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Bike India Team

FEBRUARY 2023

January 30, 2023 by Bike India Team Leave a Comment

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Blazing a Trail of Success

The Auto Expo, which was to have been held last year, took place last month. The restrictions imposed by the outbreak of the pandemic resulted in this event being postponed by a year.

The response by the mainstream two-wheeler manufacturers, however, was lukewarm as most of them stayed away. The only internal combustion engine (ICE) exhibit was from Adishwar Auto Ride India of Hyderabad who showcased Italian brands made in China. Otherwise, most of the exhibitors were start-up electric vehicle (EV) manufacturers.

These EV start-up manufacturers face a truly uphill task because they have neither any experience in the manufacture of two-wheelers, nor R&D experience or facility. They are also not likely to be familiar with how much endurance testing is done before a two-wheeler is launched. The mainstream manufacturers with years of R&D experience behind them find it difficult at times to get a new two-wheeler right at first attempt. It is after months, sometimes even years, of endurance testing that they get the product right.

The problem here is that some of the EV start-ups import their kits from China and assemble them here. The quality tends to be quite substandard. Some of them are here today and gone tomorrow, which leaves the buyer in a lurch because there is no service back-up for such two-wheelers.

The jury round for the Indian Motorcycle of the Year (IMOTY) Award was held on the 10th of last month at the Buddh International Circuit in Noida. There were 17 contenders in all and they were further shortlisted down to 10 motorcycles for the jury round. All the 10 were strong contenders. The winner for 2023 was the Royal Enfield Hunter. The trophy was presented by Dr Raghupati Singhania, CMD, JK Tyres, to Siddhartha Lal, MD, Eicher Motors Ltd. JK Tyres, the IMOTY sponsors, organised a great show.

Now it looks like Royal Enfield are making a habit of winning the IMOTY Award, this one being their third in the last five years.


Aspi Bhathena

Editor





Filed Under: NEW ISSUE

JANUARY 2023

December 30, 2022 by Bike India Team Leave a Comment

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Looking Forward to a Bright Future

The year gone by started with a lot of uncertainties because of the pandemic but things settled down as the year progressed. Now, as we usher in the New Year, the pandemic seems to be coming back with a vengeance. A large number of cases have been reported in China and infections in the US are also on the rise.

Owing to the nature my job at Car India and Bike India I travel and drive/ride more or less across the globe. That gives me an opportunity to compare our traffic situation with that in the other countries. Last month I was on a holiday in Africa. I visited Rwanda and Uganda, two very backward and poor countries compared to India. What surprised me the most, however, was how the traffic is regulated and the way everyone obeys traffic rules in those countries. There was no road rage or aggression on the streets. Nobody cut lanes or honked. There was no screaming or shouting; everything was peaceful. Why have we become so aggressive and intolerant? The roads in Rwanda and Uganda were single-lane highways but the quality of the surface was amazing and even the speed-breakers were well designed and of a uniform length and height; not like what we have here where each one is different in height and length.

The two-wheeler market in Rwanda is dominated by the TVS Victor and in Uganda by the Bajaj Boxer. You see only these two brands on the road. Their dominance is such that if you see 100 motorcycles, 99 of them will be Bajaj and TVS, barring an odd Chinese two-wheeler or a Honda or a Yamaha.

I would like to thank all our readers and wish them a happy New Year. Enjoy your ride but always wear your helmet and ride safely.


Aspi Bhathena

Editor





Filed Under: NEW ISSUE

DECEMBER 2022

November 29, 2022 by Bike India Team Leave a Comment

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Looking Forward to a Bright Future

The year 2022 has literally flown by and I am already writing the editorial for the month of December. We started the year with a lot of uncertainty because COVID-19 was threatening to make a comeback of sorts. Today, however, there is greater clarity as the pandemic is behind us and now we may look forward to planning for the future.

It has been a wait of 15 long years for Ducati to win the MotoGP world championship after Casey Stoner who won the crown for them in 2007. This year Francesco Bagnaia won the MotoGP crown and Ducati the manufacturers’ championship. To add to their success in MotoGP, Ducati also won the World Superbike Championship thanks to Alvaro Bautista. Incidentally, that makes Ducati one of the few manufacturers to win both the MotoGP and the World Superbike crowns in the same year.

It is great to see Indian manufacturers getting into motor sport. At one time, it was only TVS who were supporting motor sport and now they have taken their involvement to another level by upgrading the RR310 race series to Asian-level championship. The racing experience has helped TVS make better road bikes and, seeing this, other Indian manufacturers are getting into motor sport.

Hero MotoCorp started at the top by entering the Dakar Rally and now they have begun organising events in the country.

The latest entrant into motor sport is Royal Enfield. They started with a land speed event at the Bonneville Salt Flats and moved on to flat track racing in the United States. Last year was the first time we had the Royal Enfield Continental GT Cup in India and it was a great success. Now Royal Enfield want to take the game to the next level with the flat track slide school and track schools for the GT Cup.


Aspi Bhathena

Editor





Filed Under: NEW ISSUE

NOVEMBER 2022

October 29, 2022 by Bike India Team Leave a Comment

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None Too Heartening

With high inflation and the economy still struggling to get back to normal after the pandemic, two-wheeler sales are yet to regain the pre-pandemic levels. Although scooter sales have bounced back to some extent following the resumption of work-a-day life, motorcycle sales continue to be lacklustre on account of lack of demand from the rural areas. The high cost of fuel is yet another factor responsible for low sales, because expensive fuel does hurt the ordinary citizen the most.

The traffic situation is going from bad to worse and the police are happy turning a blind eye to offenders going down the wrong way. Three astride a bike seems to have become the norm nowadays. It is unfortunate that the police look for a soft target. For example, if you happen to be riding a two-wheeler registered in another state, they will stop you even if you have not committed a traffic offence, but they will not take action against people carrying little children on the bike or even three astride a two-wheeler going the wrong way.

During the launch of a commuter motorcycle of late, the person doing the presentation said that the model had the longest seat in the commuter segment. When I asked him if he was trying to convey that the bike would accommodate three people, he changed the subject and refused to answer my question. There should be a law whereby the seat is limited in length, so it cannot accommodate more than two persons. Similarly, those who knowingly flout traffic rules by riding down the wrong way should be heavily penalised or even imprisoned. It is because of such miscreants that law-abiding citizens become vulnerable to accidents trying to avoid morons coming down the wrong way.


Aspi Bhathena

Editor





Filed Under: NEW ISSUE

OCTOBER 2022

September 30, 2022 by Bike India Team Leave a Comment

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Of Road Infrastructure and Traffic Discipline

We in India get thrilled when we get a six-lane highway, having been deprived of good roads in the past. What a six-lane highway does is increase the speed of vehicles and that is where the problem starts. First and foremost, a highway should be designed well and not in a haphazard manner wherein, for instance, three lanes merge into two lanes without a warning. Even if three lanes merge into two, there should not be a wall at a right angle across the third lane; it should merge in gradually so that even if a driver or rider is caught unawares, they will not be vulnerable to a head-on collision, at worst a glancing blow.

The road tax we pay is one of the highest in the world and the road infrastructure is pathetic. Furthermore, we have to pay toll for roads that are half decent.

The road transport ministry is trying to make helmets mandatory for pillion riders as well, which is a welcome move. We know that it is very inconvenient to carry an extra helmet, but the pillion rider is at as much risk of getting hurt (or even worse) as the rider.

On the one hand, the ministry of road transport wants to push the use of helmets and, on the other, the government has banned the import of helmets that are superior to the ISI-mark helmets sold here. This is a little perplexing, to say the least.

To make the roads safer we must enforce traffic rules and have a stringent riding/driving test in place. Almost ninety-nine per cent of the people who possess a licence to ride a bike should not be on the road in the first place, for they have no clue about riding a bike nor are they conversant with the basic traffic rules since there is no rider training programme before issuing a licence.

 

Aspi Bhathena
Editor





Filed Under: NEW ISSUE

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Pulsar NS400Z – CHALA APNI

Pulsar NS400Z – CHALA APNI

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