I wouldn't look at the CCA as a measure of quality on a used battery. Cold cranking amp measurements have a large hole in it. By definition it is the amperage (at 0*F) the battery will put out for 30 seconds while keeping each cell voltage above 1.2 volts. So on a 12 volt battery which has 6 cells, that's 1.2 X 6 or just 7 volts of post voltage.
Some honest companies may use a higher voltage but the universal standard is 7.0 volts on a 12 volt battery.
In your case, what good is 245 amps if it's at 7 volts because at that voltage the starter won't be turning the engine. The CCA would be something worthwhile if it was a rating at 9.8 or 10.0 volts, but at a rating of 7 volts it's totally useless. (except to compare 1 battery to another)
A stock late model 96 engine draws appox 145-150 amps while cranking when the engine is cold. And lets say for example your battery has 245 CCA. That would lead me to believe that I would be able to crank the engine non-stop for appox 48 seconds. But that's not going to happen because once the battery posts voltage falls to appox 9.8 volts, cranking speed will be very very slow.
Add increased starter current draw if the engine is hot, plus the late model bikes "phase up" while cranking and that needs good high cranking RPM.
If your trying to measure what's left of your battery in life, forget the CCA rating. Just load test the battery with a carbon pile. Load it to 175 amps and start your stop watch. When battery post voltage drops to 9.8 volts, stop your watch. How many seconds went by. That is the real world starting power that your battery has. The longer the better but I would like to see at least a solid 15 seconds for those times when the engine may be flooded etc.
You can use a CCA rating to compare 1 new battery to another new battery,
but I think that's about it.