2011
Honda VT1300CS ABS - Specifications & Review

Article Complete Info
| Articleid | 575518 |
|---|---|
| Category | Custom-cruiser |
| Make | Honda |
| Model | VT1300CS ABS |
| Year | 2011 |
Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels
| Frontbrakes | Single disc. Anti-lock braking (ABS) |
|---|---|
| Frontsuspension | Telescopic fork |
| Fronttyre | 90/90-21 |
| Rake | 33.0° |
| Rearbrakes | Single disc. Anti-lock braking (ABS) |
| Rearsuspension | Swing Arm |
| Reartyre | 170/80-15M |
| Seat | 2 person seat |
| Trail | 115 mm (4.5 inches) |
Engine & Transmission
| Borexstroke | 89.5 x 104.3 mm (3.5 x 4.1 inches) |
|---|---|
| Compression | 9.2:1 |
| Coolingsystem | Liquid |
| Displacement | 1312.00 ccm (80.06 cubic inches) |
| Enginedetails | V2, four-stroke |
| Enginetype | SC61E Engine |
| Fuelsystem | Injection |
| Gearbox | 5-speed |
| Ignition | transistor type |
| Torque | 103.00 Nm (10.5 kgf-m or 76.0 ft.lbs) @ 2750 RPM |
| Transmissiontypefinaldrive | Chain |
| Valvespercylinder | 3 |
Other Specifications
| Comments | Sold in Japan. |
|---|
Physical Measures & Capacities
| Dryweight | 310.0 kg (683.4 pounds) |
|---|---|
| Fuelcapacity | 16.00 litres (4.23 gallons) |
| Groundclearance | 130 mm (5.1 inches) |
| Overallheight | 1,100 mm (43.3 inches) |
| Overalllength | 2,580 mm (101.6 inches) |
| Overallwidth | 820 mm (32.3 inches) |
| Seatheight | 684 mm (26.9 inches) If adjustable, lowest setting. |
About Honda
Country of Origin:
Japan
Founder:
Soichiro Honda (with Takeo Fujisawa as business architect)
Best Known For:
From Super Cub ubiquity to RC-era racing dominance; CB/CRF/Gold Wing families and bulletproof reliability
Company History
No marque has touched more riders than Honda. The Super Cub rewrote mobility—tens of millions built, step-through convenience, engines that survive astonishing neglect. Behind the charm sat ruthless engineering: metallurgy, tolerances, and manufacturing systems that made reliability a baseline, not a feature. Honda raced to learn: from Isle of Man to modern MotoGP, RC machines taught lessons in breathing, friction reduction, and chassis stiffness that flowed into streetbikes. The 1969 CB750 brought the superbike age; the Gold Wing defined long-distance civility; the Fireblade reinvented power-to-weight; and CR/CRF dirt bikes set standards for off-road agility. Corporate culture prized kaizen and respect for the user—controls that feel intuitive, parts support that keeps 1970s bikes alive, and engines that start after winters of silence. Honda also led in safety and emissions, pushing EFI, ABS, and catalytic solutions early and at scale. Historically, Honda democratized excellence: making the extraordinary ordinary so that a delivery rider in Delhi and a tourer in Denver share the same trust in their machines. The brand’s throughline is simple: engineer the friction out of ownership so the ride can take center stage.
