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New Indian Scout Sixty and Roland Sands Hooligan Racers

Last night was an event put on by Indian Motorcycles for media. It was the debut of the new Indian Scout Sixty, and the Roland Sand Design-built Scout Hooligan Racers. It was quite the show watching Roland and the guys racing around the track in a warehouse down by the ocean in San Pedro. Roland and the Hooligan Racers are gearing up for the Super Hooligan Race in Las Vegas this weekend.

The new Indian Scout Sixty offers many of the same features and components of the award-winning Indian Scout, which was introduced in 2014 at the Black Hills Rally on the fabled “Wall of Death.” True to the craftsmanship, reliability and legendary agility of the Indian Scout, the new Scout Sixty shares the identical chassis, suspension, brakes and core engine — all mated with a new 60 cubic inch engine. Featuring 78hp, the highest horsepower in class, and a dry weight of 542 pounds with a potent 65 ft./lbs. of linear torque, the Scout Sixty is paired with a silky smooth, easy-to-shift 5-speed transmission, and starts at $8,999. Offered in three classic, bold Indian Motorcycle colors, the Scout Sixty features a black seat, matching black frame and wheels, and is compatible with the many accessories already available for the Indian Scout.

The Scout Sixty is available in Thunder Black starting at $8,999, with Indian Motorcycle Red and Pearl White color options starting at $9,299. A seat height of 25.3 inches allows for sure-footed comfort at stops, and the low center of gravity ensures agile cornering, precise balance and overall rider confidence and control. A series of accessories including seats, handlebars and footpeg relocators allow the motorcycle to be tailored to fit each rider, while additional accessories such as saddlebags, wire wheels and quick-release windscreens give owners virtually unlimited freedom to customize their rides.

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Victory Motorcycles Unveils Production 156 Engine

Victory Motorcycles today revealed the production version of the engine that powered Project 156 up Pikes Peak this summer.

It further announced that this engine will power an upcoming 1200cc class motorcycle.

The engine has been designed to deliver the strongest power and performance in its class and was shown off in a concept motorcycle built by European builder Urs Erbacher.

Erbacher is well-known in the European custom motorcycle scene taking several top awards and gaining international attention.

Erbacher’s concept – dubbed the “Victory Ignition Concept” was custom built around the first pre-production engine off of the line in Osceola Wisconsin. The concept features an aggressive stance and frames the engine with a cast aluminum chassis, performance suspension and brakes with a Project 156-inspired paint scheme.

“I’m proud not only of this build, but what it represents for the future of the Victory Motorcycles brand,” says the Swiss builder. “Getting full reigns to wrap the new engine in an interesting bike is a real highlight in my career, and from what I can see any production bike utilising this powertrain will be a fantastic ride.”

“Project 156 is a purpose built racer that took our engine design to one of the most challenging races on the planet – it was a proving ground like no other that set the bar very high for our team,” says Victory Motorcycles General Manager Rod Krois.

“This engine platform will deliver on the promise of modern American muscle that is in the DNA of every current and future product we sell. Victory will continue to aggressively plot a new course for itself and where an American motorcycle brand can go.”

“Victory Motorcycle – from day one – has been a brand designed to deliver outstanding in-class-performance, reliability and handling,” says Steve Menneto, President of the Polaris Motorcycles Division. “Our new engine, Urs’ concept and news we’ll be sharing at the IMS in New York City will plot the direction not only of this fantastic new platform, but of this brand. We will continue to design and build the best motorcycles in every class we compete.”

The liquid-cooled four-valve engine has a 60-degree vee angle, utilising double overhead cams that promise to make class-leading power. Additional details of the engine will be revealed in the months to come.

For more information on the Ignition concept bike, visit www.victorymotorcycles.com

The display at EICMA, the international trade and consumer show, will be open for the public starting Thursday November 19, and continues through the weekend. The Polaris stand is located in Hall 13. For more information log on to www.eicma.it/en/.

Fans of American performance motorcycles are encouraged to keep an eye on Victory Motorcycles in the coming weeks for more new product and concept motorcycles announcements.

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Roland Sands Geico Chief Flat Tracker

Leave it to Roland Sands to corrupt a sophisticated bagger, an Indian Chieftain, and turn it into a stripped-down, no-frills, powerful, dirt-churning hooligan bike.

Roland looked at an Indian Chieftain – a smooth-handling, powerful bagger with a full fairing, comfortable ride and hard saddlebags – and he saw the soul of a flat-tracker. Roland and his crew dismantled the Indian Chieftain, fabbed, bent, welded, and tuned, and out rolled the GEICO 75th Anniversary Sturgis Buffalo Chip Custom Indian Chief Racer.

Roland Sands Design Geico Indian Chief Flat Tracker

The bike made a clean debut on Aug. 2 on-stage at the Buffalo Chip. Tens of thousands of concert-goers roared their approval as Roland fired up the bike’s fire-breathing, modified Thunder Stroke 111 V-Twin. The bike made its proper debut a few nights later amid a pack of fellow raw race bikes at the half-mile track in Rapid City, S.D. That’s where Roland got to run the bike in the Inaugural Hooligan Half Mile. He didn’t win, but then again, everybody won because here was a high-end custom bike bankrolled by corporate sponsors, and those sponsors said, “Hell, yeah!” to the idea of Roland running the his latest masterwork on the Black Hills dirt track. That’s where the bike belonged, what it was built for, so it was a proper baptism by dirt.

Here’s some background on what Roland envisioned, why he took the Indian Chieftain so far from its original purpose, and what work went into this amazing bike.

A Flat Track Bike
As Roland looked at the new generation of Indian Motorcycle models, he saw the race bikes of the past that built the brand’s performance heritage on race tracks of every type, especially flat tracks.

“I really like to look at the history of racing and much of that started in the dirt,” Roland said.

“The classic silhouette of rigid flat track racers is one of my favorite looks. De-raked frames, short wheel base, short forks, fat tires, and a bike stripped of all except what’s necessary. It doesn’t get much better than that… It just felt right.”

“Plus, there were flat track races we could actually run the bike. It’s safe to say this is the only one-off anniversary build to get raced at an AMA National.”

Modified? Oh, Yeah.
This is truly a one-off, hand-built custom race bike. Sure, it rolled into the Roland Sands Design (RSD) shop as an Indian Chieftain bagger, but the cutting, stripping, and modifying started the instant the bike went up on the lift.

“Outside of the cases and engine internals, I’d say we modified just about everything,” Roland said. It’s a “hand-built frame from the ground up. We used the gas tank from the original Indian Chieftain but cut it all up to make saddle tanks and bent the backbone of the frame to roll with the tank.”

“We built the rear fender and mounts, number plates, modified the Paughco Leaf fork for aluminum uprights, and matched the rear fender struts. We used our new flat track race wheels for rolling hardware with a crazy vented rear rotor from Lloyd Brothers Racing and Dunlop’s new flat track tires. We fabbed up a custom exhaust too – there’s so much to list on this thing.”

Note that those new Dunlops are branded with the Indian Motorcycle script logo for a total custom treatment.

Some of the components might make their way into the RSD retail catalog eventually, but for now, they’re one-offs.

“Currently, you can’t buy anything” that’s on the bike, Roland said. “It’s all test product and prototype stuff, but if people are really interested in the stuff, we’d love to produce it.”

“The clarity cam and primary cover, floorboards, intake, and ignition cover – and the flat track race wheels – are all potential future products.”

A huge reveal and then you chose to race it?
Custom bikes are not cheap, which means GEICO spent some serious coin in commissioning this racer. Yet GEICO let Roland take it to the dirt track almost immediately after it was built.

Roland Sands Design Geico Indian Chief Flat Tracker

“GEICO is rad,” he said with a smile. “Their guys, Kelly and Jeremy, made the process and the launch easy and non-corporate. I think traditionally they’ve reached for that TV bike audience and this bike is aimed at core riders. The fact it touches on the historical significance of Sturgis, flat track racing, and the return of Indian Motorcycle is a combination that makes the bike very marketable for GEICO to a different audience.”

Once the bike was built, Roland took it for a stealthy and quick spin plus a photo shoot in California, and he put a few miles on it outside of Sturgis.

“I rode the bike down the flood control in Long Beach, and on a dirt back road in Sturgis for about 20 minutes prior to revealing the bike.”

“Revealing the bike at the Buffalo Chip with GEICO and Indian Motorcycle for the 75th anniversary in front of a packed house of screaming bikers, it was intense,” he recalled. “We really wanted to deliver GEICO something different from what they were used to with the bikes they’ve commissioned in the past. The GEICO Indian Chief Racer was that bike, and it was really a solid moment for our entire crew. And with it being my 25th anniversary going to Sturgis, it was extra special.”

Then it was time to gear up and hit the track.

“We got a few test laps [at Rapid City], then right into a full-bore Hooligan race at the half mile.”

On a new special custom-built bike?
“It maybe wasn’t what you would normally do to a one-off corporate 75th anniversary build for a company like GEICO, but they loved it,” he laughed. “I had the confidence in the design and my crew’s skills to put my ass as well as the bike on the line in front of the AMA national crowd and live TV audience on Fans Choice TV. And as things work out sometimes, it worked out.

“I didn’t win, but I’d say we had a solid mid-pack finish and the bike worked pretty well. Mainly, the bike rolled off the track still on two wheels, which was the main priority.”

For more information on Indian Motorcycle and their bikes, visit IndianMotorcycle.com

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BMW R nineT

Four wheels moves the body, two wheels moves the soul.

This is a statement I could not agree with more. However, so often in the hustle and bustle of the daily commute we seem to forget that we’re doing what we love while riding a motorcycle, and focus more on getting from point A to point B. Every second on the BMW R nineT is a reminder of what I love about motorcycling. It is beautifully simple and gut wrenchingly powerful. You can comfortably cruise up the coast for some coffee with a friend, or take it to the track, dragging knees and sliding rubber with the best of them.

One needs not sacrifice style for speed on the R nineT. The design of the bike evolved from Roland Sands Design’s Concept 90 and maintained it’s full-performance aesthetic while stripping the new bike down to the bare minimum. The shape of the tank is somewhat reminiscent of BMW’s R90S tank, yet it maintains a modern look. The naked body, unfaired headlight, paired with the minimal tail section and inverted forks give this bike a timeless sense of class, while never letting the rider doubt the fact that this a pure ass-kicking machine.

I find myself wanting to lump this bike in with other retro-styled bikes, but performance-wise it is head and shoulders above any that I have ridden. The engine doesn’t house any technology that is brand new for BMW, but it remains a performance-based engine, not something detuned to be more approachable (I’m talking to you CB1100). In every sense, this naked sport standard is a bike for people that actually want to ride. Yes, it may be a statement because it’s damn good looking, but don’t hold that against it.

From the rider’s point of view the controls are very simple. Looking down at the bars you don’t see a mass of screens, levers and gauges: you see an analog speedometer and tachometer, minimal buttons at the handles, and a small digital readout that has little more than a clock and some mpg indicators. The rider isn’t laden down with distractions or really anything other than the ride and the road. BMW has found the perfect balance between allowing the rider full control, and providing the modern safety features that can save you if things go random.

Every person I spoke with that had spent some time on this bike said the same thing through a big smile: “That’s a bike with some soul.”

I thank the gods for the ABS on this bike, as I thank them for the lack of traction control. There’s nothing fun about having your bike back the throttle out on you after you picked up the front end taking off from a red light. Just like there’s nothing fun about locking up your brakes. I was riding with my mother as my passenger a few weeks ago(I know, brave woman) when we were cut off by some oblivious housewife on her phone. With a quick CHIRPCHIRP* of the tires, we were stopped ten feet in front of the car. I knew this thing could go, but now I was instantly sold on the incredible braking power of this bike.

BMW did not fall into the stylish bike trap of making a replica of an older successful model. They brought us a modern bike, brilliantly designed. They made what they are always making, a precision machine that is pushing the limits of performance in it’s class, it just happens to look better than just about any other new bike out there.

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For more information on the BMW R nineT, visit BMWMotorcycles.com

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2015 BMW R nineT: Video

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Tackle the city streets and go carve the canyons. Impart your style on your bike. Whatever you want to do, the BMW R nineT makes it easy, and helps you look good doing it.

We took our Bolt-On Beemer to the streets of Santa Ana, CA and jammed around for a bit after installing all of our bolt-on parts! Enjoy the video and stay tuned for the full write-up later this week!

Check out the Factory Accessory Install HERE

Check out the Roland Sands Design Install HERE

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cruiser news Cruising Cycle World Other Motorcycle Blogs Project 156 Race to the Clouds Roland Sands Design Victory motorcycles Victory Prototype

Victory Motorcycles Pike's Peak Race Prototype

Victory Motorcycles Racing to the Clouds at Pikes Peak With Roland Sands Designs, Team Cycle World and Prototype Project 156 Engine.