EnfieldMotorcycles.in is the blog for all Royal Enfield enthusiast where we live, breathe, and eat Royal Enfield Bullet .  We not only keep you informed of the news about Royal Enfield originals, but also give custom bikes and historical bikes a lot of attention. You can also find with us the best Enfield related movies and crazy stunts etc. We are testing and reviewing  new models of which a complete relief will be shown on our site. Finally, we have technical tips, for example, how to properly get engine through the winter.  
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An Introduction:
 An Indian motorbiking ikon, but  much maligned for its perennial mechanical shortcomings, the Royal  Enfield Bullet has been accorded a facelift of sorts with the 'Electra',  a metallic-hued monster that has shed some of its traits of torment.  Sirish Chandran gets a leg over the original m(e)an machine and comes  away delighted...... almost! So who in God's name buys a Bullet?  Skeptics and so-called 'critics/experts' have retorts like 'men blessed  with half a brain' or 'masochists' or worse 'womanisers' at the tip of  their tongues to define Bullet aficionados. But are these informed  opinions or just unwanted slandering of an icon of national progress?  Well, yes and yes in equal measure. All the jokes about the venerable  Bullet are partially rooted in reality. Who else but a masochist (or a  person severely handicapped in the brains department) would buy a bike  that leaks oil on the first day, snaps cables on the second, drops off  the exhaust pipe on the third and faithfully takes you to the hospital  on the fourth day to get your backbone rearranged? We Indians buy bikes  keeping in mind precisely two factors; a) Fuel Efficiency and b) value  for money (read as initial purchase price). There is also the small  urban populace for whom style is as important. But even here mileage  does play a big role judging by customer preference for the Fiero over  the CBZ. Entangled in this single-minded obsession with mileage and VFM  is the Bullet buyer. In my opinion unless you can afford an imported  bike, there is (was!) only the Yamaha RD350 and today only the Royal  Enfield Bullet that can satiate the appetite of the true-blue  motorcycling enthusiast. (Objections/contradictions etc to the usual  office address). Of the two, mint RD350s aren't exactly yours for the  taking so that leaves us enthusiasts with just the Bullet. Which is  where we begin to delineate the Bullet buyer, Bulleteer to the informed.  Bulleteers are all male. Bulleteers don't cry. They make others cry.  Bulleteers wear boots, own a rarely used leather jacket preserved in the  closet, visit the gym regularly (may or may not have muscles), have  girlfriend/s, and one of his many best friends is the nearest Bullet  mechanic/spare part dealer. Bulleteers don't buy their bikes for  mileage, ride comfort, low noise levels, ease of riding, slick gear  shifts or any of the other factors lesser beings (read pansies) look for  in their bikes. A Bulleteer has a second bike in the garage and  invariably it is a high-mileage Kinetic Honda (after all a Bulleteer has  to go to work/college daily). No gears and a self-starter squashes all  masochist allegations. Bulleteers are mechanically inclined. Addendum:  if a Bulleteer isn't mechanically inclined, his pants are always stained  black (bike leaking oil from everywhere). Last but most importantly, a  Bulleteer's heart works more than his head. Now before you scream  'rubbish' and rush to flush this mag down the toilet, I shall stop this  nonsense and get down to the road test of the bike at hand. Let's get  one thing straight though. Bullet 'Electra' doesn't translate into a  Bullet with an electric starter. For that we may have to wait for  another absurdly monikered bike like maybe the 'Thunder'!
An Indian motorbiking ikon, but  much maligned for its perennial mechanical shortcomings, the Royal  Enfield Bullet has been accorded a facelift of sorts with the 'Electra',  a metallic-hued monster that has shed some of its traits of torment.  Sirish Chandran gets a leg over the original m(e)an machine and comes  away delighted...... almost! So who in God's name buys a Bullet?  Skeptics and so-called 'critics/experts' have retorts like 'men blessed  with half a brain' or 'masochists' or worse 'womanisers' at the tip of  their tongues to define Bullet aficionados. But are these informed  opinions or just unwanted slandering of an icon of national progress?  Well, yes and yes in equal measure. All the jokes about the venerable  Bullet are partially rooted in reality. Who else but a masochist (or a  person severely handicapped in the brains department) would buy a bike  that leaks oil on the first day, snaps cables on the second, drops off  the exhaust pipe on the third and faithfully takes you to the hospital  on the fourth day to get your backbone rearranged? We Indians buy bikes  keeping in mind precisely two factors; a) Fuel Efficiency and b) value  for money (read as initial purchase price). There is also the small  urban populace for whom style is as important. But even here mileage  does play a big role judging by customer preference for the Fiero over  the CBZ. Entangled in this single-minded obsession with mileage and VFM  is the Bullet buyer. In my opinion unless you can afford an imported  bike, there is (was!) only the Yamaha RD350 and today only the Royal  Enfield Bullet that can satiate the appetite of the true-blue  motorcycling enthusiast. (Objections/contradictions etc to the usual  office address). Of the two, mint RD350s aren't exactly yours for the  taking so that leaves us enthusiasts with just the Bullet. Which is  where we begin to delineate the Bullet buyer, Bulleteer to the informed.  Bulleteers are all male. Bulleteers don't cry. They make others cry.  Bulleteers wear boots, own a rarely used leather jacket preserved in the  closet, visit the gym regularly (may or may not have muscles), have  girlfriend/s, and one of his many best friends is the nearest Bullet  mechanic/spare part dealer. Bulleteers don't buy their bikes for  mileage, ride comfort, low noise levels, ease of riding, slick gear  shifts or any of the other factors lesser beings (read pansies) look for  in their bikes. A Bulleteer has a second bike in the garage and  invariably it is a high-mileage Kinetic Honda (after all a Bulleteer has  to go to work/college daily). No gears and a self-starter squashes all  masochist allegations. Bulleteers are mechanically inclined. Addendum:  if a Bulleteer isn't mechanically inclined, his pants are always stained  black (bike leaking oil from everywhere). Last but most importantly, a  Bulleteer's heart works more than his head. Now before you scream  'rubbish' and rush to flush this mag down the toilet, I shall stop this  nonsense and get down to the road test of the bike at hand. Let's get  one thing straight though. Bullet 'Electra' doesn't translate into a  Bullet with an electric starter. For that we may have to wait for  another absurdly monikered bike like maybe the 'Thunder'!
Style &  Build:
 Classic Bullet styling. Umm, I  like.This is what a Bullet should look like. Period. Fiddling around  with that classic Brit street bike looks in the form of the various  Lightning models resulted in what can at best be described as a botched  effort. So now let us put down this mag and fold our hands in a silent  prayer thanking Royal Enfield for basing the Electra on the standard  Bullet and not on some in-house marriage of the Bullet and a  Harley-Davidson. The Bullet Electra comes in three eye-delighting shades  of silver, blue and maroon (electrifying colours, as Royal Enfield  prefers to call them). Distinguishing her from the Machismo models is  the fully painted tank unlike the part-chrome part-painted tank of the  former. Also the ungainly black rubber kneepads on the tank have been  ditched to facilitate clean uncluttered lines. This also makes the Royal  Enfield logo on the tank stand proud and the smart sticker job beneath  it lends real character. Having harped about the treatment of the tank, I  am now at a loss for words. What more can I say that all of you don't  already know? I could mention the chromed mudguards, but you already  know that. I could mention the huge 19-inch wheels that give the Bullet  massive street presence, but you already know that. I could also mention  the famous Bullet casquette that incorporates the park and headlamps in  addition to the speedo and ammeter but you have already seen and eith
Classic Bullet styling. Umm, I  like.This is what a Bullet should look like. Period. Fiddling around  with that classic Brit street bike looks in the form of the various  Lightning models resulted in what can at best be described as a botched  effort. So now let us put down this mag and fold our hands in a silent  prayer thanking Royal Enfield for basing the Electra on the standard  Bullet and not on some in-house marriage of the Bullet and a  Harley-Davidson. The Bullet Electra comes in three eye-delighting shades  of silver, blue and maroon (electrifying colours, as Royal Enfield  prefers to call them). Distinguishing her from the Machismo models is  the fully painted tank unlike the part-chrome part-painted tank of the  former. Also the ungainly black rubber kneepads on the tank have been  ditched to facilitate clean uncluttered lines. This also makes the Royal  Enfield logo on the tank stand proud and the smart sticker job beneath  it lends real character. Having harped about the treatment of the tank, I  am now at a loss for words. What more can I say that all of you don't  already know? I could mention the chromed mudguards, but you already  know that. I could mention the huge 19-inch wheels that give the Bullet  massive street presence, but you already know that. I could also mention  the famous Bullet casquette that incorporates the park and headlamps in  addition to the speedo and ammeter but you have already seen and eith er hated or loved it. And lest I forget, the tail  lamp has been replaced to mimic the original 1955 Bullet's. The  rationale? Answers to the usual address please, the best one wins an  official OVERDRIVE cap. The one thing that deserves mention is the  powerplant. The engine of any Royal Enfield bike is as much a part of  the visual excitement as say the paint job or the amount of chrome. And  with the ugly and disproportionate (though technologically superior) AVL  powerplant this visual excitement flew out of the window. Now Royal  Enfield has finally realised the importance of the visual appeal of the  engine and thus the Electra derives motion from the ancient 350cc lump  that originated way back in the 1930s. Back then an engineer was also an  artist and everything was designed with a sense of proportion and  aesthetic considerations weren't simply an afterthought. This 350cc lump  may not be a marvel of packaging or boast compact proportions but what  it has is real
er hated or loved it. And lest I forget, the tail  lamp has been replaced to mimic the original 1955 Bullet's. The  rationale? Answers to the usual address please, the best one wins an  official OVERDRIVE cap. The one thing that deserves mention is the  powerplant. The engine of any Royal Enfield bike is as much a part of  the visual excitement as say the paint job or the amount of chrome. And  with the ugly and disproportionate (though technologically superior) AVL  powerplant this visual excitement flew out of the window. Now Royal  Enfield has finally realised the importance of the visual appeal of the  engine and thus the Electra derives motion from the ancient 350cc lump  that originated way back in the 1930s. Back then an engineer was also an  artist and everything was designed with a sense of proportion and  aesthetic considerations weren't simply an afterthought. This 350cc lump  may not be a marvel of packaging or boast compact proportions but what  it has is real  character. The engine has now been polished up;  the dummy timing gear casing has been chromed in addition to the gearbox  while the clutch cover now sports a machined look. This is in addition  to the chromed air-filter and battery box covers and that lovely exhaust  pipe. Switchgear is the same unit as on other Bullets of which only the  easier to operate handle lock deserves mention. The seat unit is  frankly the best you will come across on any bike. Firm, right support  in all the right places and most importantly your crotch isn't banged to  bits against the tank under heavy braking or when the bike takes off  over a speedbreaker. If you are a keen observer of details, you will  also notice that the bike has been propped up on a side stand. Yes,  Royal Enfield has managed to design a side stand that actually works.  And lest I forget, the horn finally is louder than the bike itself. A  good thing or bad, you decide. Build quality of the Electra is again a  letdown. We have always said that the Bullet vibrates so much that all  the nuts and bolts loosen up and eventually fall off. But that's not an  excuse Royal Enfield can subscribe to. The fact that they haven't been  able to get quality levels right in spite of making just one solitary  model for almost fifty years puts the company in very poor light. The  rear footrests were loose when the bike was delivered to us, the bolt  attaching the exhaust pipe to the rear sub frame fell off and the  headlamp and tail lamp fused twice in the span of a week. A shame really  as the headlamp on this bike is the best that I have come across,  better than even the Eliminator's. But then other problems like petrol  leaking from the fuel flap, oil leaks from the engine, carburettor  gaskets working loose, air filter filling up with water etc haven't  manifested themselves. Reminds me of Murphy's Law: If you perceive that  there are four possible ways in which a procedure can go wrong, and  circumvent these, then a fifth way, unprepared for, will promptly  develop. In case of the Bullet you can rest assured sixth, seventh and  eighth ways will also develop!
character. The engine has now been polished up;  the dummy timing gear casing has been chromed in addition to the gearbox  while the clutch cover now sports a machined look. This is in addition  to the chromed air-filter and battery box covers and that lovely exhaust  pipe. Switchgear is the same unit as on other Bullets of which only the  easier to operate handle lock deserves mention. The seat unit is  frankly the best you will come across on any bike. Firm, right support  in all the right places and most importantly your crotch isn't banged to  bits against the tank under heavy braking or when the bike takes off  over a speedbreaker. If you are a keen observer of details, you will  also notice that the bike has been propped up on a side stand. Yes,  Royal Enfield has managed to design a side stand that actually works.  And lest I forget, the horn finally is louder than the bike itself. A  good thing or bad, you decide. Build quality of the Electra is again a  letdown. We have always said that the Bullet vibrates so much that all  the nuts and bolts loosen up and eventually fall off. But that's not an  excuse Royal Enfield can subscribe to. The fact that they haven't been  able to get quality levels right in spite of making just one solitary  model for almost fifty years puts the company in very poor light. The  rear footrests were loose when the bike was delivered to us, the bolt  attaching the exhaust pipe to the rear sub frame fell off and the  headlamp and tail lamp fused twice in the span of a week. A shame really  as the headlamp on this bike is the best that I have come across,  better than even the Eliminator's. But then other problems like petrol  leaking from the fuel flap, oil leaks from the engine, carburettor  gaskets working loose, air filter filling up with water etc haven't  manifested themselves. Reminds me of Murphy's Law: If you perceive that  there are four possible ways in which a procedure can go wrong, and  circumvent these, then a fifth way, unprepared for, will promptly  develop. In case of the Bullet you can rest assured sixth, seventh and  eighth ways will also develop!
Engine  & Transmission:
Electronic ignition on a 1930s engine in  2001 has got to be big news. Don't think so? The ancient 350cc lump that  originated way back in the 1930s powers the Electra. The big news is  that the troublesome g ear driven contact breaker system (CB points) has  made way for CDI ignition. The CB points used to be a major irritant  demanding constant attention, adjustment and God save you if water got  into it. Now with the CDI unit, all these problems have been taken care  of, a very good thing at that. But then you win some and lose some. In  this case the barely audible tickover of the engine with accurately  adjusted CB points has given way to a fastish and noisy idle, not as  noisy as the AVL engine but not what we are used to. The engine develops  18bhp at 5625rpm and a max twist of 26.9Nm at 2875rpm (yes exactly 5625  and 2875rpm). The four-stroke unit has bore and stroke dimensions of  70x90mm, instrumental in that glorious exhaust thump. Breathing is via a  Micarb VM24 carburettor. Once you get used to it, starting the bike is a  piece of cake. Decompress, half-kick, release and
ear driven contact breaker system (CB points) has  made way for CDI ignition. The CB points used to be a major irritant  demanding constant attention, adjustment and God save you if water got  into it. Now with the CDI unit, all these problems have been taken care  of, a very good thing at that. But then you win some and lose some. In  this case the barely audible tickover of the engine with accurately  adjusted CB points has given way to a fastish and noisy idle, not as  noisy as the AVL engine but not what we are used to. The engine develops  18bhp at 5625rpm and a max twist of 26.9Nm at 2875rpm (yes exactly 5625  and 2875rpm). The four-stroke unit has bore and stroke dimensions of  70x90mm, instrumental in that glorious exhaust thump. Breathing is via a  Micarb VM24 carburettor. Once you get used to it, starting the bike is a  piece of cake. Decompress, half-kick, release and  then give it a good kick. Master the art and all  those horror stories of hip-dislocating back kicks will be rubbished.  Transmission of power is handled by the age-old gearbox located on the  wrong side (left side). Bulleteers will argue that other bikes have  their gear levers on the wrong side but that argument shall be left for  another time and place. The gearbox can accurately be described as a box  full of neutrals. There is a neutral between every gear and the neutral  finder makes finding true neutral a piece of cake. Shifting gears is a  pain, a royal pain, an art that you really can't master. The Lord has  decreed that a Bulleteer will find false neutral at least once every  10km. Not surprising then that all Bulleteers favour army issue boots to  sneakers.
then give it a good kick. Master the art and all  those horror stories of hip-dislocating back kicks will be rubbished.  Transmission of power is handled by the age-old gearbox located on the  wrong side (left side). Bulleteers will argue that other bikes have  their gear levers on the wrong side but that argument shall be left for  another time and place. The gearbox can accurately be described as a box  full of neutrals. There is a neutral between every gear and the neutral  finder makes finding true neutral a piece of cake. Shifting gears is a  pain, a royal pain, an art that you really can't master. The Lord has  decreed that a Bulleteer will find false neutral at least once every  10km. Not surprising then that all Bulleteers favour army issue boots to  sneakers.
 ear driven contact breaker system (CB points) has  made way for CDI ignition. The CB points used to be a major irritant  demanding constant attention, adjustment and God save you if water got  into it. Now with the CDI unit, all these problems have been taken care  of, a very good thing at that. But then you win some and lose some. In  this case the barely audible tickover of the engine with accurately  adjusted CB points has given way to a fastish and noisy idle, not as  noisy as the AVL engine but not what we are used to. The engine develops  18bhp at 5625rpm and a max twist of 26.9Nm at 2875rpm (yes exactly 5625  and 2875rpm). The four-stroke unit has bore and stroke dimensions of  70x90mm, instrumental in that glorious exhaust thump. Breathing is via a  Micarb VM24 carburettor. Once you get used to it, starting the bike is a  piece of cake. Decompress, half-kick, release and
ear driven contact breaker system (CB points) has  made way for CDI ignition. The CB points used to be a major irritant  demanding constant attention, adjustment and God save you if water got  into it. Now with the CDI unit, all these problems have been taken care  of, a very good thing at that. But then you win some and lose some. In  this case the barely audible tickover of the engine with accurately  adjusted CB points has given way to a fastish and noisy idle, not as  noisy as the AVL engine but not what we are used to. The engine develops  18bhp at 5625rpm and a max twist of 26.9Nm at 2875rpm (yes exactly 5625  and 2875rpm). The four-stroke unit has bore and stroke dimensions of  70x90mm, instrumental in that glorious exhaust thump. Breathing is via a  Micarb VM24 carburettor. Once you get used to it, starting the bike is a  piece of cake. Decompress, half-kick, release and  then give it a good kick. Master the art and all  those horror stories of hip-dislocating back kicks will be rubbished.  Transmission of power is handled by the age-old gearbox located on the  wrong side (left side). Bulleteers will argue that other bikes have  their gear levers on the wrong side but that argument shall be left for  another time and place. The gearbox can accurately be described as a box  full of neutrals. There is a neutral between every gear and the neutral  finder makes finding true neutral a piece of cake. Shifting gears is a  pain, a royal pain, an art that you really can't master. The Lord has  decreed that a Bulleteer will find false neutral at least once every  10km. Not surprising then that all Bulleteers favour army issue boots to  sneakers.
then give it a good kick. Master the art and all  those horror stories of hip-dislocating back kicks will be rubbished.  Transmission of power is handled by the age-old gearbox located on the  wrong side (left side). Bulleteers will argue that other bikes have  their gear levers on the wrong side but that argument shall be left for  another time and place. The gearbox can accurately be described as a box  full of neutrals. There is a neutral between every gear and the neutral  finder makes finding true neutral a piece of cake. Shifting gears is a  pain, a royal pain, an art that you really can't master. The Lord has  decreed that a Bulleteer will find false neutral at least once every  10km. Not surprising then that all Bulleteers favour army issue boots to  sneakers.Chassis & Suspension:
 Same age old design.The chassis is  the same single downtube using the engine as a stressed member.  Telescopic forks at the front and 5-stage adjustable shocks at the rear  endow the bike with a barely acceptable ride quality. Throw the bike  into potholes and ditches and you will end up in the hospital, make no  mistake about it.The longish (1370mm) wheelbase endows the Electra with  superb straig
Same age old design.The chassis is  the same single downtube using the engine as a stressed member.  Telescopic forks at the front and 5-stage adjustable shocks at the rear  endow the bike with a barely acceptable ride quality. Throw the bike  into potholes and ditches and you will end up in the hospital, make no  mistake about it.The longish (1370mm) wheelbase endows the Electra with  superb straig ht line stability, hardly affected by crosswinds.  Handling of the bike is good though feedback is limited. She can be  coaxed into scraping her footpegs but at these extreme angles of lean it  is all a matter of faith, that the bike will hold her line and not spit  you off.
ht line stability, hardly affected by crosswinds.  Handling of the bike is good though feedback is limited. She can be  coaxed into scraping her footpegs but at these extreme angles of lean it  is all a matter of faith, that the bike will hold her line and not spit  you off.
Performance:
Won't electrify your senses or burn the  road. We always knew that the Bullet had adequate Performance. We also  knew that if you want to go on a long (and I mean long) biking trip, you  have two options - the Bullet or any other bike plus a truck to haul it  back after it breaks down. Bullets were never meant for wining traffic  light grand prix races. No sir, not until the Lightning 350 arrived and  grabbed the crown of the fastest bike in production today. So getting  back to the standard Bullet after being spoilt by the Lightning was a  bit of a letdown. In our measured acceleration runs, the Electra took  8.1 seconds to hit 60kmph and 13.9 seconds to hit 80kmph from a standing  start. Compare this to the Machismo 350 that takes 6.3 seconds and the  taller geared Lightning 350 that takes 6.2 seconds and you will  understand why I am a trifle disappointed. The Electra maxes out at  100.65kmph (as opposed to the 110 plus speeds the other two are capable  of). The quarter mile is achieved in 22.2 seconds, the Datron test gear  registering 92.9kmph at this speed. Coming to the roll-on figures, the  Electra took 9.5 seconds in third and 15.0 seconds in fourth to cover  the benchmark 30 to 70km ph test. Put these figures in perspective and you  will realise that the Electra is not slow, not by a long shot. Launch  her right and you can have almost any bike for breakfast. Where the  Bullet excels (her forte if you wish) is in touring. Out on the open  road the Bullet will thump all day at a steady 90kmph without skipping a  beat. We feel that it is high time that the gear ratios are revised and  a fifth gear is also incorporated. Royal Enfield did it for the  Lightning 350 that made her go like stink. A shorter fifth gear and  taller first and second on the Electra will achieve the twin objectives  of fiery acceleration and higher cruising speeds. Hope Royal Enfield  doesn't forget this for their next model. Braking is taken care of by  7-inch twin leading shoe drum brakes at the front and a 6-inch single  lead drum at the rear. This is the same setup on the other Royal Enfield  bike and the same criticisms still apply. The brakes, adequate at  moderate speeds, become woefully inadequate as speeds rise. Braking from  60kmph to rest was achieved in 3.2 seconds, the bike covering a  distance of 26.8 metres. This is not much worse than other 100cc bikes  equipped with drums but the Bullet carries so much inertia that if you  slam into anything at any speed, it will bring down the building. The  brakes lack any feel whatsoever and a mammoth grab on the brake lever is  called for to achieve any retardation whatsoever. So there! The secret  why Bulleteers have muscular forearms has been revealed. Skinny  Bulleteers have retro-fitted disc brakes on their bikes (and no scars or  broken bones either).
ph test. Put these figures in perspective and you  will realise that the Electra is not slow, not by a long shot. Launch  her right and you can have almost any bike for breakfast. Where the  Bullet excels (her forte if you wish) is in touring. Out on the open  road the Bullet will thump all day at a steady 90kmph without skipping a  beat. We feel that it is high time that the gear ratios are revised and  a fifth gear is also incorporated. Royal Enfield did it for the  Lightning 350 that made her go like stink. A shorter fifth gear and  taller first and second on the Electra will achieve the twin objectives  of fiery acceleration and higher cruising speeds. Hope Royal Enfield  doesn't forget this for their next model. Braking is taken care of by  7-inch twin leading shoe drum brakes at the front and a 6-inch single  lead drum at the rear. This is the same setup on the other Royal Enfield  bike and the same criticisms still apply. The brakes, adequate at  moderate speeds, become woefully inadequate as speeds rise. Braking from  60kmph to rest was achieved in 3.2 seconds, the bike covering a  distance of 26.8 metres. This is not much worse than other 100cc bikes  equipped with drums but the Bullet carries so much inertia that if you  slam into anything at any speed, it will bring down the building. The  brakes lack any feel whatsoever and a mammoth grab on the brake lever is  called for to achieve any retardation whatsoever. So there! The secret  why Bulleteers have muscular forearms has been revealed. Skinny  Bulleteers have retro-fitted disc brakes on their bikes (and no scars or  broken bones either).
 ph test. Put these figures in perspective and you  will realise that the Electra is not slow, not by a long shot. Launch  her right and you can have almost any bike for breakfast. Where the  Bullet excels (her forte if you wish) is in touring. Out on the open  road the Bullet will thump all day at a steady 90kmph without skipping a  beat. We feel that it is high time that the gear ratios are revised and  a fifth gear is also incorporated. Royal Enfield did it for the  Lightning 350 that made her go like stink. A shorter fifth gear and  taller first and second on the Electra will achieve the twin objectives  of fiery acceleration and higher cruising speeds. Hope Royal Enfield  doesn't forget this for their next model. Braking is taken care of by  7-inch twin leading shoe drum brakes at the front and a 6-inch single  lead drum at the rear. This is the same setup on the other Royal Enfield  bike and the same criticisms still apply. The brakes, adequate at  moderate speeds, become woefully inadequate as speeds rise. Braking from  60kmph to rest was achieved in 3.2 seconds, the bike covering a  distance of 26.8 metres. This is not much worse than other 100cc bikes  equipped with drums but the Bullet carries so much inertia that if you  slam into anything at any speed, it will bring down the building. The  brakes lack any feel whatsoever and a mammoth grab on the brake lever is  called for to achieve any retardation whatsoever. So there! The secret  why Bulleteers have muscular forearms has been revealed. Skinny  Bulleteers have retro-fitted disc brakes on their bikes (and no scars or  broken bones either).
ph test. Put these figures in perspective and you  will realise that the Electra is not slow, not by a long shot. Launch  her right and you can have almost any bike for breakfast. Where the  Bullet excels (her forte if you wish) is in touring. Out on the open  road the Bullet will thump all day at a steady 90kmph without skipping a  beat. We feel that it is high time that the gear ratios are revised and  a fifth gear is also incorporated. Royal Enfield did it for the  Lightning 350 that made her go like stink. A shorter fifth gear and  taller first and second on the Electra will achieve the twin objectives  of fiery acceleration and higher cruising speeds. Hope Royal Enfield  doesn't forget this for their next model. Braking is taken care of by  7-inch twin leading shoe drum brakes at the front and a 6-inch single  lead drum at the rear. This is the same setup on the other Royal Enfield  bike and the same criticisms still apply. The brakes, adequate at  moderate speeds, become woefully inadequate as speeds rise. Braking from  60kmph to rest was achieved in 3.2 seconds, the bike covering a  distance of 26.8 metres. This is not much worse than other 100cc bikes  equipped with drums but the Bullet carries so much inertia that if you  slam into anything at any speed, it will bring down the building. The  brakes lack any feel whatsoever and a mammoth grab on the brake lever is  called for to achieve any retardation whatsoever. So there! The secret  why Bulleteers have muscular forearms has been revealed. Skinny  Bulleteers have retro-fitted disc brakes on their bikes (and no scars or  broken bones either).Fuel Efficiency:
 A little heavy on the wallet. The  Electra returned 38kmpl on the highway run while on the city run, the  mileage dropped to 32kmpl. Not very acceptable to whoever pays your fuel  bills but then what the heck, which other bike has the image of a  Bullet? On a positive note, as the kilometres got logged on, the Electra  started drinking less fuel. Stay tuned in for our long term updates on  the Electra to see how her drinking habits progress over time.
A little heavy on the wallet. The  Electra returned 38kmpl on the highway run while on the city run, the  mileage dropped to 32kmpl. Not very acceptable to whoever pays your fuel  bills but then what the heck, which other bike has the image of a  Bullet? On a positive note, as the kilometres got logged on, the Electra  started drinking less fuel. Stay tuned in for our long term updates on  the Electra to see how her drinking habits progress over time.Summing it up:
No other bike can have as huge or lasting  an impact on your life as the Bullet. The Bullet can transform your  outlook towards life, no less! One stands taller, shoulders feel  broader, chest swells up and arms feel infinitely stronger. You feel  invincible, like nothing or no one can lay a finger on you. (This  invariably causes most problems but while the feeling lasts, it's  great). While riding her, your hectic cutthroat schedule somehow seems  to lighten up. As you use her, you develop a telepathic bond with the  bike, she becomes a part of your system like no other bike can ever hope  to. The riding pleasure that the Bullet offers is unmatched bar none.  Sure when you get to a stretch of bad tarmac, your backbones are in for a  little rearrangement but out on the open road, a couple of 100km from  your destination, the throb of the 350cc lump between your legs, the  fantastic exhaust note making merry music at a steady 90kmph... that's  what touring is all about. That's what the Bullet is all about. And also  for seeing and being seen on, I don't think there is a more manly bike  available, not by long shot. At Rs 63,139 on- road in Pune, the Electra is far from cheap.  Value for money is not what the Bullet is about, not in term of initial  purchase price nor in terms of running costs. At this price, the Bullet  is an exclusive bike and has little or no competition. Bullets are  bought by Bulleteers, you either love the bike or hate it. A Bulleteer  is not going to buy a CBZ or Fiero and by extension, the CBZ/Fiero buyer  is not going to step into a Bullet dealership. A Bulleteer may look  over the Eliminator but personally I feel that the Eliminator buyer is  in a different league. For this dedicated buyer, the Electra spells good  news. With the Electra Royal Enfield has managed to create a better  Bullet. The old CB points that were a major headache have been sorted  out. Now what remains to be sorted out is the ride (18-inch rims and  better shocks), brakes (disc brakes), Performance (revised gear ratio)  and the quality levels. And I hear that the cogs are already turning at  Royal Enfield and precisely such a machine is on its way. Umm, I can't  wait... Can you?
road in Pune, the Electra is far from cheap.  Value for money is not what the Bullet is about, not in term of initial  purchase price nor in terms of running costs. At this price, the Bullet  is an exclusive bike and has little or no competition. Bullets are  bought by Bulleteers, you either love the bike or hate it. A Bulleteer  is not going to buy a CBZ or Fiero and by extension, the CBZ/Fiero buyer  is not going to step into a Bullet dealership. A Bulleteer may look  over the Eliminator but personally I feel that the Eliminator buyer is  in a different league. For this dedicated buyer, the Electra spells good  news. With the Electra Royal Enfield has managed to create a better  Bullet. The old CB points that were a major headache have been sorted  out. Now what remains to be sorted out is the ride (18-inch rims and  better shocks), brakes (disc brakes), Performance (revised gear ratio)  and the quality levels. And I hear that the cogs are already turning at  Royal Enfield and precisely such a machine is on its way. Umm, I can't  wait... Can you?
 road in Pune, the Electra is far from cheap.  Value for money is not what the Bullet is about, not in term of initial  purchase price nor in terms of running costs. At this price, the Bullet  is an exclusive bike and has little or no competition. Bullets are  bought by Bulleteers, you either love the bike or hate it. A Bulleteer  is not going to buy a CBZ or Fiero and by extension, the CBZ/Fiero buyer  is not going to step into a Bullet dealership. A Bulleteer may look  over the Eliminator but personally I feel that the Eliminator buyer is  in a different league. For this dedicated buyer, the Electra spells good  news. With the Electra Royal Enfield has managed to create a better  Bullet. The old CB points that were a major headache have been sorted  out. Now what remains to be sorted out is the ride (18-inch rims and  better shocks), brakes (disc brakes), Performance (revised gear ratio)  and the quality levels. And I hear that the cogs are already turning at  Royal Enfield and precisely such a machine is on its way. Umm, I can't  wait... Can you?
road in Pune, the Electra is far from cheap.  Value for money is not what the Bullet is about, not in term of initial  purchase price nor in terms of running costs. At this price, the Bullet  is an exclusive bike and has little or no competition. Bullets are  bought by Bulleteers, you either love the bike or hate it. A Bulleteer  is not going to buy a CBZ or Fiero and by extension, the CBZ/Fiero buyer  is not going to step into a Bullet dealership. A Bulleteer may look  over the Eliminator but personally I feel that the Eliminator buyer is  in a different league. For this dedicated buyer, the Electra spells good  news. With the Electra Royal Enfield has managed to create a better  Bullet. The old CB points that were a major headache have been sorted  out. Now what remains to be sorted out is the ride (18-inch rims and  better shocks), brakes (disc brakes), Performance (revised gear ratio)  and the quality levels. And I hear that the cogs are already turning at  Royal Enfield and precisely such a machine is on its way. Umm, I can't  wait... Can you?| 
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Royal enfield bullet Electra 4s review / Road Test  & specifications
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Its gr8 bike looks awesome t road.Smooth to drive and good performence also
Posted on 12:18:00 PM
thanks 4 posting dis gr8 review!!!
Posted on 10:07:00 PM
I AM 45 YEARS OLD AND MY FATHER USE TO HAVE ROYAL ENFIELD I GREW UP WITH KING OF THE BIKE.AND NOW I AM HAVING ROYAL ENFIELD 4S THIS IS MY THIRD BIKE FROM ENFIELD IN INDIA THIS IS THE ONLY HEAD TURNING BIKE REST ALL LADIES BIKE,ROYAL ENFIELD IS KING IT’S A SINGH BIKE.
Posted on 12:16:00 AM
It is marvelous to ride for long drive.
Posted on 7:26:00 AM
well i like to modifi my bullet standerd 350 cc 1993 model .is it will become legal can i get the renuval any one please help me.
Posted on 8:17:00 AM
Does electra 4s still comes? i do not see it on official website of RE.
Posted on 2:45:00 PM
Hey Ya’ll,
I have a STD of which I changed the swing arm. Now its a flat swing arm that holds an 18″ 130mm rear MRF tire. When I’ve been cornering it I don’t feel all that comfortable. My friends been telling me the flat swing arm is not well balanced than the normal round ones. I have the new rear gas shocks and it doesn’t wobble. Also, does the combo of the front and the rear matter for smooth cornering? I think I have a 19″ 110mm on the front or whatever comes stock. Professional advice suggestions, very much appreciated.
THANKS
Posted on 7:42:00 AM
We love our 2010 royal enfield bullet 500! We live in Canada and it sure turns heads. A great conversation piece and a great ride!
Posted on 8:49:00 PM
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