sport / default rider 183 cm
Aprilia RS 660 vs Honda CBR1000RR ergonomics
Aprilia RS 660 and Honda CBR1000RR land within a few ergonomic points for the default rider, so the better choice comes down to posture preference and bike category.
Fit verdict
Aprilia RS 660
90Comfortable
All contacts reached
Honda CBR1000RR
90Comfortable
All contacts reached
The two bikes are close enough that posture preference matters more than the overall score.
Rider fit: reaching the ground
The Aprilia RS 660 has a 820 mm seat; the Honda CBR1000RR sits at 820 mm, within a few millimetres of each other. As a rule of thumb you flat-foot a bike when your inseam roughly matches its seat height: about 82 cm for the Aprilia RS 660 and 82 cm for the Honda CBR1000RR.
Geometry snapshot
| Spec | Aprilia RS 660 | Honda CBR1000RR |
|---|---|---|
| Seat height | 820 mm | 820 mm |
| Wheelbase | 1,370 mm | 1,410 mm |
| Wet weight | 183 kg | 199 kg |
| Displacement | 659 cc | 999 cc |
Posture metrics
Knee angle
- Aprilia RS 660
- Sport (60.7 deg)
- Honda CBR1000RR
- Sport (60.7 deg)
Hip angle
- Aprilia RS 660
- Neutral (99.5 deg)
- Honda CBR1000RR
- Neutral (99.5 deg)
Elbow angle
- Aprilia RS 660
- Relaxed (143.3 deg)
- Honda CBR1000RR
- Relaxed (143.3 deg)
Torso lean
- Aprilia RS 660
- Forward (25.3 deg)
- Honda CBR1000RR
- Forward (25.5 deg)