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the rear mudguard on the Scout looks like it fell off a boat trailerthe engine sounds like a good one but the styling leaves me coldonly have to change: wheels, frame, all bodywork and that seat!
Bump. Have y'all lost interest already ??? :bike
I like it too, and with twice the hp of the H-D Sportster 1200, only a brainwashed fool would choose the Sporty over the Indian. :bow
1200 Sportster only has 50 HP?????? Where do you get those figures?
On the Sporty vs. Scout thing, I EXPECT the Scout to offer more performance out of the box and for it to be hard for Sportys to match it just based on power-to-weight ratio.I LOVE my Sporty and wouldn't trade it for a Scout for multiple reasons, but it's still in the upper 500# range and maybe is putting out 70-80 hp at the crank, more like 60-70 at the rear wheel.So the Scout is lighter and makes more power for starters.I still haven't seen all the specs (wheelbase, length, details on the valve train). I assume the Scout is going to require periodic valve adjustments (and if so, advantage Sporty).And there are certainly guys who get 100+ hp out of their sportys, but that takes some work including cams and heads, not just air cleaner/exhaust/mapping. But there's just no way an air-cooled, pushrod 2V/Cylinder V2 is going to compete in that arena with a water-cooled multi-valve OHC motor.I might still choose the Sporty if buying new tomorrow, but for other reasons than straight power-to-weight performance.
"twice the power" was simple hyberbole.Sportster 1200 = Horsepower: 67.7 hp @ 5680 rpmsourceSounds better than "1.4777 times the power of a Sportster"
Actually that statement is incorrect. Buell made air cooled engines that had 102 HP and 82 lbs ft of torque and were lighter than either the Sportster or Scout . 2 Cylinder 1200 cc 2 valve per cylinder pushrod engines. They were reliable and had great driveability. You had to ride one to appreciate it. I went to a test ride and walked away with a Buell Cyclone the first time and a Buell Ulysses the second time. I love the Norge for all it is but I have to admit the Buell engine was smoother and way more powerful with much more torque down low. Had they continued to build bikes and offered one with wind protection and ABS I would have stayed with them.
Stock Sportsters have had about 60 hp (measured at the crank) for the past, oh, forty years. That shows up at the rear wheel as around 50 hp. Newer models supposedly make up to around 70 crank hp, so current model rwhp might be a few ponies more.According to the dealer that I spoke to this weekend, the 100 hp figure Indian quotes for the new Scout is as measured at the rear wheel.Buell made the most that they could from the Sportster engine, but what they wound up with was neither smooth nor reliable.
Stock Sportsters have had about 60 hp (measured at the crank) for the past, oh, forty years. That shows up at the rear wheel as around 50 hp. Newer models supposedly make up to around 70 crank hp, so current model rwhp might be a few ponies more.
According to the dealer that I spoke to this weekend, the 100 hp figure Indian quotes for the new Scout is as measured at the rear wheel.
Buell made the most that they could from the Sportster engine, but what they wound up with was neither smooth nor reliable.
So far in my sheltered 46 years, this is the only sorta cruiser I've liked enough to give a 2nd look.
Huh? Are we looking at the same bike?I'm NOT a fan of water cooled bikes, BUT at first glance I really like this and think it has a lot going for it:
The front fender , and the wheel , brake , and tire package visually overwhelm the forks . Dusty
Question, is it possible to put a durable powder coat finish over chrome?
OK , so they made it resemble one of those weird 250 CC Chinese cruisers on purpose ;D Dusty
WOAH WOAH WOAH...MCN 96 1200S - 56 rwhp99 1200S - 56.4 rwhp04 1200C - 58 rwhp07 1200N - 57 rwhp
You realize you're arguing over 6-8 hp, as measured by one particular dyno, right? ;)Buell turned the Sportster lump into an over-achiever, but there were adverse consequences: excessive heat, NVH, and mechanical failures. As any engineer will tell you, there are no free lunches.
I don't think I'll ever cease to marvel at the infatuation with HP - especially in such small increments.If I had $1 for every time someone has - without solicitation - told me that I NEED to put a 1200 kit on my 883, I gould buy a couple of tanks of gas. Admittedly, a couple of very small Sportster tanks but still. :BEER:
I also think this Scout would look a lot better with a black 2:1 exhaust instead of the huge chromed 2:2 they're showing it with...