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Honda Unveils Custom ‘Cool Wing’ Gold Wing at Daytona Bike Week

It’s Cool, Indeed

When we think cool custom bikes, we don’t usually think of the Honda Gold Wing. The touring machine doesn’t necessarily lend itself to customization. However, Honda didn’t let that stop it from bringing a super-cool custom Gold Wing to Daytona Bike Week. It calls the bike the “Cool Wing.”

The team at Steady Garage built the bike. The Cool Wing pays homage to the Gold Wing’s past while still looking to the future. Designer Francis Clemente is the man who came up with the design concept. That concept led the way for the team to go about making the customizations. 

The bike gets air suspension, batique-style mufflers, a custom hand-crafted leather seat, and a light blue paint job among other things. The air compressor for the suspension system is hidden away in one of the saddlebags. As far as technology goes, the team didn’t skimp out. The bike gets the first-ever motorcycle blind-spot monitoring system among the Gold Wing’s other current tech. Steady Garage Co-founder Kevin Dunn sounded proud of the finished product.

The project was very challenging due to the Gold Wing’s new design, as there was no guidance from any existing builds or projects that fit our style. Our hope was to build a custom Gold Wing that would be appreciated by riders of all ages, interests and backgrounds. We had to make it look cool without stepping away from functionality.

I love seeing a group of talented builders take to the Honda Gold Wing and make it a unique and awesome machine. It goes to show that anything can be customized tastefully with a well-crafted design and superb execution. The guys at Steady Garage did a fantastic job, making one of the most alluring Gold Wings out there. 

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A Future Honda Gold Wing Will Get Stereoscopic Cameras for Predictive Safety

An Extra Set of Eyes for Safety

Cameras and sensors for safety purposes are commonplace on cars these days, and now that technology will begin to become commonplace on motorcycles. MoreBikes noticed some new patents from Honda that put stereoscopic cameras into the fairing of the Gold Wing.

What does this mean? Well, those cameras would work to build an accurate 3D image of the road ahead. That would allow the bike’s safety features to kick in automatically. Do you know the automatic emergency braking systems found on cars? Yep, that’s where this is going. If you failed to apply the brakes or don’t react quick enough the bike’s safety system could assist automatically. These systems are already on Honda’s cars, so it only makes sense to add them to bikes eventually. 

Honda Gold Wing Patent
Image from MoreBikes

KTM and BMW have similar systems in the works according to MoreBikes. That would mean that Honda isn’t out of line to add this technology to its Gold Wing. A touring machine like this is one of the only applications where I can imagine this tech working well.

I’m not sure I’d want my commuter motorcycle applying the brakes when I wasn’t ready for it. However, on a long touring ride, some slight assistance from the bike’s safety system could help ease fatigue and make gobbling up miles even easier. 

Is This Kind of Tech Smart for Motorcycles?

There’s still a lot of questions about this kind of technology for motorcycles. My knee-jerk reaction is to say it’s a horrible idea, but I’ve been very impressed by some of the automotive semi-autonomous technology. The Honda Sensing system in its Civic and Accord is actually quite good.

Honda Gold Wing Patent
Image from MoreBikes

It can’t drive the car itself, but it dramatically reduces fatigue on long drives. I know there’s going to be a lot of pushback on this type of technology for motorcycles. I definitely have my own reservations, but I would urge people to be open to the possibility, and at least wait and see what it’s like before writing it off as a dumb bit of tech.

Anything that can make motorcycling safer and therefore better for more people is good in my book, and this kind of tech could eventually get to a point where it makes a ton of sense. We’re not there yet, but who knows where we’ll be in 10 or 15 years. It’ll take some time before Honda is ready to roll this out I think, and it’ll take more time before people are willing to accept it.

 

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Honda Issues Updates for Gold Wing

Techy Updates Keep the Wing Current

With Honda’s Gold Wing being so new, you wouldn’t expect many new updates coming in 2019 or for the 2020 model year, and you’d be right. However, according to a recent press releaseHonda will issue updates to the Gold Wing’s onboard computer system that will help the models stay up to date. 

Honda’s Gold Wing comes equipped with a smart, onboard computer system. This makes adding updates to things like the navigation system easy. The company will do just that for the 2018 and 2019 Gold Wings. Honda issued a couple of updates for the model.

Keeping Customers Happy

Honda Completes Second Scheduled Gold Wing Navigation Update
Image from Honda

The first was the addition of iPhone X communications software improvements, allowing iPhone users with the latest phone to more easily connect with the bike’s onboard system. Honda also improved the Sirius XM radio system, which means that fewer riders will have issues getting the songs and shows they like in areas with a low signal.

Honda has updates that will fix some issues Gold Wing owners complained about. The updates can be download from Honda’s website onto a USB. From there, the owners can install them on their bikes. This update will fix a daylight savings issue that some owners experienced and allow certain features to still be accessible to the rider once the engine is shut off. 

The navigation updates included with the changes outlined above include the ability to set 99 different waypoints along each specific route. This can be a real help on longer trips, as it allows you to set all your stops ahead of time.

Honda includes step-by-step instructions for all owners, and the updates should be easy to perform on your own without going into the dealership. It’s important to note that owners of the previous generation Gold Wing can get updates for their Garmin navigation system. However, those owners will need to purchase them from Honda instead of just going on to the company’s website to download them.

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X-Wing: Rodsmith Gets Carried Away With a Honda Gold Wing

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith
Craig Rodsmith is one of the elite few that truly deserves to have an ego…but doesn’t. According to photographer Grant Schwingle, the Australian metal-shaping guru has a tendency to sell himself short, and had to be pried for details on this stunning Honda Gold Wing.

Based in Illinois, USA, Craig calls this the ‘X-Wing,’ and casually dismisses it as a ‘quick’ build. “It started off as a bone stock 1980 Honda GL 1100 that had been sitting in my shop gathering dust for a year or two,” he says.

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith
“I decided to do a quick build as a daily rider—why not? They’re smooth, comfortable and ultra reliable. I thought I’d just do a quick replacement aluminum tank cover to give it a little character, which lead to a matching seat, and it soon got out of hand.”

Out of hand is an understatement: by the time Craig was done, there wasn’t an inch of the Gold Wing that hadn’t been seen to. Slimming down the big old tourer became an obsession, as he started shaping new parts, one by one.

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith
Craig started with the new tank cover and rear cowl, but quickly decided that a new under-seat fuel tank was in order too. He even went to the trouble of including a sight glass, because he wanted to ditch the stock clocks and fuel gauge.

The only dials left are an oil and temp gauge, tucked in behind a custom-made cowl, which sits over a one-off headlight. “It was becoming an obsession,” says Craig. “So I also formed up a front fender and a chin spoiler-slash-radiator shroud in the same style.”

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith
With the bike gradually transforming into a very different beast, Craig knew that the hideous Comstar wheels needed attention. So he cut and dished a set of aluminum wheel discs to cover them up, then fitted some Shinko rubber. Even though he was unsure about the idea at first, they certainly complete the sleek metal look he was aiming for.

The Gold Wing was now shedding plastic at a rate of knots, so Craig started turning to the finer details. He filed the original ‘GL 1100’ designation off the valve covers to push the smooth aesthetic even further.

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith
For the controls he cut the stock handlebar clamps off the triple trees, polished them up and installed clip-ons. When the clip-ons felt too low, he kept the clamps, but slotted in a set of separated Ducati Monster bars. Then he machined up his own textured aluminum grips, before making a cover to house the oil and neutral lights.

Craig also made a new front brake master cylinder, and installed braided stainless steel brake lines. The battery was relocated to under the false tank, the brake rotors drilled and a whole lot of brackets sent off for nickel plating.

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith
The Gold Wing’s suspension was left stock, but refurbished and lowered at both ends. Under the hood, the frame was de-tabbed, its welds cleaned up, and the whole thing painstakingly polished. The engine wasn’t messed with, but it now breathes better thanks to open filters and a pair of Cone Engineering mufflers and reworked headers.

“I don’t think I’ve ever heard another modified Gold Wing of this era with this exhaust,” Grant tells us, “but let me tell you it sounds great! A little bit flat-six Porsche, a little bit Subaru boxer, a little bit CB750.”

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith
According to Craig, it has the bite to match its bark: “The bike is a blast to ride, it’s like sitting on a locomotive!”

It looks great too, complemented by the blue seat leather (executed by Dane Utech) and hand pin striping and lettering (handled by Jim Brando). Plus, with so many original parts binned, Craig speculates that it’s a lot lighter.

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith
“The original bike weighed almost 700 pounds,” he says, “and while I haven’t weighed it yet, but I’d bet I shaved over 250 pounds off it, probably more.”

“I named it X-Wing not because of the Star Wars space ship design, but because it is hardly reminiscent of a Gold Wing—think ex-Gold Wing.”

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith
Craig might have built the X-Wing for his own use, but we’d be surprised if offers to buy it don’t come rolling in. And when they do, we can look forward to his next ‘daily runner.’

Rodsmith Motorcycles | Facebook | Instagram | Images by Grant Schwingle

Custom Honda GL1100 Gold Wing by Craig Rodsmith