Injuns

    • 2 posts
    November 7, 2011 12:48 AM PST
    Not my kind of ride or my kind of price, the technology is way dated & the HP anemic  but good luck to you lads

    http://www.cycleworld.com/2011/11/02/2012-indian-motorcycles-first-look/#.TreRQk8Fk48.facebook

    Polaris Industries bought Indian last April, which hasn’t given the company much time to launch a completely reengineered, all-new line of 2012 Indian motorcycles. So it hasn’t. But three bikes will be offered for 2012: Vintage, Classic and Dark Horse—all three powered by Indian’s 105-inch Powerplus engine. That’s 1720cc in metric terms, running an undersquare  3.96 x 4.25-inch bore and stroke, with two pushrod-activated valves per jug and cooled in the time-honored fashion: air. The Indian Chief Vintage we tested in November, 2009, made 64.5 horsepower at 4550 rpm and 94.1 foot-pounds of peak torque at 3250. And while there were some sweet spots in the rev range with the non-counterbalanced 45-degree V-Twin, our main complaint was serious vibration in the less-sweet spots. According to our Indian PR contact, “over a dozen small improvements primarily on the minor technical side” have been made to the bikes, which we expect means the riding experience will be similar to what it was on our 2009.

    MSRP for the top-line model remains in the same rarified ballpark for 2012. The Vintage, which comes with a windshield, a cool fringed leather seat and matching bags (also a removable pillion pad) is $35,999 in solid colors, with optional two-tone paint schemes $900 more. The Indian Chief Classic retails for $26,499 and dispenses with some of the Vintage’s gewgaws and furbelows, while the Dark Horse (matte black) is $27,999. (If those are out of your price range, Indian does have some very nice T-shirts.)

    Mark Blackwell, VP of Special Projects at Polaris, informs us that the company is not for now revealing any details about future Indian models, but that the feedback he’s been getting about the acquisition from around the world, including Europe and China, has been “incredibly positive.”

  • November 7, 2011 1:50 AM PST
    Maybe they should have stuck with the Victory instead of trying to revive an overpriced defunct icon.
  • November 7, 2011 3:55 AM PST
    I just never did understand the whole resurgence of the Indian Motorcycle company or their design. They have their place in history and should, in my humble opinion, stay right there! But there's an ass for every seat or so they say!
    • 395 posts
    November 7, 2011 4:05 AM PST
    wow..they are pretty...but not 35g worth of pretty.....
    • 5420 posts
    November 7, 2011 4:20 AM PST
    Yep, I too think the Indian's a great looking motorcycles, a real piece of art and history... but $35K, not for this guy!

    I was reading that one of the goals of Polaris was to use there mass production capabilities in Spirit Lake, Iowa to bring the cost down, but not sure if that will happen, and like Black9 said maybe they should just leave them with their place in motorcycle history and not start making a new mass-produced line.
  • November 7, 2011 4:55 AM PST
    I remember when they made a comeback in 99 and there was a guy at a rally bitching about his new Indian chief (with the 88" S&S motor about how this wasn't working right and that wasn't playing fair blah blah blah... so one of the guys listening to him advised him to take it back... the Indian owner says "Have you seen any Indian dealerships?" and then come to find out this guy paid $24,000 for his bike and during the round-robin discussion the ONLY thing I could say was "looks to me like you shoulda saved your money and bought a Harley!"