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V45 Magna, Cycle May 1982 |
![]() Honda has cut its V-four two ways. The Magna is the New four with an appearance bias; the Sabre The one faithful to function. The Magna adheres to the shape that most of all sells. |
HONDA V45 Magna
This is the motorcycle everybody else was afraid Honda might
build someday. Those who weren't worried should have been, and probably are now. Honda
would not have built this motorcycle do five years ago, nor given it a proper name.
Welcome to 1982.
Honda's new 750. or V45 it you prefer, proves that the era oft the Universal Japanese
Motorcycle, given formal definition in this magazine years ago, is an era in passing.
Honda could have built a third generation UJM, a successor to the first CB750 series
(1969-1978) and the second (1979-to whenever), but did not. To be successful in the 1980s,
a manufacturer must produce something that is new and is perceived as new. Yamaha
understood this proposition first: designers dressed up an old motorcycle in new and
different clothes, the Yamaha XS650 twin, and finally created a new motorcycle in
different clothes, the 750 Virago.

Honda
engineers started with empty drafting tables and blood in their eye; the result is new,
staggeringly new. You want a freshly minted engine, a copy of nothing and similar to
nothing before? Well, have this Vee-four with four overhead camshafts, 16 valves, water
cooling six speeds and shaft drive. You'd have to be blind and deaf to miss the newness of
this motorcycle. You want a styling motif in cruiser mode, Milwaukee esque, something with
a dense, industrial look in the engine compartment, something that looks like it could
repel sledge-hammer blows?
At one time Honda might have blushed, hesitating to pursue glitz and fashion and the
vagaries thereof. Today Honda invites you to try the route to the Midwest via Asaka,
Japan. Now the Motorcycle Engineering Company has even found a toughie-boy name for this
mean-ish, Vee-four Mo'Sickle: Magna It takes a hidden, auxiliary fuel tank and a fuel pump
to have both reasonable gas capacify and a main gas tank in the cruiser style and size. So
be it: then the Magna has two tanks and one fuel pump. Eeeek: Form dictating function,
right? Not entirely. Did anyone ever complain that the Gold Wing has a fuel pump and tank
buried in the "wrong" place, and a falsie-tank in front of the saddle? The point
is this: when the engineering department begins by tossing out the UJM concept and designs
a completely new engine and motorcycle, then form becomes just another set of engineering
issues that the department deals with.

The Magna is Honda's ultimate weapon in market warfare. Here's a
motorcycle that retails for $3298, barely more expensive than premium 550s. Potentially
these V45s~Magna and Sabre could cut a broad swath through motorcycling, from the 550
level upward. The Sabre offers new with a functional bias, and the Magna new with
an appearance bias. If the functional purist didn't have the Sabre option, he'd be tempted
to buy a Magna for the engine alone, and then remake the rest of the motorcycle to suit.
That would be difficult. Because, while Honda used the same engine/drive train package for
the Sabre and Magna, the motorcycles are very different machines. In the Magna, the
cruiser seating position benefits from the narrow engine, a bit more than 16 inches wide
at the pegs. This means the footpegs can be moved far forward; and, in fact, the Magna has
the most radically forward-positioned pegs of any Honda. With most transverse
four-cylinder engines, the rider would have his feet splayed out and his toes in the
alternator cover. The Magna's rear-bank cylinder head (9.0 inches across) allows the tank
to stay narrow and still cover the mechanicals below.

In both the Magna and
Sabre, low saddle height was an important objective. The V-fours' rear-bank cam covers
come apart in two sections; this is a consequence of dropping the upper frame rails as low
as possible, running them along the top of the engine. And in the V-four frames, the
left-side engine-cradles unbolt to permit side excavation of the engines.
With a saddle height under 30 inches, the Magna is a real low-rider. In this, the
twin-shock rear suspension aids; a single shock positioned under the seat would, with the
inclusion of other components, require more seat elevation to get everything in and under.
Among these components is the under-saddle gas tank, which is the second part of an
interconnected fuel system. An electric fuel pump draws from the bottom of the lower tank
to feed the carburetors. Thus, styling considerations (such as tank shape) and engineering
objectives (such as low saddle height) were served by building a twin-shocker.
From the broad, flat seat, the rider reaches out to the handlebar, the grips of which
angle back, down and outward, positioning the rider's hands just forward of a vertical
line rising from the footpegs. Now that's forward pegs. The Magna gas tank appears smaller
and narrower than the Sabre's; smaller it is, because the air filter must, unlike the
Sabre's, live under the tank. But, curiously, the
![]() ![]() ![]() Lower, 1-gallon fuel tank interconnects with main upper tank. Fuel pump draws from lower tanks bottom. Fuel system has straight on-off petcock: no reserve position. Under seat compactness keeps seat height low. ![]() Magna's air cleaner fits under the tank between the frame tubes. Undressed bike shows all available space occupied. |
Magna tank is wider and lower than the Sabre's at
knee-contact points.
The low saddle, forward pegs and erect riding position allow short riders to get both feet
planted flat on the ground at stops, where their legs will be behind the pegs. That's
terrific for stoplight trollers on the avenue; the ergonomics are less splendid outside
city limits.
The forward pegs and the resulting riding position conspire to make the Magna a short-hop
motorcycle, regardless of how cushy the suspension might be. Fifty miles of freeway riding
is acceptable; 150 miles of varied riding in a single sitting tested our riders' limits.
One tester always wore his Gold Belt when he rode the Magna. Peg location is the most
objectionable single feature because it strains the back by forcing the spine to support
upper-body weight; arms, shoulders and hands bear no stationary load at all. Wind speed
aggravates the problem by making the rider pull into the bar.
Because they are less ergonomically successful than standard motorcycles, cruiser style
bikes actually fit a narrow range of riders. Parked in a showroom, at rest, they feel
reasonably comfortable to everyone. In actual road use, however, an individual rider's
physical characteristics explain much of his reaction to the motorcycle's comfort. Riders
who are large and overweight, or who are well over six feet tall, or who have relatively
long legs and short torsos, or who have back problems from age or injury are, in general,
not good candidates for the sit-straight school of ergonomics. But shorter riders, riders
with relatively long torsos and abort legs and with backs in good condition show less
sensitivity to the riding position of motorcycles like the Magna. Bringing back real test
rides (don't you wish) would probably help an enormous number of riders decide whether a
particular motorcycle style is well suited to their physical characteristics and emotional
preferences.
Honda matched the Magna's suspension to its riding position; compared with the Sabre's,
both are mediocre. They're a match in another way The sit-up riding position cries out for
a soft rear suspension to minimize road shocks administered to the rider's spine. That
Honda has done, hut the choices aren't easy here. There are trade-offs. The low saddle
height means that the rear suspension can't have much travel, and the ever-popular shaft
drive guarantees lots of rear wheel sprung weight, which is always difficult to control;
matters are complicated by a final-drive system that tries to extend the suspension under
power and settles down on trailing throttle. Makers have therefore produced shaft-drive
motorcycles that cluster around two poles. At one pole are bikes with firm to harsh rear
suspensions that behave well under hard riding that tests handling; at the other pole are
bikes that have soft, pleasant rides on the freeway, and get unruly under backroad
pressure.
Honda engineers seem to have concluded that the Magna should be boulevard and freeway
cushy: soft springs and light damping, and nothing further. The rear suspension units,
while trick-looking with their remote reservoirs, have no damping adjustment.
Five-position spring preload sums up the shock absorbers' adjustability.
The rear suspension delivers a smooth and compliant ride around town with little preload
(one or two). On straight highways at speed, preload to the third or fourth level is
required to cancel out a floaty sensation over bumps, reminiscent of traditional American
luxury cars. Still, the soft. short-travel rear suspension bottoms out over medium
potholes, or by adding a passenger. While it has reasonable ground clearance. the Magna
resists sporty-type riding over backroads. With little preload. the bike feels rubbery and
vague in corners over bumps and on trailing throttle: a lot of preload helps, but you're
working against the basic suspension decisions made in Japan, there's lust too little
spring, not much travel, not enough damping, and all that sprung weight. The Magna needs
less flash and more substance in the rear suspension units - Fully adjustable damping,
both rebound and compression, and maybe air-assisted springing, would give owners some
latitude to make their own suspension trade-offs.
The 37mm front fork is likewise calibrated to the Magna's cruiser role. It's air-assisted
fork caps have individual valves in them, and we experimented with air pressures between
12 arid 22 psi. twelve pounds let the fork soak up road imperfections; though it didn't
quite intercept less severe pavement irregularities such as slight pavement breaks as well
as the fork on our last test CB1100F. At 12 psi the fork could be bottomed on driveway
entrances. Increased air pressure obviated this bottoming problem without disturbing the
fork's compliance over lane-divider dots.
The Magna's built-in fork brace should help keep the tubes from twisting under decisive
input tram hard riders at high speeds. making the steering feel very positive and
instantaneous. Both the Sabre and Magna have a greater distance between their lower triple
clamps and axles than the current motorcycle norm. If tying the sliders together top and
bottom reduces any flex-induced stiction, then Honda has been successful be cause the
front fork is very active. Furthermore, the Magna and Sabre forks have their dual
Syntallic bushings both located in the sliders, rather than one on the tubes and one in
the sliders. The new system keeps the bushings the same distance apart and thus the fork
may be a little more responsive when operating at near full extension. Both bushings bear
(and slide) against steel tubing.
The front fork is TRAC-equipped, Honda's version of anti-dive, explained in detail in the
CB750 Nighthawk test (April, 1982). Functionally, we like this system on two counts: Since
it does nut work off the master cylinder, the front brake lever never feels spongy: and
TRAC produces more anti-dive effect, we think, than in other contemporary systems.
The diminished front-end dive encouraged our test riders to use the front double disc
brake harder than normal, thus provoking tire howl. You wouldn't want do this unless the
brakes were progressive and readable. Honda's are. The Magna employs the now familiar
Honda double-piston calipers, elongated pads and slotted discs. On the Magna the
non-adjustable front brake lever seemingly has little tree play, causing small-handed
riders to pull against master-cylinder pressure with their fingertips, an annoying niggle
when wearing winter riding gloves. Actually the hand position on the Magna bar grip
creates this impression by putting the lever at a greater reach than standard bars do; the
amount of lever free play is just fine. In any event two or three fingers can howl the
wide-footprint 110-90 x 18 Dunlop Qualifier tire. The rear drum brake, built into the cast
rear wheel, is small but works fine. Motorcycling seems over its compulsion to fit 10 inch
discs to rear wheels.
Honda has kissed good-bye to the composite wheels in favor of cast alloy- primarily a
concession to styling rather than engineering. As a style leader, the Magna must have
state-of-fashion cast wheels. The rim widths (2.50 front: 3.00 rear) indicate that the
V-fours have reached 1982 tire requirements and are prepared for future developments.
Indeed, rim width is a more significant advance here than wheel construction.
After nudging the choke lever up, turn-lag the key and hitting the starter button, you'll
not question where the greatest technological leap forward lies in the Magna: the engine.
It has a throaty, gutsy flat sound, something like two Honda 400T twins revving in unison.
More amazing is the sheer volume of this sound. Is it legal? Yes. Decibel meters can't
distinguish between exhaust notes and mechanical noise emanating from engine cases; human
ears can. Quiet the engine with water cooling, silent timing chains and anti-backlash
gears and, presto, you can step up the good sounds, which are clear and present to the
rider at stops, not at speed.
While
the Sabre treats its rider to a display-panel light show, the Magna has traditional dial
face mechanical drive tachometer and speedometer, indicator lights and a water-temperature
gauge. These lights reside under dark window panels, and indicators light up the
appropriate leg ends marked on the dark window panels. In shade, readability is fine; in
strong, direct sunlight the lights are almost invisible. A rider might miss the fuel level
warning light during a fast cruise on a sunny day. The light generally winks on at 110 to
120 miles, presumably when the main tank runs dry (2.6 gallons); but should you miss it
for 30 miles, you'll be about 10 miles away from pushing. The Magna has no reserve tap,
only an on off fuel valve located behind the right side-cover. Another surprise; Filling
the gas tank to the brim causes the cap to seep.
The Magna, a hundred greenbacks cheaper than the Sabre, lacks two important features of
its mate. First, no self-canceling turn signals; second, no fiber-optic safety cable. We
didn't miss the self extinguishing signals; for our tastes the Sabre signals cycled far
too short a time and distance. On the Magna, we would have preferred the turn-signal
indicator lights at the top rather than the bottom of the instrument panel.
By virtue of the Magna's looks, we think it's more likely than the Sabre to be ripped off,
but the Magna has only the protection of an ignition key fork lock combination. The Sabre
has a key activated, self contained and independently powered alarm system, into which
plugs the male end of a sheathed cable, normally stowed in its place above the tool kit.
The cable has a closed loop-eye on one end; the rider can lasso a lightpost and plug the
male end into the receptacle beneath the left sidecover. The sheathed cable has
fiber-optic material in its center; if the cable is cut, a piercing little beeper sounds.
The system can't be circumvented. The anti theft system is neat but the Magna doesn't have
it. For Magna owners its an accessory alarm, lock, and chain, garage or hard to hand
combat
Wet weather riding is no treat with the Magna or the Sabre. The front fenders are useless
for water protection; in all probability they are better than nothing. The Magna's rear
fender is so short if seemingly does little to keep the rear wheel spray from being pulled
up and forward. Our advice to Magna riders who see a storm ahead, head for shelter.
Day or night, rain or shine, the effortless way the Magna operates on the far distant side
of Legal-Speed is a tribute to the engine, its mounting system and the sixth overdrive
gear. Since the V-four has perfect primary balance, the only concern might he some
secondary vibration at high engine speeds. Yet this is inconsequential because the engine
attaches to the frame (both Magna and Sabre) with six rubber mounts. four on the
crankcases and two on the rear cylinder head; the mounting system is identical to that on
CB900F bikes, with two kinds of rubber in a collar, the first controlling radial and the
second lateral vibrations. In this way high-frequency vibrations fail to penetrate to the
rolling chassis and rider. Finally, the engine turns about 4500 rpm at 55 mph in fifth,
and sixth drops the revs below an indicated 4000 rpm.
At the drag strip the Magna recorded an impressive 12.29-second quarter-mile, running
through at 109.62 mph; the Sabre cut through in 12.23 seconds at 108.56 mph. These V-fours
surround the Kawasaki KZ750E3 (December 1981), which posted a 12.276-second, 109.22-mph
pass at the drag strip. To date, the Magna is the fastest 750 we've put on the strip, by
about 0.4 mph, and the Sabre is the quickest arriving at the quarter's end a 0.046-second
nano-blink sooner than the KZ750.
Normally, we'd bubble over about the raw numbers; the V-fours, however, impress the rider
in a completely different way: the nonchalant almost detached way they make this
performance. No fuss, no busyness, just here's a 12.23 and it wasn't much of a bother
--let's he on our way.
We decided the V-four should he on its way to the dyno, despite the difficulties created
by mating a shaft drive motorcycle to the dyno. Because the Honda V fours were so
radically new and we were so curious about their power output, we had a special fixture
built at the dyno so the V-four could he put on the pump. We knew that despite differences
in the air cleaners and pipes, both V fours had nearly identical outputs. The Sabre went
to the dyno. With the rear wheel removed, the Sabre's drive shaft turned a special rear
axle carrying a sprocket, which in turn linked to the dyno sprocket by means of a chain.
Bear in mind that the method introduces one more stage between engine and dyno. Though not
tentative, the figures reflect our first experience: only further experience will
demonstrate how completely numbers taken this way can he compared with others from
chain-driven bikes. The V-four's horsepower and torque figures may he slightly higher than
indicated by our charts. Although the Magna and Sabre are about 20 and 30 pounds heavier,
respectively, than the Kawasaki Kz750. the dragstrip times for all three bikes were
practically the same
The V-four makes a bit more peak horsepower than the K7750 (65.05 vs. 62.10), but it's the
VF750 power spread that's compelling. Where the Kawasaki makes more than 59 horsepower
over a 1000-rpm hand, the V-four does so over a 2000-rpm spread. Upstairs, there's more
horsepower under the curve, which helps to explain why the heavier V-fours could run with
the Kawasaki at the strip. The Kawasaki, however, has marginally better horsepower
figures, in general, from 2500 rpm to 6000 rpm. The quickest and fastest Honda CH750F in
our record books ran a 12.57 105.01 mph quarter mile, it made the same kind of upper end
dyno power as the V-four, was about as strong down-range, and weighed about 30 more pounds
than the Magna. Figures aside, the Magna and Sabre are strong. The V-four impresses riders
as having a broad, flat and high torque curve and a lot at pull-away power in sixth gear.
That quality about the V tour makes one wonder whether Honda has a touring Magna on the
drawing boards. Look how the pegs, gearshift linkage and brake pedal are laid out, and
then think about it. Honda could easily make an alternative tank, seat, bar and footpegs
for the Magna, then upgrade the rear suspension, and create an instant tourer.
The Magna's seat, a his and her split level number, corresponds to
the riding position and rear suspension. The riding position drives long-legged riders
back, putting their rumps against or on the rise pocket; it's better for smaller people.
The saddle is broad, flat and soft in the rider's pocket If feels cushy enough, and with a
short rear suspension travel the seat must assume rider suspension duties. Yet after 100
miles or so, a rider feels as if he's compressed the foam even though he hasn't; it's just
that fatigue and bun-burn make him aware of the saddle's flatness and the stepped ride.
For any one rider, the ergonomic relationships and the saddle construction dictate a
single seating position. From that pocket, the rider can get little fore-aft movement, and
the rear footpegs are too far rearward to give the rider any alternate positioning. Like
the Sabre, the Magna could use some more seat work for those riders who want to ride more
than a 100 miles in a stretch.
Again like the Sabre, the Magna throws some heat back on the rider from the radiator.
California winter conditions were cool enough that we couldn't quite determine how
objectionable the heat throw-oft might be. A couple of 85 degree days indicated that the
outside temperature combined with radiator throw-off and radiant heat from the rear
cylinder head would warm the Sabre rider's legs and thighs to tolerable limits. Clipping
along on the Sabre on a 90-degree after noon might be unpleasant. The Magna, with its
wider gas tank and different riding position, doesn't have the problem to the same degree
as the Sabre In part, the rider's legs are farther away from the engine; also, the Magna's
riding position encourages lower highway speeds.
We'd fake a fair amount of heat to get this engine; it's that much a functional marvel in
other ways. In functional terms the Magna is compromised compared with the Sabre.
Pure-blood sporting riders will proceed directly to the Sabre without so much as a look at
the Magna. But guys who want that engine in a motorcycle with styling bias will gravitate
to the Magna. Honda figures the Magna customers will outnumber Sabre-types three or four
to one. These V-fours signal a giant step forward; they represent a breath-stopping
escalation of techno warfare in the motorcycle market; they portend the arrival of a whole
new generation of Honda street motorcycles; and the Magna, especially, announces that in
the future everyone will have to sell style and super tech together.