ART OF MOTORCYCLING

On the weekend of March 13th/14th, W+K Exp will host a two-day exhibition that celebrates The Art of Motorcycling. Motorcycle exhibits will range from the brand new Classic 500 to an exotic variety of customized Enfields from all over India...
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ROYAL ENFIELD TOUR OF TIBET KICKED OFF

The 1st edition of the Royal Enfield Tour of Tibet shall be flagged off from Lucknow on the 12th of October 2013. There are numerous thoughts that come into one's mind when one thinks of Tibet, "The Roof of the World", "Where Eagles Dare" and many others. This September the first Royal Enfield ride to this mystical land will have 25 riders from across India will set off on this epic journey to Lhasa and back.
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Royal Enfield Classic Desert Storm 500

The Classic Desert Storm comes to you with a “sand” paint scheme reminiscent of the war era, a time when Royal Enfield motorcycles proved their capabilities and battle worthiness by impeccable service to soldiers in harsh conditions of the desert
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ROYAL ENFIELD BULLET CLASSIC REVIEW

It is a blend of post world war II motorcycle and gen next bike. Several things remained the same as a vintage motorcycle such as 'Roar of engine', deep and wide design of front and rear fender, covered headlamp, seating, fuel tank, silencer, spoke wheels, tail lamp and air filer box. , ...
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Royal Enfield Classic Chrome 500 launched

The Royal Enfield Classic Chrome is based on the Classic 500 with a rather generous dose of chrome on it. Like the Classic 500, the new Classic Chrome retains the quintessential classic British styling of the 1950s: simple, harmonious, well proportioned."
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Bullet C5 Military

The iconic Bullet has seen extended duty on several fronts and is now a prize for military enthusiasts and collectors the world over.
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Royal Enfield Rider Mania 2010

The biggest biker bash in the country is courtesy Royal Enfield, and hundreds of zany Enfielders. Here's what the 2010 edition of the Royal Enfield Rider Mania was all about....
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ROYAL ENFIELD LAUNCHES 'CONTINENTAL GT

Royal Enfield has finally launched the highly anticipated Continental GT in India with an on-road price of Rs 2.05 lakh on-road Delhi and Rs 2.14 lakh on-road Mumbai. The Continental GT is the same bike that Royal Enfield had displayed at the Auto Expo 2012 by the name of Café Racer.
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'Handcrafted in Chennai'

Royal Enfield announces the release of a new ad film created and produced by Wieden+Kennedy, Delhi...
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Royal Enfield Thunderbird 500

The all new Royal Enfield Thunderbird now with a powerful 500 cc engine, a 20 litre tank, digital meter console, LED tail lamps and in three striking shades of black gives a new definition to Highway cruising. ...
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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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    Showing posts with label Royal Enfield Cafe Racer. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label Royal Enfield Cafe Racer. Show all posts

    Royal Enfield launches 'Continental GT' at Rs 2.05 lakh



    Royal Enfield has finally launched the highly anticipated Continental GT in India with an on-road price of Rs 2.05 lakh on-road Delhi and Rs 2.14 lakh on-road Mumbai. The Continental GT is the same bike that Royal Enfield had displayed at the Auto Expo 2012 by the name of CafĂ© Racer. Now, cafĂ© racing, as a culture, evolved during the 1960s in the UK and involved motorcycle enthusiasts (the Rockers—a biker subculture) using stripped down, customised motorcycles to race between transport cafĂ©s. These sporty, souped-up motorcycles gave birth to the cafĂ© racer genre. Low-set handlebars and rear-set footpegs—lending to a crouched down riding posture—were the hallmarks of these cafĂ© racers. They were also very simple machines that could be customised easily to make them more responsive and quicker.

    CafĂ© racers of the 1960s and Royal Enfield’s own 1965 Continental GT—the first mass produced cafĂ© racer of its time—have been the main design inspiration for the current Continental GT. This bike has a stretched out low-profile fuel tank with knee recesses for the authentic period cafĂ© racer look. Then, it has a flat sculpted racing seat with contrast stitching and bump stop along with rear-set foldable footrests. There are trimmed front and rear mudguards that add to the clean lines of the Continental GT. It also has an upswept exhaust that allows more ground clearance, especially required when you are cornering at speed. Royal Enfield has worked closely with Xenophya Design of the UK in order to ensure that the Continental GT doesn’t miss out on design details. 

    The new RE flagship will be sold in two colours, red and yellow only. Powering the Continental GT will be a single cylinder air cooled 535cc engine delivering 29PS of power and 44Nm of peak torque and will come mated to a five-speed gearbox. RE has developed the chassis in collaboration with UK based Harris performance. The front suspension has 41mm telescopic forks while the rear has Paioli twin gas-charged shock absorbers. The bike is shod with Pirelli Sport Demon tyres and brembo brakes.

    The Continental GT is manufactured at the company’s plant in Oragadam near Chennai. The company is expanding its manufacturing capacity to 2.5 lakh units by 2014.

    Technical Specifications:  

    TypeSingle Cylinder, 4 Stroke, Air Cooled
    Displacement535 Cc
    Bore X Stroke87mm X 90mm
    Compression Ratio8.5:1
    Maximum Power29.1 Bhp (21.4 KW) @ 5100 Rpm
    Maximum Torque44 Nm @ 4000 Rpm
    Ignition SystemDigital Electronic Ignition
    ClutchWet, Multi-Plate
    Gearbox5 Speed Constant Mesh
    LubricationWet Sump
    Engine Oil15 W 50 API, SL Grade JASO MA
    Fuel SupplyKeihin Electronic Fuel Injection
    Air CleanerPaper Element
    Engine StartElectric & Kick
    Frame TypeTwin Downtube Cradle Frame
    Front SuspensionTelescopic, 41mm Forks, 110mm Travel
    Rear SuspensionPaioli,Twin Gas Charged Shock Absorbers With Adjustable Preload, 80mm Travel
    Wheelbase1360 Mm
    Ground Clearance140 Mm
    Length2060 Mm
    Width760mm ( Without Mirrors)
    Height1070mm ( Without Mirrors)
    Seat Height800 Mm
    Kerb Weight-(90% Fuel+Oil)184 Kgs
    Fuel Tank Capacity13.5 Ltrs
    Front Tyre100/90-18, 56 H Pirelli Sport Demon
    Rear Tyre130/70-18, 63 H Pirelli Sport Demon
    Front BrakeBrembo 300mm Floating Disc, 2-Piston Floating Caliper
    Rear Brake240mm Disc, Single Piston Floating Caliper
    Electrical System12 Volt – DC
    Battery12 Volt, 14 Ah
    Head Lamp12V H4 60 / 55 W
    Tail Lamp12V 21W/5W
    Turn Signal Lamp12V 10 W (4 Nos.)

      What you guys think about this, please let us know by commenting below. Keep thumping. 



      Royal Enfield Continental GT Cafe Racer production in India video, launch expected in October




      The 535cc Royal Enfield Continental GT Cafe Racer will debut in the UK this month, and in India soon after. Siddhartha Lal, CEO of Eicher Motors Limited is passionate about the way in which he has turned Royal Enfield around. Speaking on the subject with fervor and enthusiasm on India Business Report on BBC World, Lal goes back to 1901 when Royal Enfield was the most favored brand.


      The much awaited Royal Enfield Continental GT 535 aka Cafe Racer is looking ready to become the fastest-ever mass produced bike from Royal Enfield ever. The bike has also become the lightest production RE of recent times.

      The GT 535 will be built around a lightweight, double cradle frame that will help in keeping the weight under a check. The upcoming bike is expected to be as much as 15kgs lighter than the Thunderbird 500 TBTS.

      The Continental GT 535 will be powered by a single cylinder 535cc UCE engine that will boast of a bigger throttle body and a larger piston (than the 500cc UCE motors). The new 535cc mill will also have a remapped ECU and a lighter flywheel. All this would bestow the bike with enough juice to have a 150kmph-plus top whack and decent in-gear acceleration. The bike will be shod with Pirelli tyres and will sport a pair of Paioli gas-charged shock absorbers at the rear.




      As can be seen in the pics, the bike will have disc brakes on both the wheels. The upcoming 2014 Royal Enfield Continental GT 535 Cafe Racer, in all possibility, would be priced a little above INR 2 lakhs in Indian bike market. Stay tuned for more info on 2014 Royal Enfield Continental GT 535 Cafe Racer India launch.

      Rumor has it that the bike will reach Europe and the US with a price tag under $8,000 (€6,070) and in case October proves this right, we might be looking at really nice sales figures before the end of the year.

      Royal Enfield Denies 250cc Rumors, Says Cafe-Racer 535 Is the Next Release


      Rumors on the interwebs saw Royal Enfield planning to enter once more in the quarter-liter class with a new motorcycle which was to compete with the similar machines Honda or Bajaj are already selling in India and adjacent markets quite successfully. Learning about this, Royal Enfield themselves squashed the rumor in a very firm manner.


      While 250cc bikes wearing the Royal Enfield have been in production since 1911 through 1967, the company is now focused in bigger displacement bikes, with the smallest being a 350cc model. 

      Even more, Royal Enfield is trying to project a different image, and building up a reputation of solid, very reliable bikes suitable for daily riding, and thus tap into the mainstream sales.

      Royal Enfield adds that the announced Cafe Racer 535 is the only bike which is scheduled to be launched any time soon, and this is an altogether different story. 

      The Cafe Racer 535 will be more powerful than existing half-liter bikes such as the Classic or Thunderbird, will sport new chassis and suspensions and will also have updated exhausts cam shafts and all.



      Studio shot of the India bound 2013 Royal Enfield Cafe Racer 535 motorcycle leaks

      Studio Shot [Click to Zoom]
      As we all know that Royal Enfield is planning to launch Cafe Racer in India in early 2013 and we’ve just managed to lay our hands on the first ever studio shot of the 2013 Royal Enfield Cafe Racer 535 motorcycle. The motorcycle will come with a massive 535cc UCE engine and will come equipped with fuel injection technology (EFI). We are still waiting for the power and torque figures to be released. However we feel that the engine will churn out peak power of about 30 Bhp and peak torque to be rated at about 42 Nm.

      These figures will make the Cafe Racer 535 the most powerful production motorcycle in the Royal Enfield line up. Thanks to Royal Enfield engineers who chucked out unnecessary things, reducing kerb weight of the motorcycle. This combined with the higher power and torque figures, will make the Cafe Racer the fastest production Royal Enfield. The Cafe Racer 535 will be built at Royal Enfield’s new plant at Oragadam, off Chennai.
       
      As seen in various motor shows, Cafe Racer 535 comes with a single seat and a rear cowl to give the motorcycle a racy look. However the Indian-bound model is expected to get a slightly longer flat seat that will allow two adults to squeeze atop the motorcycle.

      The 2013 Royal Enfield Cafe Racer 535 gets disc brakes for both wheels, fatter front forks from the new Thunderbird 350/500, the new instrumentation console and lock system borrowed from the Thunderbird twins, a brand new fuel tank and brand new gas charged Paioli rear suspension.

      Another important new item is the double cradle frame that holds the engine unlike the the single donwtube item that the current crop of Royal Enfield motorcycles come with. The motorcycle will sport the new swing arm (from the Thunderbird twins is a new design) which will help in attaining high speed stability.

      Watch out this space for details !!
       

      ROYAL ENFIELD WILL LAUNCH THE CAFE RACER 500 IN INDIA NEXT YEAR


      To keep the momentum going, Royal Enfield will be launching Cafe Racer 500 next year. Cafe Racer was shown earlier this year at the Auto Expo in New Delhi.

      The Cafe Racer 500 model will feature the 500cc unit construction engine, albeit in a higher state of tune to pump our marginally more power and torque. The biggest change on the Cafe Racer model however is expected to be the styling, which will make it the most sporty Royal Enfield to be sold in till date.








      Features of Royal Enfield Cafe Racer include classic rear view mirrors, scooped out and sculpted tank, a lot of chrome, clip-on handlebar, retro design for taillights and headlights, exhaust that reminds of the era gone by, humped leather seat, and much more. The Cafe Racer will also get a rear disc brake (same as Thunderbird 500) in addition to the one on the front wheel. 

      The Cafe Racer 500 is expected to be priced somewhere in the whereabouts of the Thunderbird 500 model. The motorcycle is expected to be produced from Royal Enfield’s upcoming factory at Oragadam, off Chennai. 



      Mumbai Chai Racer




      I am a fan of whatever rocks, rolls, drives, flies or glides with or without engine. Of course I am a motorbike fan. I am also a photographer and, last, I am French but I currently stay in Mumbai India.


      Being a riders in the biggest Indian city I soon started to meet other two-wheeled freaks. The experience was so tasty, so exotic that I could not help take photos of it. So my project was born. The people from Mumbai are called the Mumbaikars, let me introduce you to ... The MumBaiKERS.





       This personal project takes the shape of a portrait gallery filled with hardcore bikers faces and their custom bikes such as choppers, scramblers, cafe racers, roadsters and so on. So far my portfolio houses a dozen subjects.

      His name is Joshua Crasto, he is from Mumbai. He works as a freelance motorbike tester and feature writer for BS Motoring (a Mumbai based cars and bikes magazine. He is also involved in a Bangalore based Motorbike Travel Agency called Indimotard.




      I call his bike the "Chai Racer" (there are not much coffees in Mumbai but a lot of tea (chai) stands), it is a 1969 Royal Enfield 350 Bullet Standard, it was bought then by Joshua's father and has always been a member of the family since. The customization is quite simple: fiber glass tank and seat, rear command set, racer low rise handles and side racing plates in place of the usual tool boxes ... All of these hand made by Joshua. The exhaust and the suspensions are adaptable parts.

      I have tried it and I can tell you that it sounds has good as it runs, just the gear selection is a little tricky but it certainly not is an issue: it is a wicked piece of pleasure to ride!
      That's it.


      Thierry Vincent

      (From Thierry in Mumbai (Bombay for old Majors) in India.)

      THV Photo Blog

      Royal Enfield’s CafĂ© Racer based on UCE500 to be launched in 2013!

      Royal Enfield showcased this concept bike in the 2010 Auto Expo and we see it showcased again. This is one concept that has been able to generate a lot of interest amongst the young and the old.
       
      But it was unclear if the concept will ever make it into production, as a similar concept was shown back 2010 but has not seen the light of the day. But putting rest to all speculation Kevin Mahoney from Classic Motorworks who are the official OEM distributor for Royal Enfield Motorcycles in the US confirmed that Royal Enfield Cafe Racer should be in production by 2013. 

      "Yes, it will be available in early 2013. It is coming with 100% certainty. I spoke to the CEO last night to confirm even though they have told me this repeatedly," said Kevin Mahoney  



      So there is no need to hunt for a customizer or spend extra on a Café Racer kit. All you would need to do is go to the nearest RE showroom and book your Café Racer motorcycle.

      Features of Royal Enfield Cafe Racer include classic rear view mirrors, scooped out and sculpted tank, a lot of chrome, clip-on handlebar, retro design for taillights and headlights, exhaust that reminds of the era gone by, humped leather seat, and much more.

      Powered by the 500cc twin-spark unit construction design (UCE) power plant might possibly see modifications to accomodate the fact that the weight of the bike is considerably less than Royal Enfield's existing lineup.

      Video :


       Royal Enfield’s CafĂ© Racer based on UCE500





      Royal Enfield cafe racer will come to U.S , but Royal Enfield wants it to be right for us



      Royal Enfield India sent two executives to a fun "vintage" motorcycle show in Venice, Calif. July 11.

      The P.A. system noisily hawked raffle tickets and motorcyclists glanced with curiosity at a display of Royal Enfield motorcycles. What are Royal Enfield motorcycles, some must have wondered. Something new?

      The U.S. market is important, senior manager for international business Andrew Anantharaj told me, although right now the United Kingdom market is bigger.

      "But we have not been in California, we have never been in California, and this is where you sell the maximum number of motorcycles."

      I promised him I would not ask him to reveal any secrets, and he responded with a smile that "there is nothing secret about what we do."

      But then he told me that Royal Enfield's fantastic looking café racer will come to the U.S. when it rolls out in a couple years.

      The café racer got a "tremendous response" when it was unveiled at Auto Expo 2010 in New Delhi, and it will be applauded in the U.K., home of history's first café racers, Anantharaj said.

      "But we are not sure one size fits all. That is why we are here." The people who buy the Royal Enfield café model will be knowledgeable about what a café racer is, he said.

      "We want to make sure we bring everything the market expects."

      I kidded Singaravelu "Siva" Sivakumar, Royal Enfield's head of industrial design, about the camera around his neck; was he looking for ideas at the motorcycle show? Not really.

      "We know our market, and we are claiming it," he said. "We are here to validate some concepts."

      The two executives from India and Royal Enfield USA President Kevin Mahoney were doing that by conducting focus groups at three locations in California: one in Venice, and others in San Francisco and San Diego.

      Royal Enfield will retain its retro reputation, and all the fun that goes with it, while coming completely up to modern standards, Sivakumar said.

      After all, "We are not selling motorcycles," Sivakumar added. "We are selling motorcycling. We want the motorcycle to be fun right from the first moment."

      This explains why the new C5 model has its classic looks, yet improved power and reliability, and less demand for maintenance, he said.


                                    Andrew Anantharaj, left, and "Siva" Sivakumar
      credit : David Blasco

      Royal Enfield rocks to different drummer


      (Ace Cafe photo)


      The romance of Royal Enfield motorcycles and British style motorcycles in general is tied up with their role in youth culture in Britain (and, eventually, in the U.S.) in the 1960s. The young Rockers who hung out at the Ace Cafe in London had the looks, the music and the motorcycles we loved.

      The exhibition "Teenage Rebels at the Ace Cafe: 1955-65" opens Jan. 16, 2010 at Worcester City Museums in England and continues to April 17. According to the museum, "it features a selection of historic Ace Cafe artifacts, 1950-'60s household objects, music and movie memorabilia and a host of iconic classic black and white images."

      Sounds terrific. I'd love to see it, although I would view it with really very little personal sense of recognition. I love the Rockers' style, but it's not my style.

      At the time I would have been intimidated by the Ace crowd, and over awed by the powerful motorcycles. No one I knew had one, or dressed like Brando, although everyone listened to rock'n'roll music.

      In a way, it's nice that my 1999 Royal Enfield Bullet is the made-in-India motorcycle design that left Britain in 1955, before the Swinging Sixties. It takes me back to a time I associate with a slower pace, more modest clothes and less intimidating motorcycles.

      It doesn't wail rock'n'roll. It hums a quieter tune.

      Royal Enfield Clubman - A close view

      Royal Enfield Clubman: Goggles on, lads, and off to the 1950s

      The bike maker, a part of biking history, has embraced modern technology. Well, up to a point, says


      The Royal Enfield's newly designed engine is a gem


      I don’t know what’s happening to the world of motorcycling, I really don’t. BMW is making superbikes, Italian electronics in Ducatis are better than Japanese, Harleys can accelerate, brake and corner and Royal Enfields no longer disintegrate at random in a puddle of oil and post-imperial disillusionment.

      And if you I think I’m being unpatriotic, I speak as a man who once rode an Enfield from India to Britain. 

      Enfield had a factory in Madras making 350cc Bullet bikes for the Indian army from 1949-55, and when the contract ended, the Indians bought the factory and kept on making them, even producing a diesel version that did 200mpg but had to be pushed uphill. It also made the 500cc Bullet, which was the model I bought new for £865 and rode the 7,000 miles home. 

      On the way, I quickly got used to the fact that every bit that could shake, rattle and fall off, would. I was riding through Istanbul when I heard a clatter and looked round to see that the horn had dropped off, and at the end of a day’s ride from Kent to the Lake District in the last days of the trip, I looked down to see that the air filter had become detached and was leaning wearily against the ignition key. 

      In recent years, though, Eurocratic emissions standards and market forces, including the fact that Triumph makes several retro models with modern running gear, have forced Enfield to drag itself kicking and screaming, if not exactly into the 21st century, at least to the end of the 20th. The bikes are still made in India but they now boast western build quality.

      Even better, I am now standing admiring one of the children of this revolution: the Clubman cafe racer version of the 500 Bullet Electra, with drop bars, a fabulous-looking hand-polished aluminium tank and a handmade seat with pop-off pillion fairing should a chap wish to take his girl for a spot of motorcycling. 

      Standing with me is Ben Matthews of Watsonian Squire, the Cotswolds company that imports the bikes from India. I have just spent a happy half hour wandering with Matthews around workshops where honest-looking chaps in faded overalls were tinkering with bikes in an atmosphere thick with the smells of oil and paint, like a ghost of my dad’s bike garage in the 1950s. 

      Best of all was the sight of row upon row of gleaming Enfields lined up and waiting for delivery, along with several of Watsonian Squire’s handmade sidecars, which, with wonderful irony, are mostly exported to Japan, the country that virtually killed the British bike industry. 

      Outside again, I bring the Clubman to life with its new-fangled electric starter, and listen with sheer pleasure to the sound of that single cylinder lolloping up and down. At cruising speed on the way back from India, it always became a purr, like a lion after a particularly satisfying wildebeest, and at higher speed a subtle threnody, which, in the moment before another bit fell off, sounded to me like the music of the stars. 

      I ride off, and it is immediately obvious that the Enfield has the performance to match its classic looks. The five-speed box on the left is sweet and clean, with none of the crunches and false neutrals of the old four-speed box, which was on the right. 

      As for the new engine, designed by Watsonian Squire so that it meets European Union emissions legislation but built in the factory in India, it’s a gem. It has the fabulous sound of the old one except that when it reaches 60mph, instead of forcing you to back off before 

      the thing shakes itself to pieces and leaves you snatching a look in your mirrors for assorted cogs and sprockets bouncing down the road in your wake, it urges you to press on to a mind-boggling top speed of 85mph. Which for an Enfield is practically supersonic. Heavens, you can even drop a gear and overtake things. Well, pedestrians and tractors, at least. 

      Faults? Hardly any, apart from the fact that it’s a bit vibey at higher revs, although I couldn’t tell you exactly how high, since it doesn’t have a rev counter. But then, that’s normal for single-cylinder bikes, and extended high-speed touring isn’t what the Enfield is about. 

      It’s about what I am doing right now — snorting through beautiful Cotswold villages that seem to be called Little Poggling on the Morrow or Greater Boobsnuggling, with my scarf fluttering in the wind, flies in my teeth and a song in my heart. 

      Ride over, I arrive back at Watsonian Squire and walk through the door to find an old chap wandering around the showroom. “Fabulous,” he says. “Fabulous to see these still being made. I had some grand old times on one of these in my youth.” 

      I leave him in earnest discussion with a salesman about the deposit on a new Bullet 500, close the door with a gentle ting-a-ling and walk slowly back into the real world.


      Royal Enfield Clubman 
       
      ENGINE 499cc, single-cylinder, air-cooled four-stroke

      POWER 28bhp @ 5250rpm

      TORQUE 30 lb ft @ 4000rpm

      TOP SPEED 85mph

      PERFORMANCE 0-60mph: not available

      FUEL 80mpg

      DRY WEIGHT 412lb

      ON SALE Now

      PRICE £5,100

      VERDICT It’s the journey, not the destination, old chap

       

      Road Test: C-R40 v Enfield Cafe Racer v Bonneville

      Visordown Motorcycle News


      Not so long ago Britain was a proud nation. For decades the British bike manufacturers had been world leaders. Norton, Royal Enfield, Matchless, AJS, Triumph and BSA (among many) had led where others followed. And copied. We were the envy of the world. Then, inside of one very short decade (the 60s), it all came crashing down. Short-sighted factory bosses underestimated the threat from the Orient. When the struggling last survivor Norton-Villiers-Triumph was, in 1983, put into liquidation the mass production of British motorcycles ended. Some well meaning people attempted to resurrect various marques, but most simply faded by the wayside (with one very notable exception, of course).
      But this is the Noughties and those failures are technically from a past century. And today, miraculously, you can again buy new British bikes. Triumphs are properly mass produced, proper British competitors on a global basis. But here we also have a Royal Enfield and a CCM, one an indo-anglo confection, the other anglo-jap. So with our ale tankards raised, we toast the new age Brit motorcycles. And what better way to savour them than with some home-grown musical accompaniment? Take it away, Chas and Dave...

      Triumph Bonneville
       
      In 1986, construction giant John Bloor bought the rights to the Triumph name. By 1991 he had the first of a new generation of British bikes rolling off the Hinckley production line. These were bikes that didn't follow Triumphs of old. They didn't leak oil, they were more reliable and didn't follow the stylings of yesteryear. These were a new generation of Triumph, built to sell to a new breed of owner rather than to please the classic crowd.
      And they've been a massive success. The figures speak for themselves; Triumph is now the UK's biggest vehicle manufacturer with 47,500 bikes rolling off the production line in 2006. But which model has been their mainstay over the last six years? The Bonneville.
      In 2001 Triumph launched a parallel twin styled on the 60s Bonneville. And they called it... the Bonneville. In an unashamed nostalgia trip Triumph unveiled this modern classic. Six years later and with six variations on the theme - Scrambler, Thruxton, America, T100, Speedmaster and Bonneville - Triumph has sold 54,000 Bonnies.
      Triumph has been rather clever with the Bonneville. Instead of a vague attempt to recreate the actual motor of old it has instead kept just the original format, i.e. a parallel twin. Unfortunately the new power plant doesn't quite have the character of old. While the original was the CBR600RR of its day and favoured by rocker racers, you aren't going to be doing much tearing around on the new Bonneville.
      For 2007 the Bonnie gets the new 865cc motor, but it's still a bit of a wet drip. There's nothing really wrong with the engine - it's smooth, has reasonable midrange and the gearbox isn't too bad - but it's about as devoid of character as a Celebrity Big Brother contestant. The Bonneville's exhaust note is an absolute dead ringer for a sewing machine. But considering who this bike is aimed at, this isn't a problem.
      You see Triumph has targeted the Bonneville at the kind of rider who doesn't want a fast, intense, focused bike. This is a fun, good looking machine that's reliable and will start at the push of a button. And in this respect the Bonneville is perfect.
      Sitting on the long, well-padded seat, reaching for the high bars, you are instantly put in a position of comfort. Unlike race reps you don't feel the urge to adopt a racing crouch and chase every other bike on the road. No, on the Triumph you sit back and enjoy the ride.
      And it's not a bad ride at all. Yes, the engine is a mite disappointing, but only if you've ridden a modern bike or you want to go fast; for the back-road amble it has more than enough drive. The suspension is a bit soft for enthusiastic riding, but those settings mean you're not catapulted out of the seat at every pothole or imperfection in the road. And while the brakes are a bit weak, to be truthful you aren't going to be going that fast on a Bonneville anyway.
      Out of the three British bikes here you can see why the Bonneville is the big seller. On a cold and frosty morning, having been left outside all night and with ice still on their tanks, which bike started first time? The Triumph Bonneville. Modern biking wrapped up in a retro veil.

      Royal Enfield Cafe Racer
       
      Chicken tikka masala is the UK's best selling takeaway dish. But if you take one to India no one will recognise it because no such dish actually exists there. This culinary delight was invented in Glasgow in the 1970s. So, although it was invented in Britain, it is cooked, sold and eaten in Indian establishments. So is it Indian?
      Royal Enfield is a British company, founded in the 1890s. But like most other British bike manufacturers it went pop. This bike is an Indian Royal Enfield, built in India and imported back into the UK.
      So is it British? Who cares? The name on the tank is British. And to be fair, most of the Triumph's components are made abroad anyway.
      When it comes to authentic retro riding you can't get much closer than the Enfield. To all intents and purposes, this is the same bike that was churned out in Britain until 1970 when the factory shut its doors. But while UK production halted, a satellite Indian factory, built to supply Bullets to the Indian army, has continued making the bike to this day.
      Despite the recent revolutionary changes of adding a left-hand gear change and electric start, the basic design of the Enfield has been left manifestly unchanged.
      Fire up the Cafe Racer and it sounds like a British bike should: loud and proud. There is no way those pipes are road legal, but the Enfield gets away with it.
      Unfortunately the Enfield also rides like an old British bike. Where the Triumph looks old but feels modern, the Enfield looks and rides like a bike from another era. The skinny tyres, wobbly suspension, poor brakes and, in the case of the Cafe Racer, tucked-in riding position make riding the bike an interesting experience. It will chug away at a fairly happy 60mph but I wouldn't recommend attacking your favourite bends with any gusto. But again we must ask: who is the bike is aimed at?
      Over Christmas I was talking to the local vicar from the village where my folks live. Over a pint he was telling me about the Enfield he'd had for a few years, a modern Indian Enfield. He loved it because it looked like an old bike, but came with modern electrics and more than a fair chance of starting every morning. Well it wouldn't do to keep his flock waiting on a Sunday, would it?
      So God-fearing folk like this, then, are the kind of riders who appreciate the Enfield for what it is, a real retro bike with (barely) enough of a modern makeover to keep its character while making it more reliable. Okay, it's not perfect. The electrics are still dodgy - our bike broke down after about five minutes when water got in there - but to the enthusiast this isn't a problem. I reckon that Enfield owners are secretly waiting for their bikes to not run quite right so they can approach them with a spanner.
      It's funny, but looking back at riding the Enfield I can kind of get the point. It's an authentic classic experience, only with just enough modernity to make that experience pleasureable. And you could leave it standing a year and it would still start, God willing..

      CCM C-R40
       
      After a spell in the cold CCM is back in business. Despite going into receivership in 2004, Alan and Austin Clews (CCM stands for Clews Competition Motorcycles) bought the company back off the liquidators and decided to concentrate on making small runs of hand-built bikes. And it's working for them. Last year CCM took orders for over 80 bikes, which may not sound a lot but for a small company from Blackburn that's not bad going at all. The C-R40 is their latest model.
      Like all CCMs this bike doesn't use their own engine. What's the point in a small company spending a fortune making a motor when it can just buy one, ready developed? In this case CCM has again let Suzuki do the work and simply bought a DR-Z400 engine, complete.
      Which is a good choice because the DR-Z's is a beautiful motor. Despite being only 398cc and having five gears it's still frisky, pumping out a decent 42bhp which, in a bike as stripped down as the C-R40, makes it feel pretty fast. The single cylinder lump revs quickly and smoothly and has near perfect throttle response thanks to it still using a single carb rather than fuel injection. It may not be that quick at the top end - I reckon you'd struggle to top 90mph - but would you really want more on this type of machine?
      Like the other British bikes here the CCM is a retro racer designed for Sunday blasts, not day-to-day commuting, which is why you can forgive it some of its faults. It's also worth mentioning that the bike we tested is basically a running prototype, so many of these criticisms will be ironed out in the final production bikes, but a few are simply inherent in the design.
      For a start the forks are set way too soft, meaning that even a slight touch of the front brake results in a huge amount of dive. And there are a few design issues, such as the gigantic footrest hangers and horrible clocks. James, who knows the guys at CCM, was straight on the phone about them and was assured they would all be ironed out. It's the advantage of short-run hand-built bikes - changing fork oil, springs etc. is simply and readily done.
      What will be trickier to iron out is the bike's geometry. In designing the C-R40 the guys at CCM stuck to what they know best, so the chassis is basically a modified off-road chassis. With a very short wheelbase and sharp steering geometry what we have here is a very light handling bike that wheelies at the first sign of throttle input. Unlike the Triumph and Enfield, which really aren't that keen to misbehave, the CCM is more than happy to play the fool. And that makes for one hell of a ride.
      You can't really just hop on the C-R40 and go for a gentle trundle like you can on the other two. The CCM's riding position, combined with its very small size, puts even shorter riders in a racing crouch and relegates the CR-40 to a Sunday blast bike. The problem is how many riders can afford £5840 for a weekend toy, even if it does look great?
      But this is the kind of market that CCM is in. Yes, it is an expensive bike, but for your money you are getting a unique, hand-built machine that looks great and is fun to ride. Can you really fault it for that?

      WHITHAMS'S SECOND OPINION
       
      TRIUMPH
       
      Out of the three bikes here the Bonnie is by far and away the most practical and usable machine.
      In recent years Triumph has been very good at producing retro bikes with just enough of the look and feel of the original to spark a bit of nostalgia, but with all the modern production methods and reliability that people naturally expect these days.
      The Bonnie behaves in exactly the way its looks tell you it should. Weighing over 200 kilos and with around 60bhp on tap the Triumph's never going to break any speed records. And it doesn't. It has old-style geometry and simple suspension so it should be slow steering and stable. And it is. And that front brake has just the one disc and a small caliper gripping it, so it won't be good for practising your stoppies on. And guess what? It's not.
      It may not be the most exciting bike but I'll tell ya what, it looks the part and you feel good riding it. I've had a Bonnie Scrambler all summer and have done more miles on that than on any other single bike for as long as I can remember. Call me old fashioned, but I like 'em !

      ROYAL ENFIELD
       
      Now this, within the context of cool retro Brit iron metal, is the opposite of the Bonnie. A 50-odd year-old design with none of the modern production techniques or reliability that people expect these days.
      The only thing I like about this bike is the feel of the engine. Its long stroke and huge flywheel coupled to that exhaust note is pure 1940s and 50s British bike charm.
      Almost everything else about this bike annoyed me. The build quality, the kick-start lever that gouges away at your shin as you ride, the way we had to push it up and down the street to get it going, and the general built-in-a-shed look of the thing.
      I'm not saying it won't appeal to anybody - it probably will - and most likely for some of the very reasons I don't like it.
      But if that's what you want why not buy an original ? It won't cost a lot more and you won't have to pay any road tax on it.

      CCM
       
      The C-R, or 'Cafe racer' 40 is the third in a line of retros from micro manufacturer CCM. It shares the same Suzuki DR-Z motor with the FT (Flat-Track) 35 and the SC (Street Scrambler) 40.
      Compared to the steady Enfield and the larger, heavier Triumph, the CCM feels like a toy. Riding position is a bit more stretched- out and sporty, but not uncomfortable.
      On the road the C-R is fairly lively, especially in the lower gears. That single cylinder motor has a smaller flywheel than the Enfield so when you blip the throttle you get more of a bark, instead of that slow wind-up typical of old British singles.
      I probably shouldn't say so in this type of test (complaints to the usual address), but the C-R was dead easy to wheelie. It'd come up in first then you could just slot through the box quite easily.
      The steering was sharp, even though the suspension front and rear had a lot of movement. Brakes were good, as expected. They're only stopping 130-od kilos...
      The C-R 40 looks the part and is fun to ride. It's never going to be a practical, everyday machine, but it'll make you grin.

      Conclusion
       
      Okay, the British bike industry isn't anywhere close to regaining its previous glory as world leader, but it isn't doing too badly.
      Triumph has shown that a British name on a tank still carries kudos, and if you give riders what they want the market is still out there. Alright, the Bonneville may not be a worthy successor when it comes to performance comparisons with its namesake, but this is a new era and the Triumph provides a generation of bikers with exactly what they want - a good looking, reliable bike that tugs on the heart strings. Considering the current state of British industry the Triumph brand is an amazing success story and as long as it keeps producing its unique style of bikes it's only going to get stronger, which is fantastic news.
      Although Royal Enfield is never even going to get close to rivalling Triumph when it comes to UK sales it's still refreshing to know that here's an old British bike still being made (even though it's in India). For the classic enthusiast that wants a running machine rather than a leaky garage ornament the Enfield would be ideal. It doesn't have the Japanese reliability, but any problems would be fairly easy to sort out with some basic workshop knowledge and a bit of water resistant connector grease!
      And as for CCM, this could be the next success story. Like Triumph this little Blackburn manufacturer has spotted a niche market and hit it. After the NEC show CCM took so many orders for both the Flat Track and the Cafe Racer it is struggling to keep up with demand, which is excellent news. Unless you're waiting for a bike... Okay, CCM is only ever going to be making hand-built bikes in small numbers but at least it's making them. For a company that was in receivership just two years ago that's quite a turnaround.

      SPECS - CCM
       
      TYPE - SUPER MOTO
      PRODUCTION DATE - 2007
      PRICE NEW - £5840
      ENGINE CAPACITY - 398cc
      POWER - 42bhp@9000rpm
      TORQUE - 32lb.ft@600rpm
      WEIGHT - 125kg
      SEAT HEIGHT - 795mm
      FUEL CAPACITY - 18L
      TOP SPEED - 90mph
      0-60 - n/a
      TANK RANGE - N/A

      SPECS - ROYAL ENFIELD
       
      TYPE - CAFE RACER
      PRODUCTION DATE - 2007
      PRICE NEW - £4999
      ENGINE CAPACITY - 499cc
      POWER - 23bhp@5500rpm
      TORQUE - 26lb.ft@5500rpm
      WEIGHT - 180kg
      SEAT HEIGHT - 820mm
      FUEL CAPACITY - 14.5L
      TOP SPEED - 80mph
      0-60 - n/a
      TANK RANGE - N/A

      SPECS - TRIUMPH
       
      TYPE - RETRO
      PRODUCTION DATE - 2007
      PRICE NEW - £4999
      ENGINE CAPACITY - 865cc
      POWER - 66bhp@7200rpm
      TORQUE - 52lb.ft@600rpm
      WEIGHT - 205kg
      SEAT HEIGHT - 775mm
      FUEL CAPACITY - 16.6L
      TOP SPEED - 110mph
      0-60 - n/a
      TANK RANGE - N/A 


      by Jon Urry

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