Friday, January 17, 2025

Make plans to see Dania motorcycle show

Proud owner and Royal Enfield WD/CO.
Bruce Gipson will bring his wartime Royal Enfield to the show. 

 The Dania Beach Vintage Motorcycle Show is 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 25, at Frost Park, 300 NE Second St., Dania Beach, Florida. 

More than 300 antique motorcycles (35-years-old and older) will be on view. 

It's FREE and open to the public. 

If you'd like to enter your 1989 or older motorcycle in the judging, the fee is only $10 cash. To compete, be at the park to register from 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. (sharp). There is on online registration. 

Fifty trophies and one Best of Show will be awarded.

Royal Enfield WD/CO military motorcycle.
Royal Enfield proudly served in World War II.

Bruce Gipson, of Boca Raton, plans to show his 1942 Royal Enfield  WD/CO. He says it served the Royal Corps of Signals (communications) in World War II.

"The original panniers and water bucket are attached," Bruce said.

He brought the wartime motorcycle from England last year, did some restoration, repacked the gearbox and reset the timing. It runs well, he says.

Royal Enfield's overhead-valve WD/CO served during the war with many branches of Britain's military and civilian services.

Close-up of WD/CO.
Tax disc shows wartime status of WD/CO.

Military history is interesting to Bruce. I wrote about his wartime Norton 16H.

And then there was the time he converted a 2014 Battle Green Royal Enfield and sidecar to carry a surfboard!

The Dania Beach Show is my favorite vintage motorcycle show, not least because admission is free. The 2025 show is its 18th year. I never fail to discover motorcycles I never knew existed

Friday, January 10, 2025

New Flying Flea buzzes with big ideas

Rider with electric motorcycle.
Rider pretends to kick start Royal Enfield's new electric Flying Flea.

 Word salads can have a delicious taste in the mind, whether or not you actually understand what it is you are eating. 

Just for instance, taste this, from the press release introducing the software behind the Royal Enfield's new "Flying Flea" brand of electric motorcycles: 

"Designed specially to support two-wheelers, the Snapdragon QWM2290 SoC is engineered to provide a truly ‘connected’ experience into Flying Flea’s motorcycles. The Snapdragon QMW2290 SoC powers the core vehicle control unit running an in-house operating system, developed by Flying Flea, that enables the motorcycle to manage all aspects of the vehicle and ride experience through the interactive true round TFT cluster. The Snapdragon QWM2290 SoC and Snapdragon Car-to-Cloud give the Flying Flea an ability to maintain seamless communication between the rider and the machine through a secure multi-modal interaction, both on and off the motorcycle with 4G, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi connectivity. This powerful and efficient chip allows users to maximize the potential of the cluster and develop a simple and intuitive UI (user interface) and UX (user experience), including a dedicated Voice Assist button. The motorcycle comes with five pre-set ride modes and allows the rider to customize the ride mode combinations based on the rider requirement and terrain. It also allows the system to recognize and enable mobile phone as a smart key to unlock and start the vehicle." 

Delicious sounding. But is it nutritious? What exactly is this dish, anyway? The press release is happy to explain what it is you're chewing on: 

"Flying Flea, endorsed by Royal Enfield, is the electric vehicle brand that is an expression of Royal Enfield’s commitment to keep moving forever forward. Operating at the intersection of technology and lifestyle, Flying Flea is a new brand of electric vehicles that continues a legacy of innovation and creates a new category for the global electric motorcycle marketplace and beyond. "

Ummm. Sounds mouth watering, although you wonder what it means that Royal Enfield has "endorsed" the Flying Flea?

Is that like, you know, putting sugar coating on oats and promising you'll love them for breakfast?

And WHAT a great cereal box the Flying Flea comes in! The looped introduction to the brand is a masterpiece. It's addicting. You can't stop eating it up.

Hungry for more? You can sign up for updates on Flying Flea motorcycles, which will come in city-bike and scrambler versions.

Want to add a little flavor to your Flying Flea? Feel free to season to taste. According to TopSpeed "Royal Enfield says the processor allows you to fine-tune ride modes beyond the five pre-set settings, with nearly 200,000 unique combinations."

Or is all this just a bit too much spice, for those who associate Royal Enfields with kick start, oil leaks, drum brakes and balky four-speed gearboxes with a neutral finder lever?

No, no! The press releases assures that the heart (although not the internal combustion thump) of Royal Enfield will always be there:

"Royal Enfields are engaging, uncomplicated, accessible and fun to ride; a vehicle for exploration and self-expression. It’s an approach the brand calls Pure Motorcycling."

New Flying Flea and parachute motif.
New Flying Flea's logo includes parachute, a tribute to the original.

OK, OK, I've had a bit of fun here as I try to decode Royal Enfield's recipe for the future.

But it's plain the future is electric and sophisticated and Royal Enfield doesn't want to be left behind.

The original Flying Flea, of World War II, was decidedly crunchy: a two-stroke motorcycle with tank shift, tough enough to parachute into combat.

It isn't coming back, even in "retro" form. But Royal Enfield did try to sell the original to the civilian public after the war. It sold to country parsons and young couples on a budget.

The new Flying Fleas will seek customers among urban residents with sophisticated tastes.

Ad for civilian version of wartime Flying Flea.
Royal Enfield tried to sell Flying Fleas to the public.

Friday, January 3, 2025

What the Classic 650 looks like

Animation compares Classic 650 to 500 twin.
Royal Enfield's new Classic 650 isn't a copy of the 1951 500 twin.

 Dubbing it "the most retro of them all," Ultimate Motorcycling's thorough description of the coming Royal Enfield Classic 650 twin neatly summarizes why it appeals. 

Of all the Royal Enfield 650 twins -- Interceptor, Continental GT, Shotgun, Super Meteor and Bear -- the Classic 650 packs the clearest appeal to fans of historic British motorcycles. 

It's upright, attractively styled, tastefully shiny, and powered by a parallel twin-cylinder motor. 

It clearly references Royal Enfield twins of the past. EVO magazine reported that the "sweetly rounded tank plus a solo saddle" are a direct reference to Royal Enfield's first parallel twin motorcycle, the 500 twin of 1948. 

"In fact, if you care to compare it to the new Classic 650 you can make out why and how (design chief) Mark Wells and his motley crew fell in love with the 500's lines to scale them up in more ways than one to present Royal Enfield's new flagship in all its grown-up build and grace," the magazine wrote.

Listen to Mark Wells enthuse about the Classic 650 in this brief Royal Enfield video.

Except, note that he doesn't mention the 500 twin in this video (he may have, elsewhere).

Comparing the 500 twin to the Classic 650 directly, it's easy to spot the differences in appearance. See the animation at the top of this blog item.

The separate gearbox, kick start lever, and neutral finder lever of the 500 twin impose a lot of busyness. Its straight up-and-down cylinders stand as erect as soldiers at attention. Its solo seat doesn't hide the springs that support it.

The Classic 650 caters more to modern tastes, with gearbox and motor encased together. Cylinders are canted forward and the side covers slant firmly forward.

The Classic 650 is tightly packaged. Its solo seat is tucked in, without springs. From some angles the big, unit powerplant seems to bulge with barely contained muscle.

One point of criticism has been the (overly?) generous rear fender, which at rest leaves a significant space over the rear wheel.

Rear fender of new Classic 650.
Does this rear fender make me look fat?

It seems to awkwardly advertise the fact that the Classic 650's rear wheel is 18 inches, slightly smaller than its 19-inch front.

In contrast, the rear fender of the 1951 500 looks svelte, and closely follows the curve of the wheel. (Note that the front fender of the Classic 650 is relatively trim and tight.)

To be fair, some of the "classic" in the Classic 650 twin is supplied not by bodywork but by its vintage-looking color palate of Teal, Vallam Red, Bruntingthorpe Blue, and Black Chrome.

Why even bring up the comparison of a 2025 Royal Enfield to the 500 twin of (gasp) 75 years ago?

"For those not up to speed with post-war British motorcycle history, Enfield credits its 1948 500 Twin as one of the most important bikes in its long history, and indeed of its era," Dan Trent wrote in Goodwood Road and Racing.

Royal Enfield itself suggested the comparison; not the press. Its press release, reprinted on many websites says this:

"In the mid-20th century, streamlining was the optimistic promise of modernity, speed and progress. The streamline ‘speed-form’ was an integral part of the signature style of design masters such as Henry Dreyfuss and Raymond Loewy.

"On the 500 Twin, this influence was evident in the form of the teardrop-shaped fuel tank, side panels and, perhaps most prominently, the famous signature Royal Enfield casquette (nacelle) headlight housing.

"With the new Classic 650 Twin, the design team has taken this design language and evolved it, italicizing the stance of the motorcycle to give it a sense of motion even when stood still...

"The ‘500-Twin’ later evolved into further parallel twin models like the Super Meteor, Constellation, and Interceptor, but the 500-Twin is where it all started."

To that statement, Trent injects a note of realism regarding the new (yes, new!) Classic 650 twin.

"It may not look it, but this is a totally modern bike, riffing as it does on Royal Enfield tradition but based around that decidedly 21st-century engine and using up-to-date suspension and brakes to hopefully combine contemporary riding manners with a look harking back to the good old days. If, indeed, they were that good at all."

Those "good old days" were good, in part, because they looked forward, not back. The 500 twin of 1948 was Royal Enfield's step towards the future. In his book "Royal Enfield, The Postwar Years," Roy Bacon tells it this way:

"After the second world war there was a great rush among the British firms to get a twin cylinder model into their lists in opposition to the Triumph, which had come out first in 1937. Not for nothing was the (Triumph) Speed Twin advertised as the one with a 10-year start.

"In time all the major firms produced their twins as fast as postwar problems would allow them and Royal Enfield were no exception."

Royal Enfield's 500 twin had its own distinct history, triumphing in competition, improving in power and sophistication, and even getting better looking: the early models lacked the famous casquette, and had an enormous, ghastly, unsprung front fender.

The 1951 version was best looking, in my opinion, and so I've used it for the comparison animation.

During its run, the 500 twin would spawn "sport" and "deluxe" models, be saddled with the somewhat dowdy Airflow fairing, a toaster-shaped tank, and be renamed with the sad-sack moniker "Meteor Minor."

"A little sadly, this was not what sold motorcycles at that time for a decline had set in and was to last a decade, destroying much of the British industry in the period," Bacon writes.

"There was no longer any place for a 500 twin and so, in 1963, the final example of the small Enfield twin went from the range."

What remained were memories, and they are fond memories. The new Royal Enfield Classic 650 is, to me, the most interesting of the new 650s because it carries on into that future the 500 twin never got.

Basically, it's this: what if the motorcycle I wanted as a teen (but couldn't have) was suddenly available in 2025, updated and perfected? Would I want it? Wouldn't you?

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