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After
a week and over 1,000 kilometres with Harley Davidson’s stunning new
V-Rod I must say I was sad to be handing the machine back. This
surprised me, I am a confirmed sportsbike addict, always
hankering for the latest crotch rocket.
Forget your preconceptions about Harleys; the V-Rod is a smooth and very
refined package. In fact, it is the most polished cruiser available. A
distinct lack of vibration, and a smooth revving powerplant serve to
make the V-Rod a new type of Harley.
The 1,130cc V-Twin engine is water-cooled, a first for Harley-Davidson.
A sophisticated sequential fuel injection system feeds through a pair of
53mm throttle bodies and supplies each of the four-valve cylinder heads.
Double overhead camshafts operate those valves and help the machine spin
freely all the way to the 9,000rpm rev-limiter. Forged pistons and a
forged steel crankshaft swing inside a wet-sump, aluminium crankcase.
9,000rpm is a heady number for a large capacity V-Twin, and not too far
behind the specialist sportsbike V-Twins from Suzuki, Honda, Aprilia and
Ducati. That Harley has managed to achieve this, and truly rival the
smoothness of the sportsbike powerplants, is quite a feat of
engineering.
Harley claim 115 horsepower @ 8,250rpm and 74 lb/ft of torque at
7,000rpm. Unfortunately, to achieve these heady figures some bottom end
performance has been sacrificed and the V-Rod does not have the earth
moving torque from idle that the traditional large capacity cruisers
enjoy. But that is the price you pay when the V-Rod offers around twice
as much top-end power as mainstream cruisers.
All that power is transferred through a smooth five-speed gearbox.
The shifter is operated via the foot-forward controls common to most
cruisers, shift throw is okay, for a cruiser, but I think a shorter
throw and more positive action would make for even more fun. Due
to the nature of the engines appetite for revs I
also suggest that the V-Rod
could do with a much shorter first gear than fitted. As standard, first
gear is good for 100kph, as a result getting the V-Rod off the line
quickly can be a challenge.
The
best solution, sit on the start line with the rear spinning a little,
then nail the throttle to the stop when the lights
turn green. Under controlled conditions of course. As a
result, the engine spins straight in to the more 'sweet' part of it's
torque and power spread, much more rapid progress results. The
Dunlop Sportsmax rubber soon hooks up though
and the machines settles in to quick and smooth acceleration through the gears.
I enjoyed a couple of my more
memorable runs through the Kangaroo Valley aboard the V-Rod. More
touring based rubber would have the hoon in me leaving nice dark lines
out of the hairpins, but the rear Dunlop refused to break away, no
matter how much torture I meted out. I never thought I would ever
find myself asking for rubber with less grip, but I wanted exactly that.
If I had a V-Rod, more touring biased rubber would be fitted on the
rear, just to enjoy laying black lines out of tight turns. I know,
I know...............I can't help it, but I also don't want a cure.....
Top speed is in excess of 200kph,
the
V-Rod arrives there in around 15 seconds.
180 kilometres can be stretched out of the 14-litre under-seat fuel tank
in highway mode, however consumption reduces
during city commuting.
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