Key performance

60 ch
Power
🔧
449 cc
Displacement
⚖️
118 kg
Weight
💺
960 mm
Seat height
8.3 L
Fuel capacity
💰
10 500 €
New price
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Technical specifications

Engine

Displacement
449 cc
Power
60.0 ch (44.1 kW)
Engine type
Single cylinder, four-stroke
Cooling
Liquid
Compression ratio
13.5:1
Bore × stroke
96.0 x 62.0 mm (3.8 x 2.4 inches)
Valves/cylinder
4
Camshafts
1 ACT
Fuel system
Injection. Programmed Fuel Injection (PGM-FI)
Valve timing
Single Overhead Cams (SOHC)
Ignition
Full transistorized with electronic advance
Starter
Electric & kick

Chassis

Frame
Semi-double cradle, aluminium twin-spar
Gearbox
5-speed
Final drive
Chain   (final drive)
Front suspension
49mm inverted Showa fork with rebound and compression damping adjustability
Rear suspension
Pro-Link® Showa single shock with adjustable spring preload, rebound and compression damping adjustability
Front wheel travel
305 mm (12.0 inches)
Rear wheel travel
312 mm (12.3 inches)

Brakes

Front brakes
Single disc. Two-piston calipers.
Rear brakes
Single disc
Front tyre
90/90-21
Rear tyre
120/90-18

Dimensions

Seat height
960.00 mm
Wheelbase
1476.00 mm
Ground clearance
328.00 mm
Fuel capacity
8.33 L
Weight
118.40 kg
New price
10 500 €

Overview

For nearly a decade, enduro enthusiasts who wanted to ride Honda had to turn to specialists like HM or Red Moto to convert motocross machines into road-legal bikes. A surprising gap in the lineup of a manufacturer so dominant in off-road. With the 2017 Honda CRF450RX, Tokyo is finally taking matters back into its own hands and marking its grand return to the category with a weapon built for the special stage. Not a simple cosmetic spin-off of the CRF 450 R, but a genuine machine designed to devour liaison miles and deliver the goods between the timing beacons.

Honda CRF450RX

The technical foundation, it must be said, is solid. This Honda 450 CRF in RX trim inherits the completely overhauled engine from the R — the first major redesign in eight years. The 449 cc single-cylinder produces 60 horsepower, gaining 11% in power over the previous generation while retaining a high 13.5:1 compression ratio with a 96 mm bore and 62 mm stroke. The four-valve Unicam valvetrain receives DLC coating on the piston pin and rocker arms to reduce friction. Everything runs through a five-speed gearbox with 13x50 final drive gearing, slightly taller than on the motocross version. The real difference lies in the PGM-FI injection maps, deliberately softened to deliver a more progressive power build-up. The EMSB selector on the handlebar lets you toggle between three modes: an all-around setting, a smooth mode for the end of special stages when your arms are pumped, and an aggressive mode that brings back the raw character of the R. The standard electric starter will spare many a cold sweat at the bottom of a rock field.

On the chassis side, the Honda CRF450RX is built around the seventh generation twin-spar aluminum frame, whose main spars adopt a trapezoidal profile. Torsional rigidity drops by nearly 7% compared to the previous version — a deliberate choice to improve feel during weight transitions. The 1,476 mm wheelbase, revised geometry with a lowered center of gravity, and rearward-biased mass distribution promote traction on loose terrain. Seat height tops out at 960 mm, which rules out smaller riders from the start, and 328 mm of ground clearance allows full commitment on the roughest sections. On the scales, 118 kg wet: a contained weight that places this machine in the upper-middle range of the category against rivals like the KTM 450 EXC-F or the Husqvarna FE 450.

The Showa suspension deserves a closer look. The 49 mm inverted fork is derived directly from the kit supplied to factory teams in the Japanese MX championship, with damping recalibrated to softer compression than on the R. The Pro-Link rear shock, sprung at 52 N/mm versus 54 on the motocross version, follows the same logic of increased comfort without sacrificing high-speed support. Everything remains fully adjustable in preload, rebound, and compression. Braking relies on a 260 mm petal disc up front with a two-piston caliper, complemented by a rear disc. Effective and easy to modulate, nothing more. The Dunlop Geomax AT81 tires in 90/90-21 and 120/90-18 are a sensible choice for versatile use, though demanding riders will quickly switch to more terrain-specific rubber.

Then there's the question of positioning. At €10,500, this 2017 Honda CRF450RX is clearly aimed at the competitive rider or the committed practitioner looking for a no-compromise, cutting-edge enduro. The 8.33-liter tank limits range on long liaisons, and the 15-hour service intervals are a reminder that this is a pure racing tool. It's not a Sunday trail bike or a supermoto in disguise. It's a high-level enduro machine, built to attack, putting Honda back in a fight where KTM and Husqvarna had been reigning unchallenged. The wing is back in the battle, and that's good news for the entire field.

Practical info

  • La moto est accessible aux permis : A

Indicators & positioning

Weight-to-power ratio
0.50 ch/kg
🔧
Volumetric power
131.8 ch/L
In category Enduro / offroad · 225-898cc displacement (1754 motorcycles compared)
Power 59 ch Top 18%
17 ch median 45 ch 85 ch
Weight 118 kg Lighter than 79%
104 kg median 144 kg 230 kg
P/W ratio 0.50 ch/kg Top 1%
0.13 median 0.23 0.43 ch/kg

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