Intentar ORO - Gratis

PROJECTILE MOTION

Motoring World

|

May 2020

Two drag bikes. Two different strokes. The sole purpose of speed

- Janak Sorap

PROJECTILE MOTION

It was evening time and there were several motorcycles parked besides each other just outside the IMW Racing workshop. While most them were parked for display, some were being worked upon. A few steps inside the workshop, a mechanic was carefully installing different parts onto a freshly painted red frame. It had a Pulsar 220 engine and that was about all that I could recognise looking at the machine. All the other components like the wheels, swingarm, and suspension were unlike what you’d expect on a Bajaj. It was the assembly of a dragspec motorcycle in progress. The reason to be there was that in just two days I’d be riding two custom-built drag-spec bikes for the very first time. What better reason can one think of to head to a workshop like this?

As I was observing the other bikes in the workshop, Iqbal Shaikh, the man behind building all the drag bikes under the IMW Racing name comes out of his office. Behind him, stacked on shelves, are several trophies from his wins in drag racing championships. While I was already impressed by the workmanship on the upcoming red drag bike, he invited me into his office to see a bike standing in a corner, sporting a blue trellis frame with silver body panels and red highlights. It was only after I got close enough that I realised it was a KTM Duke 200 engine mounted onto a drag chassis. The attention to detail was fantastic as even the thin brackets holding the delicate fairing were buffed to a sparkling shine. After being engrossed for some time observing the details of the motorcycle, Iqbal informed me about the other drag-spec bike, a Yamaha RX-135 weighing only 54 kg and with even skinnier tyres. It was ready, but was kept at his house since it is his prized possession.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Motoring World

Motoring World

Motoring World

ON A HIGH

THE HONDA ELEVATE CVT ENTERS OUR LONG-TERM TEST FLEET AND STARTS OFF ON A GREAT NOTE

time to read

1 mins

September 2025

Motoring World

Motoring World

Glam Slam

Is the new Glamour X just about the fancy features, or is there more to it?

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Motoring World

Motoring World

RUBBER CHRONICLES

A lesson on how much of a motorcycle's story is really written by its tyres

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Motoring World

Motoring World

SMALL DUKE, BIG BITE

KTM's new 160 proves you don't need big cubes to have big fun... just a big wallet

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Motoring World

Motoring World

Rebel Without Chrome

This Indian tears up the cruiser cliché in style

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Motoring World

Motoring World

THE LAUGHING STOCK

A fanclub? No, just friends at a point of convergence. Here's one 'saffron brigade' you shouldn't mind at all

time to read

5 mins

September 2025

Motoring World

Motoring World

THE WANT FOR MORE

A morning with the SS80 and BE 6 shows how much we've gained — and what we've quietly lost

time to read

5 mins

September 2025

Motoring World

Motoring World

BOTOXED UP

Renault's Kiger gets a glow-up that's small in effort but big in impact

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Motoring World

Motoring World

HISTORY CHANNEL

When I'm around old motorcycles, I often find myself wondering what it must've been like to be born in an earlier time. Wondering, mind you, not wishing. I wonder what it was like when mankind invented the motorcycle. I wouldn't want to get anywhere near the first motorcycle, the Daimler Reitwagen (the word means 'riding car', stupidly enough), made by German inventors Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach in 1885. To quote Melissa Holbrook Pierson, 'The first motorcycle looks like an instrument of torture.' And something that might cause an explosion uncomfortably close to one's nether regions. Right after it's shaken loose every healed bone in one's body.

time to read

2 mins

September 2025

Motoring World

Motoring World

THE RESTART

QUICK ADVENTURES WITH A MOTORCYCLE THAT REFUSES TO STAY CLEAN FOR TOO LONG

time to read

1 mins

September 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size