Intentar ORO - Gratis
EVERYTHING TO SAY, NOWHERE TO GO
Motoring World
|August 2025
A stripped-down machine that expressed more standing still than most do at full speed

For someone like me, expressing anything at all can take some effort. And doing that with a motorcycle I saw in the dark and rode for maybe 200 metres — in a parking lot, no less — it should've been a challenge. An interesting one, sure. But a challenge, nonetheless. It wasn't.
Because the Sawed Off, Bombay Custom Works' wild take on the Royal Enfield Shotgun 650, didn't need daylight to make itself understood. It didn't need speed, or scenery, or even a crowd, though it drew a lot of attention at Motoverse 2024. It said what it had to say in stillness. In silence. And in the dark. Maybe that's why it stayed with me — long after I climbed off.
Even in the dark, the Sawed Off didn't hide. It wasn't loud, but also it was impossible to ignore. Its proportions felt deliberate, as if everything unnecessary had been stripped away — not just for style, but for the sake of clarity. BCW had pared the Shotgun into something lean, raw and I'd go as far as to say uncivil. There was no rear subframe. No soft touches. No distractions. Just presence.
The girder-style front fork was the first thing that really unsettled my expectations. It looked more industrial than mechanical — like something borrowed from another era. No polished tubes or clever design hid its purpose. It was brutally honest. And it held the rest of the motorcycle together with the same kind of unflinching character.

Esta historia es de la edición August 2025 de Motoring World.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Motoring World

Motoring World
ON A HIGH
THE HONDA ELEVATE CVT ENTERS OUR LONG-TERM TEST FLEET AND STARTS OFF ON A GREAT NOTE
1 mins
September 2025

Motoring World
Glam Slam
Is the new Glamour X just about the fancy features, or is there more to it?
3 mins
September 2025

Motoring World
RUBBER CHRONICLES
A lesson on how much of a motorcycle's story is really written by its tyres
3 mins
September 2025

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
3 mins
September 2025

Motoring World
Rebel Without Chrome
This Indian tears up the cruiser cliché in style
3 mins
September 2025

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
5 mins
September 2025

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
5 mins
September 2025

Motoring World
BOTOXED UP
Renault's Kiger gets a glow-up that's small in effort but big in impact
3 mins
September 2025

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.
2 mins
September 2025

Motoring World
THE RESTART
QUICK ADVENTURES WITH A MOTORCYCLE THAT REFUSES TO STAY CLEAN FOR TOO LONG
1 mins
September 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size