Business Day

Harley-Davidson joins dirt brigade with Pan America

- Denis Droppa

For years Harley-Davidson has been known primarily for its cruiser and touring bikes, but the “easy rider” brand is taking a leap of faith into new turf by launching an adventure motorcycle for the first time.

The dirt-capable new Pan America 1250 is the US company’s answer to the BMW R1250 GS, Yamaha Super Tenere, KTM 1290 Super Adventure, and Triumph Tiger 1200. It’s part of a turnaround strategy from a firm that has struggled to expand sales beyond baby boomers, and included launching its first electric motorbike in 2019.

Brad Richards, HarleyDavi­dson’s vice-president of styling and design, said the company leads the US market for touring motorcycle­s but the Pan America was the “missing link” in Harley’s product range.

“We’ve got to start thinking about a new customer, too. This is something that should’ve been in our line-up.”

Harley’s premium all-terrain bike has burly power, real offroad ability and savvy technology, including an optional adaptive ride height system that allows riders to lower the motorcycle when it comes to a stop so they can get their feet down easier. A world-first feature on a mass-produced motorcycle, the system then raises the bike back up for extra ground clearance when it’s moving.

“The Pan America motorcycle is Harley-Davidson’s explore-it-all machine for riders who see touring as detouring — on road and off,” says the firm. “This rugged, powerful, technologi­cally advanced multipurpo­se vehicle is designed from the ground up to be capable, confidence inspiring, and fun wherever the road may take you.”

The Pan America 1250 is able to veer off the tar with the ground-straddling set-up typically found on most big adventure bikes; a 19-inch front wheel and a 17-inch rear. It also has adjustable Showa suspension offering a generous 191mm of gravel-cruising travel.

A host of electronic­s helps the big bike churn through all kinds of terrain, including a cornering rider safety enhancemen­ts suite with traction control, ABS, linked braking, dragtorque slip control and hill-hold control. These can all be independen­tly set by the rider, or through preprogram­med Road, Sport, Rain, Off-Road and OffRoad Plus riding modes.

The modern instrument panel is a tilting 17cm colour TFT screen with Bluetooth connectivi­ty that can be controlled via handlebar buttons when riding, or by touchscree­n when the bike isn’t moving.

The higher-specced Pan America Special model adds electronic­ally adjustable semiactive front and rear suspension, tyre pressure monitoring, crash bars, a skid plate, heated grips, a steering damper and an adaptive LED headlight with cornering function.

GUTSY OUTPUTS

Power comes from a 1,250cc V-twin engine with gutsy outputs of 112kW and 127Nm, sent to the rear wheel via chain drive and a six-speed transmissi­on.

At 239kg, the Pan America is a heavy machine but weighs 10kg less than the marketlead­ing BMW R1250 GS.

A range of available accessorie­s for Harley’s adventure machine includes luggage systems, more off-road-focused knobbly tyres and wire-spoked wheels, and different-sized windshield­s, among others.

The Harley-Davidson Pan America will go on local sale around the middle of the year priced between R310,000 and R377,000.

 ??  ?? Adaptive ride height allows riders to lower the Pan America when it comes to a stop so they can get their feet down easier.
Adaptive ride height allows riders to lower the Pan America when it comes to a stop so they can get their feet down easier.

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