Cycle News

Cycle News 2026 Issue 17 April 28

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

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/1544637

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 144 of 147

S crolling through motorcycle ads is a practice reserved not only for those folks who are buying and selling motor- cycles. For classically graying riders, perusing the classifieds helps launch one on a journey into the center of your conscious- ness, a ride to the land inside of your mind. Pass through that frontal lobe, wheelie over the precentral gyrus, jump across the central sulcus, and then gas it hard to the cerebral cortex, where most of our memories are stored. In this region is the little-known (and scientifically unverified) "garage lobe" where we keep the motorcycles of our youth. These are both cycles that we actu - ally owned and those we only dreamed of owning. A minicycle of some variety will have a space in this garage, so our memories are primed when we see them pop up for sale now and then, often at prices that are three or four times the original MSRP. The Indian SE-74 is one such machine, and it was tested by Cycle News in the March 6, 1973, issue. Kids both small (aged 9) and big (the full beard being the most noticeable clue) gave the little Indian a good workout, squeezing as much fun as they could from the bike in a short time. There are nearly as many sto - ries about the Indian Motorcycle company as there are actual Na- tive American tribes. There was the original manufacturer from Springfield, Massachusetts, and the current Indian, recently sold off by Polaris. In between, the brand was passed around like a peace pipe, landing at one time in the hands of motorcycling en - trepreneur Floyd Clymer. Clymer sold a line of Italian-made mini- cycles, branded as Indians, and even though they shared nothing in common with the legendary V-twin machines, these Indians were both durable and fun to ride. "It's a right fine-looking little piece of two-wheeled machinery," wrote Cycle News. "It has a real motorcycle kickstarter, a four- speed one-down-three-up shift pattern, very good front and rear brakes… all the real stuff." CNIIARCHIVES P144 BY KENT TAYLOR Cycle News tested out the Indian SE-74 at Indian Dunes in 1973. The SE74 Eight Horsepower of Fun

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Cycle News 2026 Issue 17 April 28