March 30, 2011

Honda CBR250R Officially Launched in India at Rs. 1.51 lakh


Honda India has launched it most awaited bike for its Indian audience, the Honda CBR250R motorcycle and has also revealed how much you need to pay to own this Japanese motor beauty.


HONDA CBR250R - India

Honda motorcycle and scooters India has put an end to the hype, speculations and wait surrounding its latest release. Honda has finally unveiled the CBR250R in the suburb Mumbai where it has also announced the cost of the the motorcycle. They revealed that the non-ABS version of the CBR250R is priced at Rs. 1.51 lakh (ex-showroom Delhi) and Rs. 1.77 lakh (ex-showroom Delhi) for the fully loaded ABS version. The bike will be available with 400 selected  Honda dealerships in the country and in three color to choose from – Red, Black and Silver. This has been one of the most sought-after motorcycles to roll out of the Honda factory in India and it has already registered over 2500 bookings since the bookings commenced in January 2011 despite no official announcement on prices from Honda until today.


Powered by a single cylinder 250cc DOHC engine with 4-valves, fuel injection and liquid cooling, the CBR250R is going to be one cracker of a machine with a price tag that is affordable. The motorcycle can do a top-whack of about 160km/h and its estimated 0-100km/h sprint time is expected to be somewhere around eight seconds.

The Honda CBR250R is a perfect street-bike with comfortable riding position and sorted ergonomics presenting it with the versatility for daily commuting, long distance touring as well as for some roadside show off. For all the bike lovers who have been waiting all this while for a decent power-packed quarter-litre machine with corresponding handling dynamics and good comfort, the Honda CBR250R could prove to be the right choice. 








Honda CBR250R Photo Gallery:







1 comments:

  • Manu Sivaraman says:
    June 18, 2011 at 1:25 AM

    Its Amaizing, we need like this vehicles on Indian roads not a FISH delivary bikes.

    By
    Manu Sivaraman
    Eraviperoor

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