Harley-Davidson XLCR

Harley-Davidson XLCR
Manufacturer Harley-Davidson
Production 1977–1979
Engine 1000 cc OHV 45° V-twin
Bore / stroke 88.9 x 96.8mm
Compression ratio 9.0:1
Power 57 @ 6,000
Torque 67.9 @ 3,750
Transmission 4 speed
Suspension Rear: Twin Showa shocks, adjustable preload
Rake, trail 27.8°, 5.1"
Wheelbase 59.6 in.
Weight 530 lb (240 kg) (dry)
565 lb (256 kg) (full of gas) (wet)

The Harley-Davidson XLCR was an American café racer motorcycle manufactured by Harley-Davidson between 1977 and 1979.

Some say that designer Willie G. Davidson created it from the existing XLCH Sportster, initially as his personal vehicle.[1] The bike was actually designed by a committee of three people: Bob Modero (an engineer at Harley) Jim Haubert (Jim Haubert Engineering) hired as an independent Skunkworks contractor and Willie G. Although he was not present, this group had a strong styling influence from Dean Wixom when the three decided, as one of the starting points, to enlarge a dirt track XR750 fuel tank. Mr. Wixom was the original designer of this fuel tank.

Changed styling included the addition of a "bikini" fairing, slim front fender, reshaped fuel tank, a pillion-free saddle and unique "siamesed" two-into-two exhaust.[1] It was "largely ignored" by consumers when launched in the 1970s,[2] and "famously a sales flop",[3] a "narcoleptic turner" due to long wheelbase and cruiser-like steering geometry,[4] with "lethargic performance",[5] but by thirty years later, had become a collectors item.[2][6][7]

In 2013 an 1977 model sold for 12,000 dollars at an auction.[8] In 2004 a 1978 model went for 9,900 at an auction in New Zealand.[9] In 2010 a 1977 model sold for about 20,000 USD by Bonhams at auction.[10]

Specifications

Specs in the infobox are from Motorcyclist.[4]

References

Notes

Sources

Further reading

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