Enfield GT500 Cafe Racer - Specifications & Review

GT500 Cafe Racer

Article Complete Info

Articleid473073
CategoryClassic
MakeEnfield
ModelGT500 Cafe Racer
Year2007

Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels

FrontbrakesExpanding brake (drum brake)
Frontbrakesdiameter178 mm (7.0 inches)
Fronttyre3.25-19
RearbrakesExpanding brake (drum brake)
Rearbrakesdiameter152 mm (6.0 inches)
Reartyre3.50-19

Engine & Transmission

Borexstroke84.0 x 90.0 mm (3.3 x 3.5 inches)
ClutchMulitiplate immersed in oil
CoolingsystemAir
Displacement499.00 ccm (30.45 cubic inches)
EnginedetailsSingle cylinder, four-stroke
FuelsystemCarburettor
Gearbox5-speed
LubricationsystemDry sump
Power22.00 HP (16.1 kW)) @ 5400 RPM
Topspeed125.0 km/h (77.7 mph)
TransmissiontypefinaldriveChain

Other Specifications

CommentsBrand also called Royal Enfield.
StarterElectric & kick

Physical Measures & Capacities

Fuelcapacity14.50 litres (3.83 gallons)

About Enfield

Country of Origin: United Kingdom (heritage), India (modern Royal Enfield)
Founder: Enfield Cycle Company; later stewardship by Eicher Motors (India)
Best Known For: Classic singles and twins; Bullet/Classic lineage and modern 650 twins

Company History

The Enfield story spans two nations and more than a century. In England, the Enfield Cycle Company built sturdy singles and twins that served commuters, police, and the military, with the Bullet becoming a postwar icon for its thump and simplicity. When Britain’s motorcycle industry contracted, licensed production in India kept the Bullet alive at Royal Enfield’s Madras (now Chennai) works. There, the motorcycle transcended transport to become cultural shorthand—film star, touring mule, and village legend. Under Eicher Motors’ stewardship in the 2000s–2010s, Royal Enfield modernized while honoring silhouette and sound. New UCE engines, then refined J-series singles, improved brakes and electrics, and finally the globally acclaimed 650 twin platform proved that affordability and charm could travel. The brand expanded into accessible adventure (Himalayan), neo-retro roadsters (Interceptor/Continental GT 650), and a more robust service culture that turned nostalgia into a dependable ownership proposition. Historically, Enfield’s significance is unique: it preserved mid-century motorcycling’s cadence—long-stroke beats, unhurried torque—into the present, then exported it back to the world with modern reliability. For millions of riders, the first long road out of town arrived on a Bullet; for a new generation, it arrives on a 650 twin that still feels human-scaled. Across continents, Enfield stands for the idea that motorcycles can be simple, soulful, and attainable—and that lineage, if cared for, can carry a brand farther than any spec sheet.

Other Years

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