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Honda might be prepping some new aero perks for his or her CBR1000RR-R Fireblade SP.
We are likely to see a whole lot of patent purposes operating by way of this platform, Large Pink’s contributions however.
There was the time that Honda filed for a Single-Shell (Monocoque) Superbike, after which there was the telescopic aspect stand, a number of photos displaying electrical CBR/electrical Fireblade concepts, and that one single-cylinder bike (full with drum brakes).
Suffice it to say that Honda’s obtained a whole lot of enjoyable stuff within the lab – a few of which they’ve used, others….not a lot.
Honda’s cinched into new patent guidelines
Regardless of the range of the above, patents nowadays have nowhere close to the liberty that they was once. Up till not too long ago, an organization may file for a patent that wouldn’t be enforce till years later.
Now, if a patent is filed, we’re informed the corporate must make good on that patent inside a sure size of time to ensure that it to be accepted; in different phrases, corporations want to make use of the patents they file, so we’re extra prone to see Honda’s future patents on the street than ever earlier than.
That features this latest submitting from Honda, discovered by CycleWorld’s Ben Purvis.

Extra on Honda’s “hoop winglets”
Within the accompanying imagery, Honda’s filed for an aerodynamic bundle that would very effectively package out their Fireblade with a set of recent, hhop-style visuals – pertinent, contemplating the updates for the MY2024 CBR1000RR-R Fireblade SP included a perk-up in energy, weight financial savings, electronics, the swingarm…. mainly every part else.
In accordance with Purvis, the hoop-style winglets proven on the nostril of the patent’s bike will substitute the larger winglets; in permitting the entrance fairing to help in environment friendly aerodynamics, Honda can then chuck the side-mounted {hardware} that was starting to trigger issues with drag, preserve the smaller nostril hoops, and nonetheless harken to the MotoGP monitor.
Win, win, win.
(That final one is especially vital, by the way in which, seeing as anyone wanting a motorcycle with that many R’s within the mannequin identify may even be keen to pay additional for a chunk of the Grand Prix monitor on their bike.)

What does Honda’s patent need to say about their aero design?
Curious to listen to why Honda selected this explicit design instead of their regular bigger, side-mounted models?
Right here’s an official excerpt from Honda’s patent submitting explaining why they’re contemplating this winglet type:
– Honda (Ben Purvis, CycleWorld) |
What do you consider Honda’s new winglet concept?










