Hero MotoCorp dealer Fortpoint, Mumbai offers a unique Impulse, which we’ve just taken a look at.
Published on May 02, 2015 11:30:00 AM
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Existing Hero Impulse users will agree when we say on-off road enabled motorbikes are assets to daily commuting in India, offering stress-free riding that can even turn a bad day around. All this while doing what no other motorcycle in the segment can, including rolling over potholes and bad patches of road seamlessly. Also the slim Impulse is easy to move around and fit into narrow parking spaces.
The Impulse’s 149.2cc engine has always felt a bit underpowered, and only just adequate to keep you moving at a fair enough clip. Riders often question if and when Hero MotoCorp will update its Impulse with a higher capacity powerplant?
In that light, Chinmay Bafna, proprietor of Fortpoint Hero with the help of his workshop in-charge Kobad Buchia have recently equipped a regular Hero Impulse with a refurbished 223cc engine from Hero’s Karizma. Visually, the 223cc Impulse looks almost identical to the factory-produced motorcycle, apart from a new, well-fabricated, cylindrical exhaust in brushed finish steel. It also has a larger, blacked out engine in a double cradle frame.
The exhaust itself doesn’t emit excess heat and is placed far enough from the pillion. Another modification here is the headlight unit, which is now directly connected to the battery, offering flicker free illumination at night.
A light thumb start ignites the familiar-sounding 223cc motor, firing up this time to a throaty beat, from a free-flow exhaust. What immediately caught my attention was how calmly the bike sprints through traffic, thanks to the almost immediate delivery of torque, 2kgm delivered at 6,000rpm. The 223cc engine on the Impulse now gives it better initial response, and a healthy mid-range with decent top-end power delivery.
Clutch action feels a bit heavier than ideal, but this operates smoothly enough. The engine swap on the Impulse requires no major fabrication and Fortpoint even offers a years warranty for the bike.
Due to a heavier 223cc engine, ride and handling have changed a fair bit from the regular Impulse. The motorcycle tips forward a bit more now. Upon measuring, with a rider astride, the modified Impulse’s front suspension sits a little more compressed, by a fourth of an inch compared to a regular Impulse.
The bike still absorbs potholes and undulations well enough, but not as comfortably as a stock Impulse. Front and rear suspensions feel a bit stiffer. Still, nothing that would send a shock up the spine as the setup itself has enough play to absorb.
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