Hello Friends,
The Dream Yuga is a low-cost 109 cc single-cylinder motorcycle manufactured by Honda's Indian subsidiary HMSI since 2012. It was announced by Honda in January 2012 at the Delhi Auto Expo,and was available to consumers in India in May 2012. At 44,642 Indian Rupees, the motorcycle is billed as the least expensive Honda currently produced, and the least expensive Honda ever made, adjusting for inflation.
The Dream Yuga is Honda throwing down the gauntlet at Hero MotoCorp's Splendor . Honda hopes the Yuga will catch the attention of the busy people' and thus eat into the numbers of one of the world's largest selling motorcycles. So we decided to pit the two in a non-lethargic fuel efficiency test. But the catch was this. We wouldn't do the full-on accurate speed-matched, tankful to tankful test but the real one. Two bikes, Rs 100 of fuel each, ridden on the same route in Mumbai traffic at speeds that felt right. The winner would travel further on the fuel. Simple. So we filled both bikes with 1.36 litres of petrol and set off.
Thanks and Regards,
Umang Kumar
The Dream Yuga is a low-cost 109 cc single-cylinder motorcycle manufactured by Honda's Indian subsidiary HMSI since 2012. It was announced by Honda in January 2012 at the Delhi Auto Expo,and was available to consumers in India in May 2012. At 44,642 Indian Rupees, the motorcycle is billed as the least expensive Honda currently produced, and the least expensive Honda ever made, adjusting for inflation.
The Dream Yuga is Honda throwing down the gauntlet at Hero MotoCorp's Splendor . Honda hopes the Yuga will catch the attention of the busy people' and thus eat into the numbers of one of the world's largest selling motorcycles. So we decided to pit the two in a non-lethargic fuel efficiency test. But the catch was this. We wouldn't do the full-on accurate speed-matched, tankful to tankful test but the real one. Two bikes, Rs 100 of fuel each, ridden on the same route in Mumbai traffic at speeds that felt right. The winner would travel further on the fuel. Simple. So we filled both bikes with 1.36 litres of petrol and set off.
Thanks and Regards,
Umang Kumar