Highland Allroad - Specifications & Review

Allroad

Article Complete Info

Articleid938471
CategoryAllround
MakeHighland
ModelAllroad
Year2008

Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels

FrametypeCrMo steel and aluminum
FrontbrakesSingle disc. front 320 mm floating disk, Brembo double piston with floating caliper
Frontbrakesdiameter320 mm (12.6 inches)
FrontsuspensionFront fork 50 mm Marzocchi. 280 mm wheel travel, adjustable compression and rebound
RearbrakesSingle disc. with Brembo floating caliper
Rearbrakesdiameter220 mm (8.7 inches)

Engine & Transmission

Borexstroke95.0 x 66.0 mm (3.7 x 2.6 inches)
Compression11.0:1
CoolingsystemLiquid
Displacement936.00 ccm (57.11 cubic inches)
EnginedetailsSingle cylinder, four-stroke
Gearbox6-speed
IgnitionHighland integrated engine management system with ignition coils fitted directly on the spark plugs
Power85.00 HP (62.0 kW)) @ 6000 RPM
Topspeed200.0 km/h (124.3 mph)
Torque104.00 Nm (10.6 kgf-m or 76.7 ft.lbs) @ 4000 RPM
TransmissiontypefinaldriveChain

Other Specifications

StarterElectric

Physical Measures & Capacities

Dryweight164.0 kg (361.6 pounds)
Fuelcapacity20.00 litres (5.28 gallons)
Groundclearance230 mm (9.1 inches)
Powerweightratio0.5183 HP/kg

About Highland

Country of Origin: Sweden (later U.S. assembly attempts)
Founder: Mats Malmberg and a team of Swedish engineers
Best Known For: Featherweight, high-performance four-stroke enduro/supermoto twins and singles

Company History

Highland emerged in the 1990s with a bold Scandinavian take on performance off-road: compact, punchy engines in minimal chassis that prioritized mass centralization and service access. Early 950/1000 V-twin concepts and 450/570 singles earned attention for startling power-to-weight and crisp throttle response. The bikes felt like prototypes you could buy—raw, immediate, and thrilling—at a time when many OEMs grew heavier. Tragically, leadership losses and business turbulence hampered continuity, and attempts to relaunch production in the U.S. struggled against homologation costs and capital demands. Yet testers consistently praised Highland’s dynamics: supple suspension that stayed high in the stroke, geometry that rewarded committed inputs, and engines that pulled like oversized electrics. Historically, Highland stands with Britten and Bimota in the canon of small teams punching above their weight through clear ideas and superb metalwork. The rarity of surviving bikes only sharpens their legend: glimpses of an alternate path where Scandinavian minimalism defined the fast-dirt playbook years before the weight wars truly began.

Other Years

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