Some of the many models of Royal Enfield parked in the Club Rally Area. |
The 2019 Royal Enfield Owners Club International Rally was organized by the Royal Enfield Owners Club Midshires Branch (supported by members from the Home Counties and South Midlands branches), the event taking place over the weekend of 19 to 21 July at Stanford Hall in Leicestershire, Great Britain.
This charming country house, set in typical English parkland, has long been a home for motorcycle events and at one time hosted the Griffiths Collection of racing motorcycles (now dispersed).
The Sunday of the rally coincided with one of the biggest annual motorcycle events in the UK, Founders Day, named for the Founder of the Vintage Motor Cycle Club C.E. "Titch" Allen.
Flat-tank Royal Enfield with brass headlamp, bulb horn, fluted silencer and tank shift. The Indian 350 Bullet in the background has the famed swing-arm rear suspension. |
This year the Bullet was chosen, it being 70 years since the launch of the first post-war swinging arm Bullet, arguably one of the most innovative and influential machines ever built.
The Bullet name originated pre-war of course, in 1933, but was little used by Enfield in this period, machines most often being designated by a letter system. For instance the 1936 500 Bullet was the Model LF.
The earliest Bullet present, a 1934 Model BO 250. The tank transfer (decal) actually features a speeding bullet, a design only found on this model! |
Many more Bullets and other Enfields were to be seen elsewhere in the enormous event area so it's probably safe to estimate 400-plus machines.
The 1934 Bullet's flashy styling included high-mounted silencers, one on each side for its "sloper" twin-port motor. Note headlight controls on the tank. |
The other side of the 1934 Bullet. Is that an Interceptor in the background? |
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