The Honda Winner is an underbone motorcycle from the Japanese manufacturer Honda. It was launched in April 2016 in Vietnam.[6] It was also launched in May 2016 in Indonesia as the Supra GTR.[1] In June 2016, the bike was launched in Malaysia as the RS150R.[2] The engine is shared with the 2015 Sonic 150R, 2015 CB150R (StreetFire), and 2016 CBR150R. With the engine producing 12 kW (16.1 hp; 16.3 PS), it makes the Winner as the fastest and most powerful 4-stroke underbone model ever offered by Honda,[7] along with the Sonic.
This article uses bare URLs, which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot. (June 2022) |
Honda Supra GTR (Indonesia) | |
| Manufacturer | Honda |
|---|---|
| Also called | Honda Supra GTR (Indonesia)[1] Honda RS150R/RS-X (Malaysia)[2] |
| Production | 2016–present |
| Class | Underbone[3] |
| Engine | 149.16 cc (9.1 cu in) liquid-cooled 4-stroke 4-valve DOHC single |
| Bore / stroke | 57.3 mm × 57.8 mm (2.26 in × 2.28 in) |
| Compression ratio | 11.3:1 |
| Top speed | 136 km/h (85 mph)[4] |
| Power | 12 kW (16.1 hp; 16.3 PS) @ 9,000 rpm [5] |
| Torque | 14.2 N⋅m (10.5 lbf⋅ft) @ 6,500 rpm[5] |
| Transmission | 6-speed constant mesh, manual |
| Frame type | Twin-tube steel |
| Suspension | Front: 31 mm (1.2 in) telescopic fork Rear: Swingarm with monoshock |
| Brakes | Front: Single-piston caliper with single 256 mm (10.1 in) with ABS but only in malaysia Honda RSX150 disc Rear: Single-piston caliper with single 220 mm (8.7 in) disc |
| Tires | Front: 90/80-17M/C 46P Rear: 120/70-17M/C 58P |
| Wheelbase | 1,276 mm (50.2 in) |
| Dimensions | L: 2,025 mm (79.7 in) W: 725 mm (28.5 in) H: 1,102 mm (43.4 in) |
| Seat height | 780 mm (31 in) |
| Weight | 119 kg (262 lb)[5] (wet) |
| Fuel capacity | 4.5 L (0.99 imp gal; 1.2 US gal) |
| Fuel consumption | 45.2 km/L (128 mpg‑imp; 106 mpg‑US)[4] |
| Related | Honda Sonic 150R |
The Winner received an update in July 2019, dubbed as Winner X.[8][9][10] The Indonesian-market Supra GTR received a more minor update on 23 September 2019.[11]
The Winner X received a minor update in December 2021.[12]
Some performance tests listed here were conducted by Otomotif tabloid from Indonesia in June 2016.[4]
| Parameter | Time |
|---|---|
| 0–60 km/h (37 mph) | 4.2 s |
| 0–80 km/h (50 mph) | 7.4 s |
| 0–100 km/h (62 mph) | 12.1 s |
| 0–100 m (330 ft) | 7.2 s @ 79 km/h (49 mph) |
| 0–201 m (1⁄8 mi) | 11.3 s @ 95.7 km/h (59.5 mph) |
| 0–402 m (1⁄4 mi) | 18.2 s @ 111.5 km/h (69.3 mph) |
| Top speed (on speedometer) | 136 km/h (85 mph) |
| Top speed (Racelogic) | 121.2 km/h (75.3 mph) |
| Fuel consumption | 45.2 km/L (128 mpg‑imp; 106 mpg‑US) |
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