Cycle News

Cycle News 2015 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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VOL. 52 ISSUE 16 APRIL 21, 2015 P123 Zoo but they seem more impressive here. As do the crowds. But within an hour the gazelles and snakes have lost their charm and all I can think of is getting back on the Indian. Like the brat in the cafeteria next to me who constantly begs for pizza, eventually the wife gives in and we're back, heading east to Julian and a meeting with apple pie. There are lots of bikes here but the looks the Indian gets outstrip them in spades. We roll into town and vacate the steed immediately, stand back and people watch. Riders on pipe-wrapped choppers, R6 knee draggers and Italian nakeds all come for a quick look-see. The Indian Chief Vintage is a state- ment bike if ever there was one. All leathery bits and sixties paint and chrome to blind. It might be brand new but its mind is from another generation. And all the time they walk past with the pervading smile and nod that says, "nice bike…" It's the same wherever we ride, and in Laguna Beach the reaction is like people have never seen a bike before—in amongst the shops that sell stones twice the value of the Indian, it's a 10-minute job just to get through the conver- sations to get the helmet on. The American pride shines through. Heads turn. After we stuff the remaining apple pie away we hit the Julian twisties, which in hindsight is not the ideal environment for the Indian. Turn in is slow and quick direction changes are delicate at best with two people and full saddlebags. Like telling a wrestler to take on 100-meter hurdles, this is not the Indian's forte. The lack of backrest for Annabelle means she's moving around a fair bit so I back off and still hear the scrape of the undercar- riage matched to the clunk of the downshift. Whereas in the past I found the scraping a badge of honor in some juvenile way, like I was a better rider for it, doing it on the Indian feels almost disrespectful, especially as it's easily avoided by just backing off a bit and letting the Indian do its thing in peace. Taking this attitude will reward you. This is a cruiser, after all, not something you're going to do your local TT on. Kick back, relax, what's the hurry? Out of the kind of roads I normally go searching for, the Indian starts to come alive. Stretching the engine out on the run back to Irvine, keeping with traffic but still slightly faster than permitted in SoCal, the 1811cc V-twin goes from stressing about the The leatherwork is nicely done and you can get various leather add-ons via the accessory catalogue. You can also get a cool little leather pouch for the tank to keep things like your phone safe. The back end of the Chief Vintage in unmistakably 1960s American, it's a shame you can't see the rear whitewall tire hiding away under all that leather. 111 cubic inches of Indian grunt. This heaving V-twin has such little vibration coming through to the rider thanks to the rubber mounted floorboards and grips. The famous Indian war bonnet. Every Indian that has gone before houses one of these on the front fender. They're a nice historic touch to what is a very old (and somewhat new) American brand.

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