Cycle News

Cycle News 2024 Issue 05 February 6

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 ISSUE FEBRUARY , P109 phrases used to describe the experience of riding the Sprint. The staffers were quick to point out that the SX 350 wasn't really a street bike and it wasn't a dirt bike, the latter argument being bolstered with the tale of a test rider losing control of the motor - cycle in a sand wash and then enduring the unpleasant experi- ence of having the bike fall on him. "The resulting separated shoulder," wrote CN, "has caused him to have considerable ill will toward the SX 350." The SX 350 tipped the scales at circus-lady fat 400 pounds, a figure so astronomical that it seemed as if the manufacturer had tasked the engineers with the goal of making the Harley the biggest boy in the class. For the sake of comparison, Yamaha's 1973 DT360 listed a dry weight of 275 pounds. Not svelte by any means, but a featherweight compared to the SX 350. In what seemed like an effort to make the rider feel each of those 400 pounds, Harley had outfitted the SX with weak sus - penders at both ends. The Harley's front wheel was connected to a pair of Ceriani forks, high-end components at that time, but these "forks and shocks seem to be lifted from other machines, without being thought out in terms of the frame or machine application." At one point during the test, the forks performed a "hydraulic lockup" bringing back the feel of a "rigid frame Harley." The testers were equally unimpressed with the back end of the machine, stating that the shocks were "stiff enough to pop the back end of the machine up when it encounters the obstacle that the front end couldn't clear." Somewhere in that sentence, one might find a backhanded compli - ment! If there was one important component of the SX 350 pack- age that the test crew tolerated, it would be the heart of the bike. "If the Sprint has an outstand- ing virtue," CN wrote, "it is the engine. Some tastes will find it ideal. The torquey little horizontal four-stroke single was happy as a pig at the slop trough when climbing hills. It would drag its own weight along with the operator and a passenger up a considerable gradeā€¦it doesn't have all that much power, but [it] is perfectly adequate." Harley-Davidson shouldn't take too much credit for this impres- sively "adequate" powerplant. The Italian Aermacchi company, of whom H-D had acquired a 50 percent share, had been building quality engines for decades. The company had begun its run in the early 1900s as a manufacturer of military aircraft. But like Ducati and its radio business, World War II had devastated the companies, and both firms, looking for a new direction, saw war-torn Europe in need of cheap, lightweight trans - portation for its citizens. Aermacchi produced a series of beautiful machines and also had a brilliant run in road racing, with beloved Italian Renzo Pa - solini nearly winning the 250cc World Championship in 1972. Harley-Davidson's acquisition would put Aermacchi engines in U.S.-spec chassis, and perhaps they would now have a player in the rapidly growing U.S. market for small-displacement motor - cycles. "Harley-Davidson needs to pass back to their Italian branch the message on what will sell and provide pleasure in the American market" wrote CN. "The machine needs some seri - ous re-thinking if it is to compete with the horde of street-oriented Japanese dual-purpose bikes." Unfortunately, for the SX 350, that time never came. AMF Harley-Davidson dust-binned the 350 after just one more year of production, and the rest of its Aermacchi-based machines would follow it soon after. CN Subscribe to nearly 50 years of Cycle News Archive issues: www.CycleNews.com/Archives with weak sus front wheel was forks, high-end that time, but these "forks and without being thought out in A 400-pound, 350cc single? The writing was on the wall.

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