AJS Barletta 50 - Specifications & Review

Barletta 50

Article Complete Info

Articleid638339
CategoryScooter
MakeAJS
ModelBarletta 50
Year2023

Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels

FrametypeSteel
FrontbrakesSingle disc
FrontsuspensionTelescopic fork
Fronttyre110/70-12
RearbrakesExpanding brake (drum brake)
RearsuspensionSingle shock
Reartyre110/70-12

Engine & Transmission

CoolingsystemAir
Displacement50.0 ccm (3.05 cubic inches)
DrivelineCVT automatic
EmissiondetailsEuro 5
EnginetypeSingle cylinder, four-stroke
Fuelconsumption1.77 litres/100 km (56.5 km/l or 132.89 mpg)
FuelsystemCarburettor
GearboxAutomatic
Greenhousegases41.1 CO2 g/km. (CO2 - Carbon dioxide emission)
Power2.8 HP (2.1 kW)) @ 7500 RPM
Topspeed48.3 km/h (30.0 mph)
TransmissiontypefinaldriveBelt (final drive)

Other Specifications

CarryingcapacityUnderseat storage
ColoroptionsBlack/white, blue/white, black/grey
CommentsChinese scooter sold in the UK.
Electrical12V 6Ah battery.
Factorywarranty12 months parts and labour
LightLED headlight
StarterElectric & kick

Physical Measures & Capacities

Fuelcapacity6.60 litres (1.74 US gallons)
Overallheight1110 mm (43.7 inches)
Overalllength1855 mm (73.0 inches)
Overallwidth700 mm (27.6 inches)
Seatheight775 mm (30.5 inches) If adjustable, lowest setting.
Weightincloilgasetc102.0 kg (224.9 pounds)

About AJS

Country of Origin: United Kingdom
Founder: Stevens brothers (Albert John Stevens et al.)
Best Known For: Pre/post-war British racers (7R ‘Boy Racer’, Porcupine E90/95) and classic singles

Company History

AJS traces to Wolverhampton, where the Stevens brothers built precise, reliable singles that quickly earned podiums on the Isle of Man and in British trials. The initials honor Albert John Stevens, but the company’s identity is collective: meticulous family engineering that prized strong crankcases, effective lubrication, and stout frames. Between the wars AJS titles and speed records made the black-and-gold tank a byword for competence. Corporate reshuffling saw AJS absorbed into Associated Motor Cycles (AMC) alongside Matchless; engineering cross-pollinated, and racing continued with the exquisite 7R ‘Boy Racer’—a jewel of a DOHC 350 that taught generations how a well-sorted single should feel. The Porcupine E90/E95 twin, bristling with cooling fins, became legend for its rarity and world championship pedigree. Post-war commuter machines carried the badge into daily life, but car ownership and global competition squeezed the British industry; production ultimately ceased, with the name later licensed for small-series machines. Historically, AJS stands for the golden mean of British motorcycling: elegant but purposeful design, road manners honed by competition, and a parts culture that kept bikes alive for decades. To ride a tidy AJS today is to experience clear, communicative steering and a mechanical cadence that made British singles beloved across continents.

Other Years

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