Apple CarPlay is moving beyond the car and into the motorcycle.

Honda this week announced its new 2018 Gold Wing, the first bike to come equipped with Apple’s infotainment system. It will arrive next February and start at $23,500.

As noted by CNET’s Road Show blog , CarPlay’s implementation on the Gold Wing is a bit different from what it looks like on a four-wheeled automobile. The bike includes a 7-inch LCD display that shows the usual iOS-style interface, but it’s not touch-enabled. Instead, you can use a four-way joystick on the left grip or a rotary controller on the tank to get around. The latter could be tricky to manage when you’re actually on the move, but from there, you can access the usual Apple Maps, personal music libraries, iMessages, and the like.

To get CarPlay going in the first place, though, you have to connect an iPhone to one of the Gold Wing’s two USB ports—either on the trunk or in a little glove box on the tank—and pair the bike with a Bluetooth headset, according to CNET. Requiring a headset seems a bit annoying given that CarPlay can do many things without voice controls, but having one is the only way to activate Siri, take phone calls, and perform other voice commands.

The Gold Wing line has something of a reputation for going heavy on the extra features; this new model still isn’t exactly svelte, but it is significantly lighter (by close to 90 pounds) and leaner than its predecessors. Honda has a list of specs for the touring bike on its website.

CarPlay, meanwhile, is still generally a cleaner and simpler version of the infotainment systems that most car manufacturers plant into their rides by default. It remains more of a side business for Apple than anything else, but it has slowly made its way into more and more models in recent months. Apple lists close to 50 manufacturers as CarPlay partners today.

CarPlay's chief rival, Google’s Android Auto, has been expanding as well, but it isn’t available on the Gold Wing here. Honda told CNET that Google is “choosing to focus on four wheels for now.”