Royal Enfield Hunter 350 specs revealed

    Tipping the scales at 181kg, the Hunter 350 is 14kg lighter than the Classic 350.

    Published On Aug 05, 2022 12:29:00 PM

    53,196 Views

    Listen to this Article

    The spec sheet of the hotly-teased Hunter 350 has finally been revealed and the differences are more than just skin-deep. For starters, the bike tips the scales at 181kgs, which is 10 kgs lighter than the Meteor 350 and 14kgs lighter than the Classic 350, despite having a fuel tank similar in size to the aforementioned duo, at 13 litres.

    The entire bike has been gone through with a fine-tooth comb, the only major component left untouched being the engine. The aforementioned weight savings have been possible through all-new wheels, a stubbier exhaust, new headlamp and taillamp as well as minimalistic bodywork. The handlebar, fenders, suspension componentry, airbox, steering yoke and the brand-new  exhaust are all bespoke to the Hunter 350.

    Fueling and ignition timing have been tuned to suit the Hunter's peppier character to make it that extra bit more responsive. That should further complement the revised geometry which is considerably sharper than its laidback siblings. The shorter 1370mm wheelbase (1390mm on the Classic 350 and 1400mm on the Meteor 350) combined with the sharper rake angle of 25° (compared to 26° on its siblings) will definitely help the Hunter 350 score some brownie points in the handling department. 

    Tyres on the Hunter 350 are a welcome change as well (compared to other REs) with 17-inch cast alloy rims at both ends shod with tubeless tyres, the sizes of which are 110/70-17 (front) and 140/70-17 (rear). Suspension duties are taken care of by a 41mm telescopic fork at the front with 130mm of travel while 6-step preload adjustable twin emulsion shock absorbers with 102mm of travel, take care of things at the rear. Braking duties are handled by a twin-pot caliper biting down on a 300mm disc at the front with a single-piston unit clamping down upon a 240mm disc at the rear. The Metro variant of the Hunter 350 gets dual-channel ABS as standard.

    We will be riding the Hunter 350 shortly and our review will follow soon, so stay tuned to hear from the horse’s mouth how the Hunter 350 fares in the real world.

     

    Copyright (c) Autocar India. All rights reserved.

    Comments

    ×
    img

    No comments yet. Be the first to comment.

    Ask Autocar Anything about Car and Bike Buying and Maintenance Advices
    Need an expert opinion on your car and bike related queries?
    Ask Now

    Search By Bike Price

    Poll of the month

    The Mahindra XUV 300 facelift will be called the XUV 3XO. Should more brands rename models for facelifts?

    Yes, it could give new life to a slow-selling car

     

    13.67%

    Yes, but only if there are significant changes

     

    32.49%

    No, it's confusing and dilutes the brand name

     

    28.93%

    No difference, the product speaks for itself

     

    24.91%

    Total Votes : 1068
    Sign up for our newsletter

    Get all the latest updates from the automobile universe