and confident allows the rider to go a little bit quicker, brake a bit later, go for a gap that others might not feel comfortable with and feel like there’s something in reserve. The adrenalin-ometer is still as much in the red as you choose, but it’s you making the decisions about how exciting this is going to be and not some flawed engineering that you have to ride around.
The proof of the Honda’s all-round abilities and ease of use came in January. I was out of the country for the holidays and had five weeks without riding – probably the longest time off a bike in the last 20 years. At 5am in the morning with frost on the ground and a 157-mile ride to Coventry I climbed aboard and felt at home straight away, getting through traffic like I’d never been away. The Transalp makes riding easy, and I like that. Upper body nice and warm, legs not as cold as usual (I got some Zerofit thermals for Xmas which are very good), feet were flipping freezing though. Average speed 63mph, fuel consumption 59mpg, coffee consumption - two large decaff buckets and a tub of Starbucks porridge. Only one piddle too which anyone over 45 who rides regularly in sub-zero temperatures will understand is a big win especially considering the coffee consumed.
And then the January sun came out. But the height of the hedge opposite meant I needed to go off-road (this is as far off-road as it’s been) to get the bike in the sun.
The last week in January finally brought temperatures above zero, sunshine and the chance to take some photos that didn’t make biking look miserable. The main roads are filthy and covered in salt, but the country lanes are relatively clean, if still a bit flooded in places.
That’s where the Transalp shines. Less intimidating than a litre-plus adventure bike, more useful for more of the time than something like Honda’s CRF300L, but still giving confidence riding through mud, gravel and puddles of an unknown depth.
The fact that my two only niggles with the bike remain a lack of important info on the dash (ambient temperature and fuel range remaining) plus a headlight needing more power on main beam shows how good this bike is.
One word of caution though. If your bike has a tracker fitted, make sure you charge the battery regularly. After three of those five weeks sitting idle, I connected my Oxford Oximiser to check the voltage and it was reading 4.7V. That kind of number usually means a cell has failed and your battery is scrap. This one was only six months old and being the OEM item, I assume it’s a quality part. The Oximiser doesn’t attempt to charge anything below 8V, so I dug out my 20-year-old Optimate III which doesn’t display voltage but does have a deep discharge recovery mode. 48 hours later the Optimate said all was ok and the bike started and then started again and again in quick succession. I left it on charge for another 36 hours and then off the charger for a week and the voltage remained stable at 12.5V. The journey to Coventry and back passed without electrical incident, it’s still holding charge now and I reckon I’ve got away with it.
Trackers are brilliant things, but they need a different attitude to living with your bike. And a garage with power where you can use a maintenance charger.
Other than that, winter with a Transalp has been fuss-free. The tyres are starting to square off despite having plenty of tread left. The chain is surviving winter without rusting as heavily as the NT1100 I rode through last winter and the brakes still work as well as ever. The bike still cleans up like new as you’d expect of a six-month-old machine costing a little under £10k and I look forward to every ride, whatever the weather.
Which is, of course, where we came in.
If someone had to design a road for middleweight adventure bikes, this would probably be it.
You can tell that it’s spring because there’s sunshine to go with the rain.
An interesting conversation with a biking mate who was asking about the Transalp and whether I was bored of it yet. Which took me by surprise. Partly because I can’t imagine being bored by any bike…ever, but also because it never occurred to me during any of the 6000 miles I’ve done on this bike that anyone could even consider it boring. When Honda announced the specs in Autumn 2022, I saw a bike that made 90% of the power of an Africa Twin but weighed 20kg less in a package with a similar dimensions to a CB500X. The 2023 Transalp looked like it combined revvy power with torquey flexibility and middleweight agility. A sporty-ish road bike dressed up in adventure trousers.
Two hours before that conversation, I’d ridden my regular 150 miles to the BikeSocial office. A mixture of the quick way for the first 90 miles of M23, M25 and M11 and the slightly longer way for the rest through the back roads of Herts and Beds up to Peterborough.
The Honda’s narrow dimensions make filtering on the motorways easy. I know I talk a lot about filtering, but for me, it’s one of the main reasons I choose a bike first in all weathers, 12 months a year. Who would choose to be sat in someone else’s queue if you have the option of making your own motorcycle lane? Flicking between second and third gear, 40mph-ish with hundreds of tiny tweaks of direction and squeaks-of-cheeks dodging truck mirrors, wandering SUVs and the occasional chump who failed to understand the ’congestion, stay in lane’ instruction?
Narrow enough to get through any gap. The mirrors feel vulnerable to white van and SUV contact meaning much clenching of your clenchable areas.
Making progress. That’s what they call it. Using up enormous reserves of brain power and concentration. Eyes on stalks, nerves jangling, 40-odd years of two-wheeled muscle memory mixing progress with survival.
Transalp - boring? You have got to be kidding.
Away from the motorway this ride is about maintaining speed on fast-but-busy pothole-strewn A-roads. Nipping down the occasional bumpy c-road short cut and a whole lot more overtaking because by this part of the trip it’s 7.30am and sleepy drivers balance coffee cups with breakfast and maybe a couple of fingers of one hand on the wheel.
I get to work wide-eyed, wide-awake and buzzing like no one ever does in a car. Where my colleagues need a coffee to wake up, I prefer a hot milk and porridge to calm me down.
Every trip, everywhere, I love this bike for its anonymity (especially in this ‘stealth-grey’ colour scheme), agility and ability to get from here to there efficiently, quickly and enjoyably. The optional top box, heated grips and 12v socket for heated kit make it year-round practical and the suspension, brakes and power delivery are a lovely blend of capability and ease-of-use. We’ll pass over the dismal headlight for now – dipped beam is adequate, full beam is a disappointment.
The fairing is effective and protective against the weather keeping me less cold, less wet and more relaxed at speed than its dimensions suggest. The optional taller screen has mini-winglets that disperse cold air and water with remarkable efficiency. Only my feet get cold. Climbing on and off in full winter layers is a little awkward but that aside, the standard seat is not so tall as to be an issue. I tried the shorter seat again but with the tall screen I have restricted visibility for no real benefit. I’m five-foot-ten with a 32-in inside leg and can flat foot both sides on the standard seat.
Optional low seat is 2mm lower. It’s a lot more comfortable over distance than it looks.
The Transalp is due to go back to Honda shortly and I’ve been thinking about how I’d sum up the experience to anyone asking the question ‘Should I buy one?’
It sits in a part of the market that has got very busy recently. KTM’s 790 Adventure and Suzuki’s V-Strom 800 DE are the closest on price and the specs on both bikes on paper are pretty similar to the Honda. Yamaha’s T7, and Aprilia’s Tuareg 660 are a little more expensive and sharper-styled for wannabbee adventurers, while Kawasaki’s Versys 650 is a fair chunk cheaper and even more road focused.
If you’re buying on PCP a lot of that difference disappears because with a bit of deposit juggling and allowing for slightly stronger residual values on some bikes than others, you can be riding any of these bikes for pretty much the same monthly payment (around £120 a month right now if you’re asking).
Having ridden all of them apart from the Suzuki, I’d still go for the Honda because aside from the choice of tubed tyres instead of tubeless it feels like the most road focused, is the most versatile and economical and once you’d fitted a centrestand it would make a flexible sporty tourer with the comfort and visibility of an adventure bike and the equipment to tackle some light off-roading if you’re feeling bold.
I’m not a confident off-road rider but I like having a bike that can tackle the uncategorised network of single-track back roads that do A-B without the traffic or the hassle.
It shouldn’t steer this well on the road with a 21-inch front wheel or cover distance this easily with a revvy, 90bhp parallel twin motor, but it does because Honda chose smart gear ratios that make it both sporty and relaxed depending on your mood. Unadjustable suspension does a good job at soaking up bumps while keeping the bike where you point it on a twisty road. The brakes are excellent, pillion comfort is good and there’s enough power to carry two people without feeling stressed (which something like a CB500X can struggle with).
Running costs have been minimal. Services are 8000 miles apart, fuel consumption has only dropped below 50mpg once in 6000 miles and averages late 50s-early 60s mpg.
The OE Dunlop Trailmax Mixtour tyres have been noticeably squaring off for the last 1000 miles but still have plenty of tread left. With a half-full top box and full-size rider in winter kit the handlebars now wobble when I take my hands off, which didn’t used to happen when the tyres were new. As summer approaches, new tyres are required.
The options list takes care of just about everything you might want and there’s a lot of adjustability in the ABS, TC and riding mode settings. Accessing the menus and changing parameters is simple once you, ahem, read the manual and I can now reset the time and date in seconds whenever the battery goes flat (which it does, with a tracker fitted, on a sadly too-regular basis unless you keep it hooked up to a battery charger).
Lack of cruise control as standard or an option is the biggest minus-point as a tourer. Long motorway trips have my right wrist and whatever that muscle is called between thumb and forefinger aching long before my back, bum or shoulders. I know I shouldn’t really complain give the Transalp’s price but it’s such a competent long-distance bike in so many other ways that I forget that.
Less frustrating niggles include previously mentioned lack of an ambient temperature or fuel range display and mirrors that never quite convince you there isn’t a blind spot. I’ve done more lifesavers in the last eight months than for years on other bikes.
Turning up at your local bike meet on a Transalp (in this colour, at least) won’t get as much attention as a Yamaha T7 or Aprilia Tuareg. The Transalp is essence-of-Honda distilled into one bike. Grown-up, sensible, very effective, comfortable for pretty-much every human being on the planet and grows on you the more you ride it.
If they painted it the same colours as an Africa Twin, they’d sell twice as many, but maybe that’s the plan for 2025 if sales start to dip in 2024.
Either way, I’ll be sad to see it go, and the 2023 Honda Transalp has just joined my ‘saved search’ list on a couple of bike-buying websites. Which probably says as much as you need to know about how I feel about it.
Optional top box (£695 inc base plate and fittings) holds a helmet, a well-folded laminated riding suit, gloves, lock and whatever you fit in the gaps inbetween. I prefer it to panniers as it doesn’t affect filtering through traffic
Suspension is soft but still controlled in bumpy corners
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New price |
From £9499 |
Capacity |
755cc |
Bore x Stroke |
87x63.5mm |
Engine layout |
Parallel twin |
Engine details |
4v per cylinder, unicam, 270-deg crankshaft |
Power |
90.5bhp (67.5kW) @ 9500rpm |
Torque |
55.3 lb-ft (75Nm) @ 7250rpm |
Top speed |
135mph (estimated) |
Average fuel consumption |
66mpg tested |
Tank size |
16.9litres |
Max range to empty (theoretical) |
245miles |
Reserve capacity |
45miles |
Rider aids |
Five riding modes, five TC settings, wheelie control, three engine braking modes, two ABS modes, switchable rear ABS |
Frame |
Steel diamond frame |
Front suspension |
Showa 43mm USD forks |
Front suspension adjustment |
Preload |
Rear suspension |
Showa rising rate monoshock |
Rear suspension adjustment |
Preload |
Front brake |
Twin 310mm wave discs with axial mounted dual-piston Nissin calipers |
Rear brake |
256mm disc, single-piston Nissin caliper |
Front tyre |
90/90-R21 tubed tyre |
Rear tyre |
150/70-R18 tubed tyre |
Rake/Trail |
27°/111mm |
Dimensions |
2325mm x 838mm 1450mm (LxWxH) |
Wheelbase |
1560mm |
Ground clearance |
210mm |
Seat height |
850mm |
Kerb weight |
208kg |
Warranty |
Unlimited miles / 2years |
Website |