“Cruising at its purest.” That’s the phrase with which Royal Enfield is hyping its newest motorcycle, the Super Meteor 650 — a streamlined cruiser blending classic good looks and modern touches, with a balance of size, power and handling that’s versatile enough to let it zip along city streets, country backroads and bustling highways with equal aplomb.
Such a halcyon harkening is perhaps best exemplified by one of the presenters at the bike’s recent U.S. launch in Dallas, brand historian Gordon May. In his clarion British accent, May schooled the attending media (Gear Patrol included) on not only Royal Enfield’s evolution but also Project Origin, a painstaking reconstruction of the brand’s first-ever motorized bicycle from 1901. With its 239cc single-cylinder engine, hand-built brass tank and curlicue horn, this ancient, persnickety set of wheels points to a brand identity that lives on to this day: Fuck the numbers, aren’t we charming as hell?
Of course, the only way to find out if this remains true 122 years since that first moto hit the streets was to rip around on the new 650, which I was fired up to do on a pleasant October Saturday in Texas.
2023 Royal Enfield Super Meteor 650: What We Think
I must confess, my experience with mid-sized cruisers is limited. I’ve ridden the Meteor 350 that Royal Enfield launched a few years back, as well as the Honda Rebel 1100 and the Indian Scout Bobber Sixty, but these bikes are all a bit bigger or smaller — and tended to leave me wanting one way or the other.
That said, my first impressions after nine hours of seat time are pretty positive. The new 650 strikes me as a strong value proposition, a damn fine-looking bike and an excellent entry-level option for a new or beginning rider. At the same time, its 648cc parallel twin engine delivers just enough oomph — 47 horsepower, 52.3 Nm of torque at 5,650 rpm, triple-digit top speed — to satisfy many who’ve been saddling up for much longer.