Australia’s Most Famous CBX – The Honda CBX Cafe Racer By Motorretro

There can be little doubt that this is Australia’s most famous Honda CBX, it was built by Vaughan Ryan of Motorretro in Sydney and it’s been widely published in print, online, in film, and seen at shows over the past 7+ years.

With its hefty inline-six cylinder engine installed transversely across the bike the Honda CBX is one of the most memorable motorcycles of the 1970s.

When Vaughan bought one in the United States and had it shipped to Australia it was the beginning of a process that would see the bike completely rebuilt into a highly-capable modern cafe racer.

Fast Facts – The Motorretro Honda CBX

  • The Honda CBX was introduced in 1978 and it became one of the most memorable bikes from the era, the result of a technological arms race between Japan’s four largest motorcycle manufacturers.
  • The CBX is powered by an advanced (for the time) inline-six cylinder engine with double overhead cams, four valves per cylinder, six carburetors, a 5-speed transmission and 105 hp at 9,000 rpm.
  • The CBX you see here has been vastly customized, it now features a Ducati 1098R front end, hand-formed alloy body work, adjustable Öhlins shoe absorbers in the rear, a Ducati 999 rear wheel, and a slew of other changes that resulted in it losing over 100 lbs of excess weight.
  • The bike is now for sale for the first time ever, you can click here if you’d like to visit the listing.

Vaughan Ryan + The CBX Cafe Racer

The following interview with Vaughan Ryan was conducted by Andrew Jones, it’s the latest in a series of articles in which we turn over the keyboard to the person who actually did the work and let them tell the story in their own words.

Honda CBX Cafe Racer 17 Vaughan Ryan

Vaughan is the co-founder (alongside Georgio Rimi) of Motorretro in Sydney, a workshop that has become the home of classic automotive coachbuilding in the region.

Tell Us About Yourself And The Team?

G’day my name is Vaughan Ryan and I’m 1 of 2 owners of Motorretro in Sydney. Primarily there was 3 of us involved in the build: Georgio Rimi (my business partner and co-fabricator, machinist, and chief shit-stirrer), and the talented Mr Julian Lopez mechanic and electrical whiz. 

Tell Us About Your Company?

Motorretro was founded around the same time we built this bike. Our business is multifaceted eg. we specialize in repairs, restorations, and restomods of collectible classic cars. We manufacture our own cast iron wheeling machines and other industry related tools, including reverse engineering or prototyping of parts no longer available.

Both Georgio and I have teaching qualifications and vocational skills training as teachers. We love seeing students achieve their goals of building or restoring, we never struggle to turn up for work because everyday is different and challenging on many levels.

Honda CBX Cafe Racer 7

The fuel tank, rear cowl, and headlight cowl were all shaped from alloy by hand for this bike by Vaughan.

What Year/Make/Model Is This Motorcycle?

The bike was originally a 1978 Honda CBX 1000, a big heavy 70’s muscle bike in need of a diet and restyling.

How Did You Find It And What Kind Of Condition Was It In?

I found the bike via Ebay in the US, I had it packaged and sent to Sydney, complete with the US model high rise cruiser handlebars. It had 9,000 original miles on the bike.

Mechanically it was excellent but the paintwork was faded. I put rego on the bike and rode it around for 6 months. It really rode like a 40 year old in every aspect and I’ve owned modern bikes, but their styling leaves me uninspired.

What Was Your Objective When Building This Bike?

Approximately 6-7 years ago I embarked on this build, however the seed was planted many years prior when I built another CBX (A Mike Hailwood Honda 6 replica) for a client. Half way throught building the Hailwood replica I fell in love with the idea of it as a stripped down cafe racer. A raw unapologetic beast with no plastic and hand made bodywork.

Honda CBX Cafe Racer 12

The inline-six cylinder engine developed for the Honda CBX drew on the lessons learned when the company developed the Honda RC series six-cylinder race bikes in the 1960s.

What Fabrication Work Went Into This Build?

  • We fitted a Ducati 1098R frontend & modified the steering shaft, custom made the top triple clamp
  • Detabbed everything unnecessary from the frame
  • Widened and braced the rear swingarm fitting 5.5 inch wide Ducati 999 rear wheel
  • Designed and handmade the fuel tank, seat base/pan, rear café racer tail, rear hugger, headlight mounting brackets & instrument cowl, foot rests, modified the pipemaster exhaust system
  • All new motogadget wiring loom & instruments etc
  • Fitted velocity stacks
  • Ohlins rear shocks
  • Dropped nearly 50 kg from the bike

Did You Use Any Outside Contractors During The Build?

I did most of the prep work for the paint and polishing. Garry Hall assisted me with the expertise application of the paint.

Roger Warsop from Retroline signs did an amazing job with the hand pinstriping and the gold leaf striping. Hytone trimmers did the seat for me.

Honda CBX Cafe Racer 15

What Was The Biggest Challenge You Encountered During The Build?

All the technicalities of fitting the Ducati parts to a Honda so I suppose it’s a Duconda or a CBX 1098R. Problem solving and the creativity of how to go about it is the greatest problem with any build.

What Engine Work Was Done?

The block was machined to the next size because the bores were glazed. Along with a total engine rebuild with new parts, rebuilt clutch. Electronic ignition & new charging system compatible with a lithium battery. Shortened exhaust system that was cut and tiered for aesthetics.

The Motorretro Honda CBX Cafe Racer Is Now For Sale

The Motorretro Honda CBX Cafe Racer is now listed on Shannons where it’s due to be auctioned live online this week. Id you’d like to read more about it or register to bid you can click here to visit the listing.

If you’d like to visit Motorretro and see more of the work they do you can click here to visit the website.

Photography and Interview by Andrew Jones – Machines That Dream

Honda CBX Cafe Racer 16 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 14 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 13 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 11 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 10 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 9 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 8 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 6 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 5 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 4 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 3 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 2 Honda CBX Cafe Racer 1 Honda CBX Cafe Racer Hero

The post Australia’s Most Famous CBX – The Honda CBX Cafe Racer By Motorretro appeared first on Silodrome.



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vintageclassiccars:Porsche 911 2.4 Targa - 1972 - love the Fuchs….
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A Mid-Engined Honda Civic Type R-Powered Mini With 200 HP

The humble Mini has been customized in almost every way imaginable, but this is the first time we’ve seen a mid-engined, rear wheel drive example come up for sale powered by a 200 hp Honda Civic Type R K20A2 engine.

This car is one of many around the world that was resurrected during the Covid Era, when people had plenty of time at home on their hands and the excuses not to finish the project vehicle in the garage slowly evaporated.

Fast Facts – A Mid-Engined Type R-Powered Mini

  • This car was built using a kit from Z Cars in the UK, this provides the rear subframe and many of the parts needed to convert a Mini to mid-engined, rear-wheel drive car.
  • With 200 hp in standard tune, the Honda Civic Type R K20A2 engine provides approximately 260 bhp per ton when installed in a Z Cars Mini, and up to 430 bhp per ton with forced induction.
  • The Type R K20A2 engine is a 2.0 liter (1998cc) inline-four cylinder engine with double overhead cams, four valves per cylinder, variable valve timing, and 200 hp at 7,400 rpm.
  • Z Cars was originally founded in Britain in 1999 by Chris Allanson to provide both kits and turnkey cars, in the years since the company has been responsible for some of the fastest Minis in the world.

The Z Cars Mid-Engined Mini

When the Mini was first released back in 1959 the engineering team behind it could never have known that over 60 years later people would be building 400+hp mid-engined, rear wheel drive versions of the car in their sheds.

Above Video: This episode of Petrol Ped features a Z Cars Mini powered by a Civic Type R engine, it includes plenty of onboard driving footage and engine audio.

The Mini is historically notable for its use of a transversely-mounted inline-four cylinder engine that includes its transmission, and sends power to the front wheels. This powertrain layout is now used by the majority of passenger cars in production worldwide.

Due to the small size and low weight of the Mini it’s long been attractive to those who want to take it racing, John Cooper created the Mini Cooper in 1961 which went on to become one of the most successful rally cars of its time.

The Z Cars approach to getting more speed out of the Mini is relatively complex, it requires a new tubular steel frame be bolted into place to accommodate a new rear-mounted engine powering the rear wheels.

A number of engines can be used in this conversion, the most popular choices are engines sourced from the Suzuki Hayabusa superbike, as well as the Subaru flat-4 boxer, and of course, the Civic Type R K20A2.

Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 18

The engine is accessed through the rear of the car, and there’s more space in the engine bay than you might have expected.

During the build the rear seats are removed, the new frame is installed, the track width of the car is increased considerably which requires flared wheel arches. The original engine and transmission is removed from the front and replaced with a radiator and cooling fans for the new mid-mounted engine.

The new engine sits close behind the driver and passenger offering excellent weight distribution, and it’s accessed through the rear of the car.

Depending on the final specification, the Minis from Z Cars are more than capable of wiping the floor with essentially any modern hot hatch and many modern sports cars.

The Z Cars Mini Shown Here

The car you see here was originally built in 2007, it’s powered by the engine from a UK-spec 2002 Honda Civic Type R which feeds power to the rear wheels via a 6-speed manual transmission.

Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 15

The car has an all-new interior with racing seats, a full roll cage, a custom dashboard, and a laptop-tunable ECU.

The donor car was a 1993 Mini Mayfair, however apart from the unibody not much of the original vehicle remains. Inside you’ll now find BB5 bucket seats, new carpets, a custom dashboard, and an OMP fire extinguisher system.

A quick-release steering wheel has been fitted and the car uses a Kpro V4 reprogrammable engine management system, and it has a digidash with laptop/GPS plug-in ports, a 12V plug, a voltage meter, and a start button.

The car now rides on fully adjustable coilover suspension front and back, and it’s fitted with Wilwood disc brakes front and rear with four-piston calipers up front on drilled and vented rotors.

This extremely quick Mini is now being auctioned live own Car & Classic out of the UK, if you’d like to read more about it or register to bid you can click here to visit the listing.

Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 4 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 2 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 10 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 17 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 9 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 8 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 7 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 6 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 16 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 14 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 5 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 3 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 13 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 12 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 11 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 20 Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 19

Images courtesy of Car & Classic.

Mini Honda Civic Type R Mid-Engine Z Cars 1

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