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This handsome Royal Enfield has some uncommon features. |
A sharp looking 250cc 1964 Royal Enfield for sale on eBay in Hatley, Wis. turns out to be more rare than the seller suspected.
You might have wondered about it, if you had seen the pictures with the
ad, showing a peculiar muffler and a blanking plate where the tachometer
might have been.
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Tidy instrument panel has a blanking plate instead of tachometer. |
Graham Scarth, chairman of the Royal Enfield Owners Club, UK, gave this
identifying information, based on the engine number provided by the
seller:
"That machine is not a Crusader, but a Continental in what was known as
'standard' trim at that time, finished in color known as Blaze.
"The factory offered the bikes as either deluxe (chrome plated tank and
mudguards) or standard with painted items. In the case of the
Continental deluxe, a rev counter was fitted alongside the speedometer.
The standard (cheaper!) version had no rev counter drive and the
blanking plate in the fork crown instead of the instrument.
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In the UK and Europe a Continental would have had a bigger, boxier tank. |
"Your machine also has the small petrol tank with 'loose' chrome panels
usually found on U.S. market machines instead of the larger plated tank
of UK market models. It also has 'Western' handlebars instead of the
more usual low Ace bars for other markets.
"...Most of our members will have never seen a standard Continental, let
alone an export version of it... Although not recorded in the factory
ledgers, I am certain that it would have left Redditch in late 1964."
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Muffler looks a bit anemic. There's a reason. |
The motorcycle is a rare little beauty but there is just one thing that
bothered me: what an ugly muffler! Then came this note from Mark
Mumford, a keen observer and restorer of Royal Enfields in the UK:
"..It looks very original indeed. I notice it is also fitted with the original Villiers silencer (muffler).
"An ex-factory employee told me that Enfield had bought loads of these
silencers, intended for use with Villiers' own two-stroke engine (and
therefore detachable for cleaning, note the removable cap), presumably
thinking that the Villiers-engined (Royal Enfield) Turbo Twin would be a
big success.
"Finding themselves with piles of stock they used them on the whole 250
range, apparently with the result that the bikes simply wouldn't rev
properly because the two-stroke required much more back pressure that
the free breathing four-stroke Crusader!"
In his book "Royal Enfield, The Postwar Models," author Roy Bacon notes
Royal Enfield's experiment with the two-stroke Villiers motor slotted
into the company's own Crusader frame. The Villiers motor was a twin,
with a muffler running down each side of the motorcycle, so Royal
Enfield might have anticipated needing a lot of the Villiers mufflers.
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In U.S. trim, Continental has a clean, open look. |
Bacon specifically criticizes Royal Enfield for dropping the tachometer
on the standard Continental for 1964, "a curious move for the machine
sold as much on appearance as performance, and one that Enfield were to
reverse inside a year."
Perhaps so, but the result is a fascinating example of Royal Enfield's "creativity."