Bike India|June 2017

‘The speedo needle crept towards 140 km/h, the engine screamed, the scenery rushed by… and it was very easy to understand the phenomenal sales success of Yamaha’s air-cooled, two-stroke parallel twins’

Article Reader

SIMPLY CATCHING SIGHT OF the very clean white-and-red RD250E had brought back a few memories, and starting the engine really transported me back in time. The Yamaha fired up first kick with that raucous, clattery, off-beat rakkatack-tack of an exhaust note from its twin pipes, along with a small cloud of two-stroke exhaust smoke that provided the perfect, atmosphere-enhancing (and polluting) accompaniment.

I’d been looking forward to riding the RD250E all morning, and now I was really hooked. It’s a long time now since the late 1970s, when there were so many of them on the roads. But even now there’s something about Yamaha’s coffin-tanked twin that seems to sum up all that was best and craziest about the days when, for teenage speed freaks on a provisional licence, a hot Japanese 250-cc two-stroke like this was the height of motorcycling performance.

Ten minutes later, its engine warmed and the road ahead clear, the Yamaha revved hard through the gears while I held its throttle wide open, slid back on the seat and crouched down to help make the high-handle-barred RD as aerodynamically efficient as possible. The speedo needle crept towards 140 km/h, the engine screamed, the scenery rushed by… and it was very easy to understand the phenomenal sales success of Yamaha’s air-cooled, two-stroke parallel twins.

This RD250E was registered in 1980, the year that the RD250LC and its 350-cc sibling were unveiled, beginning a new era for Yamaha’s two-stroke roadsters. That was also the year King Kenny Roberts won his third straight 500-cc world championship, reinforcing the image of a two-stroke Yam with speed-block paint scheme as just about the fastest, snarliest thing on two wheels. (Ironically, Kork Ballington and Kawasaki had by this time taken over the 250-cc class.)

This story is from the June 2017 edition of Bike India.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the June 2017 edition of Bike India.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM BIKE INDIAView All
Bagnaia Stamps His Authority
Bike India

Bagnaia Stamps His Authority

The 2024 MotoGP World Championship starts where it was left off as Francesco Bagnaia reminds the field why he is the reigning world champion

time-read
3 mins  |
April 2024
Apaches on a Go-kart Track
Bike India

Apaches on a Go-kart Track

TVS invited us to their Apache Racing Experience GP. We had a lot of fun and we also learned a lot. Here is how the experience was

time-read
3 mins  |
April 2024
A Visit to Harley's Indian Home
Bike India

A Visit to Harley's Indian Home

It is always fascinating to watch things being put together. This time we got to watch X440s come to life in the \"Garden Factory\"

time-read
2 mins  |
April 2024
A Classic Re-energized
Bike India

A Classic Re-energized

Kinetic Green launched the E-Luna recently and we just got our hands on one. We took it around town and here is what we feel about it

time-read
3 mins  |
April 2024
Almost Perfect
Bike India

Almost Perfect

Anyone thinking of upgrading to a 600-cc-plus motorcycle must ride the Kawasaki Ninja 500 at least once

time-read
4 mins  |
April 2024
Xtremely Convenient
Bike India

Xtremely Convenient

We had a ride on the Hero Xtreme 125R a few months ago at the time of its launch in Jaipur, Rajasthan. Of late we had an opportunity to test it out on our roads and here is how the ride went off

time-read
3 mins  |
April 2024
The Process of Elimination
Bike India

The Process of Elimination

The Kawasaki Eliminator has little competition, for it has always belonged to its own niche. We do not see other manufacturers bunging sport bike engines into cruiser chassis, do we?

time-read
4 mins  |
April 2024
Reincarnation
Bike India

Reincarnation

The first Super Duke arrived in 2005. Some 12 years after its demise, that magic \"990\" capacity returns to the fray. This time not as a Super Duke-only the gargantuan 1390 gets the \"Super\" tag these days-but simply as the 990 Duke. Here is how our first ride went off

time-read
5 mins  |
April 2024
Singularly Purposeful
Bike India

Singularly Purposeful

Ducati produce a road-going single-cylinder for the first time in half a century and enter the supermoto class with intent

time-read
7 mins  |
April 2024
2024 Husqvarna Svartpilen 801
Bike India

2024 Husqvarna Svartpilen 801

Drops All Pretence of Being an Off-roader

time-read
2 mins  |
April 2024