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Norton Commando 961 Café Racer MKII

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Make Model

Norton Commando 961 Café Racer MKII

Year

2016 - 17

Engine

Four stroke, parallel twin with push-rod valve actuation, 3 bearing crank balancer shaft, 2 valves per cylinder

Capacity

961 cc / 58.6 cu in
Bore x Stroke 88 x 79 mm
Compression Ratio 10.1:1
Cooling System Air cooled
Lubrication Dry sump
Exhaust Café Sports exhaust, Euro 3 compliant

Induction

Fuel injected

Ignition

Electronic

Starting

Electric

Max Power

59.7 kW / 80 hp @ 6500 rpm

Max Torque

90 Nm / 9.2 kgf-m / 65 ft-lb @ 5200 rpm

Clutch

Wet multi-plate with hydraulic lifter

Transmission

5 Speed, constant mesh

Final Drive

Chain, 525 "O" ring
Frame Tubular steel with integral oil tank

Front Suspension

Ø43 mm Öhlins USD, adjustable preload, compression, and rebound damping.

Front Wheel Travel

115 mm / 4.53 in

Rear Suspension

Öhlins reservoir-style twin shocks, adjustable ride height, preload, compression, and rebound damping.

Rear Wheel Travel

100 mm / 3.94 in

Front Brakes

Brembo 2 x Ø320 mm fully-floating high carbon stainless steel discs, 4 piston Brembo radially mounted  calipers. Brembo front brake master cylinder with integral reservoir

Rear Brakes

Brembo single Ø220 mm disc, 2 piston caliper.  Brembo rear brake master cylinder

Front Wheel

3.50 x 17, 36 spoke

Rear Wheel

5.50 x 17, 40 spoke

Front Tyre

120/70 -17

Rear Tyre

180/55 -17
Rake 24.5°
Trail 99 mm / 3.9 in

Wheelbase

1420 mm / 55.9 in
Seat Height 813 mm / 32 in

Dry Weight

188 kg / 415 lbs

Fuel Capacity 

17 Litres / 4.5 US gal

The Commando 961 Cafe Racer was built to replicate the old style cafe racers with all modern components and engineering whilst maintaining a classic appearance and style.

The Norton Commando 961 Cafe Racer is powered by a 961cc parallel twin with a dry sump, power is sent to the rear wheel via a constant-mesh 5 speed transmission and the rear end is held up by twin Öhlins reservoir-style twin shocks with adjustable ride height, preload, compression and rebound. The front suspension are 43mm Öhlins forks, also with adjustable preload, compression and rebound damping.

Stopping power is provided by the Italians with twin Brembo 320mm fully- floating high carbon stainless steel discs on the front end with Brembo 4 piston ‘goldline’ radially mounted callipers. The rear brake is a smaller single Brembo 220mm disc with a Brembo 2 piston calliper.

That engine produces 80hp and 80Nm of torque at 7700rpm and 6000rpm respectively, the total weight of the 961 Cafe Racer is 205kgs and the top speed is said to be 130mph. Although I suspect that I could surpass that speed if given access to a Commando, the Bonneville salt flats and a pair of dark blue underpants.

From a styling perspective, the new Norton Commando is one of the most handsome motorcycles currently in production. In fact I’d go so far as to say that it is the most handsome outright. Now whilst this isn’t cheap it’s worth remembering that this is a bike you keep for life, then pass on as an heirloom.

Review

I am no British bike fanatic but the font and the name are seriously cool and there’s no denying that the new Commando range looks unreal – whether you are into that type of bike or not…

I’ve just stepped off the 1299 Panigale at Fraser Motorcycles. I’ve been riding the latest superbike from Italy for a week and have completely lost my mind over the amazing power and handling.

Five minutes after doing the hand back of the 1299 to multiple Australian Pro Twins Champion, Craig McMartin, he’s handing me the keys to my next press test machine. The Norton Commando 961 Cafe Racer. Polar opposites.

I swap racing leathers for my RJays Scorpion retro jacket and Bullit retro jeans not to mention the Bell open face. Happy Days. I feel like The Fonz…

It doesn’t take that long to get the rundown on the bike. No wild electronics here. There’s a speedo, tacho, trip meter and a clock. Nothing else to remember!

I walk around the bike in admiration. The build quality is good – deep silver paint, rich chrome, lots of polished alloy and stainless-steel mufflers. I do notice casting marks on the primary cover that have not been polished out, which is disappointing, but aside from that the finish is high quality.

The bike is an odd mix of old and new. The engine looks very similar to the original Commando twin aside from the obvious, being the much larger cylinders. The waistline of the fuel tank is stunningly slender and the ‘bars low and narrow.

The tank is very long and the seat flat with the caf-racer hump. Modern Ohlins forks, Brembo radial-mount calipers and wide wheels and fat hoops support these classic styling traits. The balance is just right…

I sit on the bike for the first time. The reach to the ‘bars is a loooong way. Further than on any bike I’ve ridden. The fuel tank is slim between the knees but unfortunately the knee indents are too far back and my knees are sticking out like sails in the breeze. I’m average height – 183cm.

I fire up the big parallel twin and it settles into a low rumble, clunking and clattering and sounding like it’s full of nuts and bolts. I love the character but want more exhaust sound. The mufflers are the big let down here – no note to speak of and completely strangling what could be a glorious sound. I’d be throwing them out ASAP and be putting open pipes on this stunner if I owned it.

 

 

I pull the hydraulically actuated clutch in and select first gear. Clunk! Off I head up the M4 Expressway.

Within 150m there is a nice left curve and I carve through it on the 961, grinning already and to be honest a bit gob smacked at how nicely the bike steers and tracks through a smooth, fast turn. Silverwater Rd exit and I do 20-odd kilometres of hellish peak hour traffic before I’m free again heading north through my home twisties.

The 961 is not a commuter bike – and I would assume would rarely be ridden in peak hour traffic. It rumbles, farts, rattles, clunks and is incredibly uncomfortable – we will leave it there as really, it’s pointless commenting here as the bike is out of water completely…

So back to my twisties. The same corners I rode the 1299 through just hours earlier, with 182rwhp, are just as enjoyable on the much less powerful Norton. Just like the Moto-Guzzi V7 Stone is one of the best fun machines in the smooth 80-zones of my local roads, the Commando too promotes good times at sane speeds that don’t land you in the lock-up.

The engine is old school and I’ve accepted that. I’ve found the sweet spot of 3500 to 5500rpm and there is no point revving outside that range unless you want to do an imitation of a mechanical paint tin mixer!

The gearbox action as expected of a primary gearbox – that is a long, slow shift and if I try to rush the shift or shift at the same speed as I would with a conventional ‘box, the gears won’t engage and there is a false neutral between every gear. The engine doesn’t like the throttle snapped open, either, so everything you do has to be done with finesse and patience on the 961 – think wet weather riding.

Once on the go, riding that torque curve and rolling corner to corner is a great experience. The ride position begins to make sense and the bike actually handles really well on smooth tarmac. There is a lot of weight there – no official numbers are available and I’ve read some claiming 183kg dry, others claiming 205 dry, but my estimate is closer to the 220kg range.

That said, the steering is quick and accurate, the bike tracks well, the brakes are sensational and although my test bike was very soft, the Ohlins suspension could doubtless be dialed in very nicely.

On the bumpy roads there is a lack of spring control on standard settings, making the 961 unstable particularly at the back. All in the set-up, though, and there is no questioning the quality of the suspension.

The 961 is fitted with Dunlop Qualifier tyres – I was surprised not to see Avon’s on the bike, given its country of origin. The Avon 3D Ultra Sport would work well.

Few bikes have caused as much of a stir as the new Norton Commando among the middle aged motorcyclists of this world. Those lucky enough to have enjoyed the heyday of British motorcycle domination when names like Triumph, Norton, Velocette, Vincent, HRD, BSA, Royal Enfield, Brough Superior, AJS, Ariel, Matchless, CCM and dozens more ruled the TT and streets most likely drooled over the first Norton Commando 750 in 1967 or subsequent models through to the 850.

Despite the fact that the engine design was already over 20-years old in 1968, having being pencilled by Bert Hopwood in the 1940s for the 7 Twin, the Commando was a great success. It was sporty, nimble and at 190kg, lightweight.

Despite being one of the most unreliable and self destructing bikes in history the old Commando also gained a cult following and was a pretty damn cool bike and nothing has changed…

Fast-forward to 2010 and Norton Motorcycles UK (owned now by Stuart Garner of Norton Racing) shipped the very first example of the new Norton Commando from its factory in Donnington, UK.

ive-years later, after a long wait, Norton’s are finally Down Under, with NFI becoming the Australian importer and distributor of all three models, the Cafe Racer, SF and Sport.

Before you get all excited, the first shipment was completely pre-sold and they are not a cheap motorcycle. The 961 Sport will set you back $31,490 + ORC, the 961 Cafe Racer as tested $35,490 + ORC and the top of the line 961 SF, based on the Sport but with Ohlins suspension, upgraded brakes and lots of carbon-fibre, will set you back $37,490 + ORC.

Huge dollars for an underpowered, overweight air-cooled pushrod two-valver, right? Well, there is no looking past the price but those who buy one of these exclusive hand built machines are probably willing to part with just about anything to get one and I would be willing to bet that they won’t go down in value at all as the years pass by…

The Norton Commando 961 is primarily a work of art and you would not be judged if you never even rode the bike – rather parked it on show in the bar or lounge room in a glass case. If you ride the bike, it will make you smile, particularly if you are from the original Commando era.

Source bikereview.com.au