Unlike Donington, it's dry. The road surface is 90% road salt, ice and mud, and 10% Tarmac, but I'll take it. The roads are also bumpy and pockmarked and pose a whole new set of questions to our gleaming CBR.
Feeling slightly guilty asking so much of a new engine, I plant the revs in the business area between 8000rpm and 14,000rpm and tuck in behind the new fairing. There's less wind protection, especially for hands, while my elbows find their way onto the outside of my knees and the tacho needle, centre stage on one of the classic instrument panels, flicks back and forth beneath my nose.
Here on the road, where the CBR's flowing along a B-road ribbon rather than stopping and turning into a grand prix track's corners, the steering is direct and accurate -- and heavier than on track, possibly because the HESD (Honda Electronic Steering Damper) is reacting differently too. The CBR sits flat and floats across the surface mayhem with a smoothness the Kawasaki ZX-6R I rode on these roads for a year could barely dream of.
All CBR600RRs have short wheelbases and steep steering angles to help them turn like Dani P's RC/Vs, yet the stability of successive models becomes ever more impressive. It makes you think any speed is possible. One day mass centralisation may dramatically be denounced like processed meat and sitting down -- mass dispersal the new way to make a bike go round corners -- but out here in the boondocks, I truly believe.
In contrast to the track test, I barely use the brakes on the road, though C-ABS is a reassuring presence, while the new Big Piston Forks go virtually unnoticed. All I do is snatch an occasional glance in the still decent mirrors (pull in the clutch to get a totally clear view) and keep the tacho buzzing.
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