Harley-Davidson Street

Harley-Davidson Street 750 and 500
Manufacturer Harley-Davidson and
Harley-Davidson India
Production 2014–present
Assembly Kansas City, Missouri, USA (US, Canada and Mexico)[1]
Bawal, India (rest of world)[1]
Predecessor Buell Blast
Class Cruiser
Engine 60° SOHC, water-cooled V-twin with balance shaft
Street 750: 749 cc
Street 500: 494 cc[1]
Bore / stroke Street 750: 85.0 mm × 66.0 mm
Street 500: 69.0 mm × 66.0 mm[1]
Compression ratio Street 750: 10.5:1[2]
Power 53 hp (40 kW) @ 8,000 rpm (Street 750)
Torque 6.62 kg·m (64.9 N·m; 47.9 lbf·ft) @ 4,000 rpm (Street 750)[3]
Transmission 6 speed, belt drive[1][3]
Frame type Steel[1]
Suspension Front: Telescopic forks
Rear: Dual shocks, box section swingarm[3]
Brakes Front: Single-caliper disc ×1[1][3]
Rear: Single-caliper disc[1]
Tires 100/80x17[2][3]
150/70x15,[3] 140/75R15[2]
Rake, trail 32°, 4.5 in (110 mm)[2]
Wheelbase 1511 mm[3]
Dimensions L: 2226 mm[3]
W: 815 mm[3]
H: 709 mm[3]
Seat height 25 in (640 mm)[4]
Weight 480 lb (220 kg) (claimed)[1][4] (wet)
Fuel capacity 3.5 US gal (13 L)[2]
Related Harley-Davidson VRSC

The Harley-Davidson Street motorcycle series was announced by Harley-Davidson at the 2013 EICMA show in Milan for 2014 introduction. It will comprise Harley's first all-new models in 13 years,[1][3] and Harley's first lightweight motorcycle since the 1974 Sprint.[5] The 750 is powered by a 749 cc displacement version of Harley's 60° SOHC V-twin, water-cooled Revolution engine dubbed the Revolution X. The Street 500 has a 494 cc narrower-bore but otherwise identical engine.[1] Production for sale in the United States and Canada is done at Harley's Kansas City facility; production for the rest of the world, including engines, is done at the Harley-Davidson India subsidiary in Bawal with indigenous components.[3][6] The Street series are positioned as Harley's entry-level models, with a price point that is the lowest for Harley's US lineup by over $1,200.[7]

Riders Edge program

The Street 500 replaced the Buell Blast in Harley-Davidson's rider training program.[4]

Reactions

Speculation about Harley "outsourcing" production of 500 and 750 cc models (called small-displacement in US press[8]) to India began at least as early as 2011, along with harsh criticism that by not offering smaller bikes there, Harley "doesn't understand emerging markets".[9]

After the Street announcement, one Indian commentator noted that expansion in the Asian market with medium-displacement models is key to Harley's economic success:

[A]ll the growth it [Harley-Davidson] needs to ensure survival is to get into markets where it has been absent for the better part of a century and that includes almost all of the South-East Asian markets like Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, China and of course India, markets where commuters rule and even 500cc is considered big.
Dinu Hazrat, Daily News and Analysis, November 6, 2013[10]

The New York Times also opined that Harley's move towards medium-displacement echoed that of other manufacturers for the developing world.

The midsize is becoming a point of convergence. Commuter motorcycles are getting larger and more complex; from the other direction, Harley-Davidson recently unveiled its lighter Street 500 and Street 750 models.
Samanth Subramanian, The New York Times, January 3, 2014[11]

Strong growth of the Indian market led an American commentator to call this "The most important new Harley-Davidson in living memory",[12] and another to predict more bidirectional interaction between American and Indian manufacturers and consumers, naming the Harley Street along with other Indian-made or Indian-owned marques like Hero MotoCorp, KTM, and BMW:

[M]otorcycle manufacturers have either sought out Indian business partners or, as in the case of Harley-Davidson, established their own Indian production facilities. Harley-Davidson assembles in India nine out of the 12 models it currently sells in India, allowing it to keep prices competitive...However, it's not a one-way invasion of motorcycle manufacturers into the sub continent... India as a major player in the world of motorcycle manufacturers shouldn't be ignored. This year the U.S. could see the first Indian manufactured motorcycles on sale here.
Tim Watson, RideApart, January 28, 2014[13]

References

Citations
Sources
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