In Photos: Royal Enfield 650 Twins Specs Revealed at Global Ride

Royal Enfield is hosting a global media ride for the Interceptor 650 and Continental GT 650 in California.
Roshun Povaiah
Car and Bike
Published:
Royal Enfield Interceptor 650 (left) and Royal Enfield Continental GT 650 (right) in Santa Cruz, California ahead of global launch and US price reveal. 
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Photo: The Quint
Royal Enfield Interceptor 650 (left) and Royal Enfield Continental GT 650 (right) in Santa Cruz, California ahead of global launch and US price reveal. 
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The Royal Enfield 650 Twins - Interceptor and Continental GT - lined up ahead of the media ride in Santa Cruz, California

Royal Enfield is launching its 650 cc twins - the Interceptor 650 and the Continental GT 650 - in the US market and other global markets this month, ahead of its launch in India in another month or two.

The Quint was invited to Santa Cruz in California to ride these twin-cylinder motorcycles on curated routes. Ahead of the rides, we got a deep-dive into the specifications of these new Royal Enfield motorcycles. Take a look.

The Royal Enfield Interceptor 650 twin makes for a logical upgrade for a customer moving from a Royal Enfield Classic 350 or 500 upwards.

The Royal Enfield Interceptor 650 has been built keeping in mind the original Interceptor 750 of the 1960's. It follows the classic cruiser styling. It comes with a 2,122 mm x 1,165 mm x 789 mm chassis common to both bikes. It has a wheelbase of 1,400 mm and a ground clearance of 174 mm. The seat height is 804 mm with an upright handlebar for the Interceptor. It weighs 202 Kg without fuel.

The Royal Enfield Interceptor 650 follows the same design cues as the original Interceptor 750 (see end of article). 

The bike sports 18-inch spoked wheels with Pirelli Phantom Sportcomp tyres (standard globally). It gets a 100/90 R18 tyre in front and 130/90 R18 at the rear. The rims are 36-spoke aluminium alloys.

The Interceptor sports a straight-forward cruiser look, with upright handle, forward-positioned foot pegs, flat seat, and curved 14-litre tank. 

Both the bikes sport 41 mm front forks with 110 mm of travel and twin coil-over pre-load adjustable shocks with 88 mm of travel at the rear.

The Royal Enfield Continental GT 650 follows the cafe-racer theme, but is based on the same chassis as the Interceptor. 

The Royal Enfield Continental GT 650 gets clip-on handlebars and a more committed riding position because of the pushed back foot pegs. The seat height is 793 mm on the Continental GT, while other specifications are the same as the Interceptor.

Available in an all-chrome edition the Royal Enfield Continental GT 650 sports pushed-back foot pegs, clip-on handle bars, a squared-off 14-litre tank and a cafe-racer style seat with a more committed riding position.

The Continental GT would suit those buyers who like a more sporty riding position compared to the upright stance of the Interceptor.

The parallel-twin, two-cylinder, 648 cc engine features 4-valves per cylinder, single-spark and electronic fuel-injection with oil-air-cooling.  

The 648 cc parallel-twin, two-cylinder air-oil cooled engine develops 47 bhp of power at 7,250 rpm and 52 Nm of torque at 5,250 rpm although nearly 80 percent of torque is available from 2,500 rpm onwards. It features a 270 degree crank angle, which is what gives it a burbling sound, rather than a thump-thump, with fairly muted vibrations. It gets a Bosch closed-loop fuel-injection system and is capable of meeting Euro 5 norms.

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The Royal Enfield twins get a 320 mm disc brake in front and 240 mm disc at the rear with Bosch dual-channel ABS. 

The bikes feature sintered pads on the twin-piston Bybre calipers. They come with dual-channel ABS from Bosch. The front gets a 320 mm single disc and the rear gets a 240 mm disc.

The two-pod instrument cluster features an analogue tachometer and speedometer with a digital fuel gauge, odometer and tripmeters. 

The instrumentation has been kept fairly basic and simple. It gets two-pod analogue unit with tachometer and speedometer. The speedometer also houses an LCD display for fuel gauge, odometer and two trip meters. The tachometer has tell-tale lights for engine-check, battery, oil, ABS, high-beam and neutral.

The RE twins feature a six-speed gearbox with a slipper-assisted clutch, which allows for quick down-shifts. 

The bikes feature a six-speed transmission with a slipper-assisted clutch. This will help with quick downshifts. The positioning of the levers are different for the Continental GT and the Interceptor 650 because of the foot peg placement.

Although built on the same twin-cradle, tubular chassis with a 1,400 mm wheelbase and 174 mm of ground clearance, the RE twins offer completely different riding positions. 

The Royal Enfield twins will come with a three-year or 40,000 km warranty at launch. Service interval is 10,000 Km between services although the first service (with oil change) is to be done at 500 Km.

The original 1960's 750 Interceptor twin on display. 

At the ride venue, Royal Enfield also had a full display for the heritage of these motorcycles. The Royal Enfield Interceptor 750 twin from the 1960's on display shows how close the new 2018 Interceptor looks in terms of detail to the original.

The Continental GT 250 single-cylinder bike from 1966 with its owner. 

The Continental GT 650 borrows its inspiration from the original 1962 model GT 250 single. (The bike in the photo is a 1966 model that has been restored.) This design was revived in 2013 with the Continental GT 535 and the 2018 model also stays true to the design.

A comprehensive first-ride review of the Royal Enfield Continental GT 650 and Royal Enfield Interceptor 650 follows soon on The Quint. Should you start saving up for it? We will let you know.

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