Borile B350EN - Specifications & Review

B350EN

Article Complete Info

Articleid793753
CategoryEnduro-offroad
MakeBorile
ModelB350EN
Year2013

Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels

FrontbrakesSingle disc
FrontsuspensionUpside down fork
Fronttyre120/70-21
Frontwheeltravel130 mm (5.1 inches)
RearbrakesSingle disc
RearsuspensionMonoshock
Reartyre150/70-18
Rearwheeltravel116 mm (4.6 inches)

Engine & Transmission

CoolingsystemAir
Displacement350.00 ccm (21.36 cubic inches)
EnginedetailsSingle cylinder, four-stroke
EnginetypeModified Ducati engine. Balancer shafts.
FuelsystemInjection. Weber-Marelli
Gearbox5-speed
Ignitionelectronic
TransmissiontypefinaldriveChain
Valvespercylinder2

Other Specifications

CommentsItalian made bike.
StarterKick

Physical Measures & Capacities

Alternateseatheight850 mm (33.5 inches) If adjustable, highest setting.
Seatheight800 mm (31.5 inches) If adjustable, lowest setting.

About Borile

Country of Origin: Italy
Founder: Umberto Borile
Best Known For: Hand-built retro singles like the B500CR; artisanal frames and finishes

Company History

Borile is a quintessential Italian atelier where motorcycles are designed as much with the hands as with CAD. Founded by Umberto Borile in the 1990s, the brand reinterpreted classic shapes—narrow tanks, high-shouldered tires, and upright cockpits—through modern metallurgy and clever packaging. The B500CR became its calling card: a jewel-like café single with meticulous welds, visible frame lines, and an engine tuned for tractable, real-world torque rather than headline dyno numbers. In an era racing toward electronics and multi-cylinder complexity, Borile argued for a different kind of luxury: lightness, proportion, and craftsmanship you can see and feel at walking pace. Production volumes were intentionally small, which allowed custom touches and owner consultation uncommon in mass manufacturing. That intimacy extended to serviceability; components were chosen not only for performance but also for elegance in assembly and maintenance, a nod to riders who enjoy spinning spanners as part of the relationship with a bike. Economically, boutique scale brings fragility—supplier changes and homologation rules can slow releases—but it also protects character. Borile machines ride like analog instruments: tight controls, immediate feedback, and a soundtrack that rewards a measured wrist. Historically, the marque keeps alive Italy’s tradition of small shops that punch above their weight by obsessing over the conversation between chassis and rider. Where many modern bikes anesthetize, a Borile amplifies—reminding us that speed is only one dimension of joy and that form, texture, and mechanical clarity can be every bit as satisfying as lap times.

Other Years

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