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2009 Honda CBR600RR C ABS Riding

2009 Honda CBR600RR C-ABS - Future Indicator?

2009 Honda CBR600RR C ABS Valve Units
The valve units measure the... 
   
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2009 Honda CBR600RR C ABS Valve Units
The valve units measure the hydraulic pressure exerted by the rider via the conventional brake master cylinders, and relay the information to the ECM, which tells the power units how much braking power to provide. The stroke simulator comprises two rubber cushions of differing density to replicate the resistive feel and feedback of a conventional brake system. When the engine is off or if there is a failure in the C-ABS, solenoid valves 2 and 3 close, isolating the system away from the brake system and allowing normal actuation of the brakes in the conventional manner.
Because there is a separate system for the front and rear wheel controlled by the ECM, Honda was able to incorporate its Linked Braking System philosophy--where actuating either brake also actuates the other (although using the rear brake does not automatically engage the front brake unless wheel lockup is detected; more on that later)--into the Combined ABS (hence the "combined" prefix). Instead of being constricted to a fixed ratio of front/rear brake power distribution as with the LBS, however, the Combined ABS is able to continuously and infinitely vary the braking power to each wheel, allowing the system to adapt to the CBR's more demanding handling characteristics and hopefully making the system much more transparent than its predecessor.

2009 Honda CBR600RR C ABS Power Units
The Combined ABS precisely... 
   
  read full caption
2009 Honda CBR600RR C ABS Power Units
The Combined ABS precisely and quickly controls hydraulic pressure using two electrohydraulic power units, one for each wheel. Based on data provided by the valve units, the ECM tells each of these power units exactly how much hydraulic pressure to provide and when. The electric stepper motor on the left spins the gear-driven ball screw that moves the modulator piston, precisely controlling braking force as often as hundreds of times per second.
"And what if the Combined ABS system should suddenly develop an internal failure of some sort," question the luddites, "or if you move the bike when it is off? Would you have no brakes at all?" The elegant design of the Combined ABS also includes the fact that it is built in line with the standard brake system. The valve units that send data to the ECM measure hydraulic pressure generated by the rider operating the standard master cylinders via brake lever/pedal; a solenoid valve connects the two systems. When the engine is off or there is an electronic failure, the valve is open, allowing the rider to operate the brakes by the master cylinders in the conventional manner. Once the engine is running and the bike begins traveling over 3 mph, the valve closes and hydraulic pressure control is then turned over to the Combined ABS' components.

So How's It Ride?
Needless to say, we were a bit skeptical of the Combined ABS' ability to simulate a conventional brake system's feel at the lever, and we decided to take the standard '09 CBR600RR along for comparison purposes. Our testing ran the gamut of city traffic, highway drone, canyon carving, and even some closed circuit scratching (although the standard CBR wasn't available during that time).

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