Royal Enfield J2: twin ports. |
Royal Enfield itself used twin exhausts on the single-cylinder J2 model, from 1949 to 1956. That rigid frame, 500cc sidecar puller needed two silencers, since it had twin exhaust ports. It was open for discussion whether this added any real power; some said that back pressure was reduced too much.
2003 Bullet with twin-port head. |
A dummy second exhaust pipe. |
A less controversial idea turned up in a picture of another custom Royal Enfield out of India, this one the work of Ricardo Pereira, a very talented customiser in Bangalore. Nishal Lama wrote about it Pereira's work on myBangalore.com
This one works. |
Here the second exhaust pops up out of the first; no doubt it does function to change the sound of the motorcycle, at least.
This little exhaust modification is only a tiny fraction of the work Pereira does. It's well worth looking at the myBangalore.com gallery of his Royal Enfield "street rods" — he specifies that they "are not really chopper." Whatever you call them, they are lovely.
Finally, there is the new 2011 Royal Enfield Fury, created for the UK by Watsonian Squire. It is a very distinctive looking motorcycle, inspired by the U.S.-only model of 1959 and '60, but with upgrades like a digital dashboard and — something else the original never had — dual exhausts.
UK-only Fury uses twin silencers. |
I've stared a lot at the pictures of the Fury, but I can't see where the siamese connection is to the original single exhaust.
Few would deny that twin pipes pack a visual punch, whether they add power or not.
(You can read more about the original made-for-the-USA Fury and a made-in-India Fury I bet you never heard of on Jorge Pullin's blog, My Royal Enfields.)
Seeing Ricardo Pereira's two-from-one pipe is a mod I can believe in. I always thought the right side of the Enfield was the "good side" because of the pipe.
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