Key performance
Technical specifications
- Displacement
- 450 cc → 449 cc
- Power
- 54.0 ch @ 9000 tr/min (38.7 kW) → 56.0 ch @ 8500 tr/min (41.2 kW)
- Torque
- 48.0 Nm @ 7000 tr/min → 50.5 Nm @ 7000 tr/min
- Compression ratio
- 12.5:1 → 12.0:1
- Fuel system
- Injection. PGM-Fi → Injection. Programmed Fuel Injection (PGM-FI), 46mm throttle body
- Ignition
- Full transister → Full transistor with electronic advance
- Starter
- Kick → —
- Frame
- Aluminium twin tube → Double poutre, simple berceau dédoublé en aluminium
- Clutch
- Multi plate wet clutch → —
- Front suspension
- 48mm inverted KYB PSF (Pneumatic Spring Fork) with air-adjustable spring rate, and rebound and compression-damping adjustability → 48mm inverted KYB Air-Oil-Separate (AOS) with rebound and compression-damping adjustability
- Rear suspension
- Pro-Link® KYB single shock with adjustable spring preload, rebound damping adjustability, and compression damping adjustment separated into low-speed and highspeed → Pro-Link KYB single shock with spring preload, rebound damping adjustability, and compression damping adjustment separated into low-speed and high-speed
- Front wheel travel
- 61 mm (2.4 inches) → 310 mm (12.2 inches)
- Rear wheel travel
- 61 mm (2.4 inches) → 318 mm (12.5 inches)
- Front brakes
- Single disc. Hydraulic. Two-piston calipers. → Double disc
- Rear brakes
- Single disc. Hydraulic. Single-piston caliper. → Single disc
- Seat height
- 953.00 mm → 955.00 mm
- Wheelbase
- 1492.00 mm → 1491.00 mm
- Ground clearance
- 330.00 mm → 333.00 mm
- Length
- 2191.00 mm → —
- Width
- 827.00 mm → —
- Height
- 1271.00 mm → —
- Fuel capacity
- 6.40 L → 5.68 L
- Weight
- 111.00 kg → 108.00 kg
- New price
- 8 899 € → 8 490 €
Engine
- Displacement
- 449 cc
- Power
- 56.0 ch @ 8500 tr/min (41.2 kW)
- Torque
- 50.5 Nm @ 7000 tr/min
- Engine type
- Single cylinder, four-stroke
- Cooling
- Liquid
- Compression ratio
- 12.0:1
- Bore × stroke
- 96.0 x 62.1 mm (3.8 x 2.4 inches)
- Valves/cylinder
- 4
- Camshafts
- 1 ACT
- Fuel system
- Injection. Programmed Fuel Injection (PGM-FI), 46mm throttle body
- Valve timing
- Single Overhead Cams (SOHC)
- Ignition
- Full transistor with electronic advance
Chassis
- Frame
- Double poutre, simple berceau dédoublé en aluminium
- Gearbox
- 5-speed
- Final drive
- Chain (final drive)
- Front suspension
- 48mm inverted KYB Air-Oil-Separate (AOS) with rebound and compression-damping adjustability
- Rear suspension
- Pro-Link KYB single shock with spring preload, rebound damping adjustability, and compression damping adjustment separated into low-speed and high-speed
- Front wheel travel
- 310 mm (12.2 inches)
- Rear wheel travel
- 318 mm (12.5 inches)
Brakes
- Front brakes
- Double disc
- Rear brakes
- Single disc
- Front tyre
- 80/100-21
- Rear tyre
- 120/80-19
Dimensions
- Seat height
- 955.00 mm
- Wheelbase
- 1491.00 mm
- Ground clearance
- 333.00 mm
- Fuel capacity
- 5.68 L
- Weight
- 108.00 kg
- New price
- 8 490 €
Overview
What separates a good 450 motocross bike from a machine capable of turning a fast rider into a podium contender? In 2011, Honda delivers its answer with the CRF450R, the fifth generation of a model that built its reputation on tracks around the world. The Honda CRF450R has never been a timid bike, and this model year is no exception. Beneath the seat, the 449 cc Unicam single-cylinder engine puts out 56 hp at 8,500 rpm with 50.5 Nm of torque available from 7,000 rpm. Figures that, on paper, play in the same league as the Yamaha YZ450F or the Kawasaki KX450, sold at nearly identical prices on the American market. At €8,490, the Honda positions itself as a serious weapon for the demanding club rider as much as for the regional competitor who wants reliable equipment without mortgaging their house.

What stands out on this model year is the sheer volume of changes compared to the previous version. Honda didn't just swap the stickers. The aluminum twin-spar frame gains rigidity to handle the stresses of the new exhaust system — longer and bulkier — designed to meet FIM regulations while preserving the engine's aggressive character. The battery-less fuel injection receives a revised injector that improves progressiveness at low and mid-range rpm. For a rider chaining ruts and drive-outs in second gear, the gain is tangible: the throttle becomes more readable, less brutal. The narrowed intake port follows the same logic of control. Honda also reworked the electronic mapping to improve starts, a point where the CRF had sometimes been caught out by the competition in previous years.
On the chassis side, the philosophy of mass centralization and lowering pays off. At 108 kg wet and with 333 mm of ground clearance, the Honda CRF450R 450 CRF 2012 and neighboring versions share this same architecture designed for jumping and aerial control. The 48 mm KYB inverted fork benefits from redesigned pistons and new seals, while the Pro-Link rear mono-shock offers separate high- and low-speed compression adjustments. All accompanied by the progressive HPSD steering damper, revised with a larger piston for improved precision during weight transfers. It's a cohesive, competition-oriented package that reminds you this bike descends directly from machines raced in MXGP. Tim Gajser would prove a few years later, aboard the Honda CRF450R, that the platform had room to dominate at the highest level worldwide.

The optional HRC kit deserves a closer look. Connecting the bike to a laptop to modify ignition timing and injection mapping through a single connector, without removing the 5.68-liter tank, is a real advantage for weekend mechanics and seasoned tuners alike. The only regret is that this kit remains optional rather than included as standard, especially at this price point. Another drawback: the 955 mm seat height and 1,491 mm wheelbase clearly reserve this machine for medium to tall builds. Shorter riders will have to adapt or invest in a lowering kit.
In the end, this 2011 CRF450R represents a smart evolution rather than a revolution. Honda targeted the weaknesses identified in the field — from engine response to directional stability — without betraying the DNA of a bike born for competition. Against the YZ450F and KX450 offered in the same price range, it plays the card of mechanical reliability and technical refinement. For the regular motocross rider looking for a polished 450 without spending every weekend tinkering, it's a solid choice. Not the flashiest on the starting gate, but the one that will bring you home in one piece after every moto.
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