Mr Long Fork – Dick Allen
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Dick Allen was a big man, over 6 feet tall and 250lbs. Friendly and with
absolutely zero ego. He built bikes for long miles, looking good while
they did...
CA 2014 GT 535
CA 1953 Bullet 500
Can he start it? Bullet idle 6 years
Paul Henshaw pulls a 350 Royal Enfield out of the shed and tries to start it. Can he? Watch: YouTube
BTR road racing championship
Race highlights of final Royal Enfield Build Train Race championship event at VIRginia International Raceway. YouTube
CA 1955 Woodsman
CA 1956 Trailblazer
Retracing historic 1960 Big Bear run
RI 2002 500ES
FL 2018 500
FL 2014 Battle Green
FL 1963 Interceptor
TX 1959 Patrol Car
MA 1959 Trailblazer
MA 2021 Battle Green
NY 1959 Chief
Enfield Classic 650 is pure royalty
Super Meteor 650 best bike for two?
Information packed article concludes Royal Enfield isn't perfect, but is the best all-around two-up cruiser. TopSpeed
PA 1970 Interceptor
Classic Vs. Classic, 350 Vs. 650 twin
Dan Holmes DRS racer for sale
Friday, September 9, 2016
Are Royal Enfield motorcycles Indian enough for India?
What is good for me is not necessarily good for India, of course. So, when a blog item in The Times of India suggests such artifacts of the past as my Royal Enfield may be unhelpful to India, I'm compelled to consider that possibility.
Blog author Francois Gautier describes himself as French, but he obviously knows more about India than I do. He is prepared to point fingers.
"It is probably the British colonization that blunted for good the Indian innovation spirit," he asserts.
"...Take the manufacturing sector, for instance, since Independence, India has often copied English models, such as the Ambassador car, the Royal Enfield Bullet, or the Raleigh cycle, selling them at huge profits for decades and never caring much to improve them."
Gautier's argument, I take it, is that India must innovate from its own strengths to prosper in the modern world.
Makes sense. Take what you have and build on it.
And so, he asks:
"What is that Indian-ness then? And what to do so that Indians become innovators again and not copiers anymore?"
Unfortunately, his solutions are not innovative. He suggests, in effect, that India celebrate its own national history, heroes, religion, sports stars and business spirit. His proof that this will spur innovation seems to be based on the argument that it worked for France.
"...Napoleon is known in India."
In all, I think he's a bit harsh. Napoleon is a special case. So is India.
Today, Royal Enfield is taking steps to insert itself into international markets. Surely a good thing.
In an effort to gain traction globally, the new Continental GT certainly trades on the motorcycle's British heritage. Maybe not innovative design, but smart marketing, I think.
And now the new Himalayan model seems to me to be a pure example of India building on its own strengths (and geography) to innovate.
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those curly bits on the 'E" and the 'D" remind me of a pair of cats with their backs to us, and their tails curled around them!
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