One unmistakable motorcycle trend over the past few years has been technology — often tied to shifting — that makes bikes easier to ride.
Just about every brand offers bikes requiring very little clutch pressure to engage; everyone from Ducati to Honda is experimenting with semi-autonomous shifting, and a few brands are leaning hard into automatic transmissions offering scooter-like twist-and-go throttles.

That last approach not only really lowers the barrier to entry but also makes it possible for people who can’t physically shift to experience two-wheeled bliss.
The latest bike from Hangzhou, China-based Benda takes it to the extreme, combining an automatic transmission with compact dimensions for quite possibly the most approachable cruiser ever. Meet the new Rock 250 CVT.
Throttle service
For the uninitiated, CVT is short for Continuously Variable Transmission, which refers to a system that uses pulleys and a belt or chain rather than gears to transfer engine power to the wheel(s).






