Yes, if you can see the bike in person, those buttons are obvious, but most often those aren't shown in the sales pictures. The side of the bike is always photographed, and the front wheel differences mentioned above are usually detectable in the pics. I get emails daily on STs for sale around the country and can usually decide if I want to further investigate just by looking at the front wheel in the single pic shown in the email. At least this is how I determine ABS or not on 1996 and later ST11s. I pretty much ignore 1995 and earlier.is'n it easier way to determine the presence of ABS by looking on the left panel, just below the left "glove" box? there are two distinctive buttons there, with the signs like TCS and ABS warning or something like that?
Aren't those dash panel pics of the 1100 too? With the analog fuel/temp guages...
The sticker is on both middle fairings, just above the grey, tip over wing. But it is only on the 1995 and prior models.... I have seen some images where there is a "sticker" that says ABS/TCS on the side cover , but other pictures of models listed as ABS that do not have that sticker....
I still say,The only real way to tell is if there are actually ABS parts on the bike, like the ring on the wheel.
If you're going to rely on stickers, speedos or fenders they can all be changed out/removed/added by a previous owner leaving you misinformed.
In addition to the ABSII front fender, there are two other ST1100/A front fenders. They differ mainly in the size of the holes that accommodate the fork brace.ST1100 Front Fenders can't be changed from the ABSII to the Standard - different forks and different mountings. I sure wish they could because you can find lots of standard front fenders on FleaBay but no ABSII front fenders.![]()
I still say,
Look at the eighth character of the frame number of your North American ST. That frame number is stamped into your ST's steel steering head.
...………...……………....
For the ST1100 Series, Honda always made the frame number indicate whether the ST was built with ABS/TCS or not.That still doesn't mean diddly if the previous owner removed the actual ABS HARDWARE. Somebody here converted his non-ABS bike to ABS. Good chance his VIN number doesn't reflect it.
For the ST1100 Series, Honda always made the frame number indicate whether the ST was built with ABS/TCS or not.
For such STs built for any North American market, the frame number is a VIN number stamped into the steel frame, and its eighth character is always either a 4 or a 5 (indicating built with ABS) or else it is a 0, 1 or a 2 (indicating non-ABS).
I agree that if someone added ABS to a non-ABS ST1100, the VIN in the steel should still show (the buyer) that Honda was not the party that put the ABS hardware on that ST.
"I don't think so, Tim!"Go ride the bike, make some panic stops, and see what happens?
Actually ending in "5" or "0" depends on what year. Car speedos did this too. For a long time all speedos had numbers ending in "5" and then they changed them here in the USA to end in zeros. My '98 ST1100 speedo had numbers ending in '5' but my CTX and current Burgman have speedo numbers ending in zero.