Hero Honda CBZ - Specifications & Review

CBZ

Article Complete Info

Articleid339890
CategoryNaked bike
MakeHero Honda
ModelCBZ
Year2004

Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels

FrametypeTubular single cradle
FrontbrakesSingle disc
FrontsuspensionTelescopic hydraulic fork
RearbrakesExpanding brake (drum brake)
RearsuspensionSwing arm with hydraulic damper- 5-step adjustment

Engine & Transmission

ClutchManual
CoolingsystemAir
Displacement156.80 ccm (9.57 cubic inches)
EnginedetailsSingle cylinder, four-stroke
FuelsystemCarburettor
Gearbox5-speed
Ignitionelectronic
LubricationsystemWet sump
Power17.16 HP (12.5 kW)) @ 8000 RPM
Topspeed100.0 km/h (62.1 mph)
TransmissiontypefinaldriveChain

Other Specifications

StarterElectric & kick

Physical Measures & Capacities

Dryweight148.0 kg (326.3 pounds)
Fuelcapacity12.50 litres (3.30 gallons)
Groundclearance160 mm (6.3 inches)
Overallheight1,130 mm (44.5 inches)
Overalllength2,100 mm (82.7 inches)
Overallwidth755 mm (29.7 inches)
Powerweightratio0.1159 HP/kg
Reservefuelcapacity2.50 litres (0.66 gallons)

About Hero Honda

Country of Origin: India
Founder: Joint venture between Hero Group (Brijmohan Lall Munjal) and Honda Motor Co.
Best Known For: Ultra-reliable, fuel-efficient commuters (Splendor/Passion/CD Dawn) that defined India’s 100–150cc class

Company History

Launched in 1984, Hero Honda fused Honda’s engineering discipline with Hero Group’s manufacturing and distribution muscle to build the motorcycles that put modern India on two wheels. The formula was elegant: air-cooled singles tuned for economy and longevity, framed by rugged cycle parts adapted to rough roads and heavy use. The Splendor family became a household name—easy starts, 60–80 km/l economy in real hands, and service centers in small towns where a day without transport meant lost income. Rather than chase displacement, the JV refined the commuter: better carburation then PGM-FI, corrosion-aware finishes for monsoons, and spares priced so repairs never sidelined a family budget. Advertising emphasized trust, but the brand equity was earned by uptime and resale value. By the late 2000s, Hero Honda was the world’s largest two-wheeler maker by volume. After the 2011 split, Hero MotoCorp continued with indigenous R&D while Honda deepened its own India presence, but the JV years remain a case study in industrial partnership at scale. Historically, Hero Honda normalized the expectation that a motorcycle should run for years with basic care, seeding a mechanic culture and mobility patterns that lifted productivity for tens of millions.

Other Years