Cycle News

Cycle News 2020 Issue 16 April 21

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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VOLUME 57 ISSUE 16 APRIL 21, 2020 P67 Curtiss owner Matt Chambers (left) with young designer Jordan Cornille, who will take Curtiss Motorcycles forward with the electric platform. the girder-style fork similar to the type favored by John Britten, here machined from solid aluminum to hold down the unsprung weight, kept right on working at damp- ing out road rash as I trail braked into the turn on the angle. The RaceTech shocks had been set up to give optimum damping and excellent ride quality for a person of my weight, and the Warhawk felt pretty confidence-inspiring in the way it steered. Mr. Curtiss would have approved. The grippy front Pirelli Night Dragon encourages you to keep up turn speed, especially as there's more ground clearance on the Warhawk, with the exhausts moved upstairs for extra clear- ance. The fact that the fat rear tire is mounted on a slightly wider- than-usual 8.5-inch BST carbon rim spreads the rubber out more, resulting in a flatter profile deliver- ing a more progressive feel. Firing up the X-Wedge pow- erplant is instant, after turning the ignition key down by your right knee and flicking the tiny kill switch on the right switchbox that seems disproportionately dainty for such a meaty musclebike. Just thumb the starter button, and it cranks immediately into life first time, every time—though you must be ready for the earth to move under the sustained thun- der emitted by its twin mufflers. That easy start-up by Big Twin standards comes because S&S has fitted the motor with its Easy Start cams, which reduce crank- ing compression via an innovative feature. Each of the two exhaust cam lobes is equipped with a spring-loaded compression re- lease lobe on the heel of the cam, at the point where the valve would typically be fully closed. This lobe holds the exhaust valve slightly open at cranking speed, which releases some of the compres- sion, making the engine much easier to turn. Once it starts firing, revs increase until at 800 rpm the compression release lobe is centrifugally retracted, and the exhaust valve closes fully as part of the normal engine cycle. The engine now runs normally, with full compression. Clever! When that happens, the War- hawk's engine bursts into life with a satisfyingly meaty peal of thunder from the exhaust, settling to a 900-rpm idle that's devoid of the clackety rattles and shakes of some other American air-cooled

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