At the heart of the Scout is a brand-new 1250cc liquid-cooled V-Twin christened the SpeedPlus. On paper, it makes 105 horsepower and about 109Nm of torque. In practice, it feels like you've strapped yourself to a small earthquake. Twist the throttle and it doesn't climb through the revs politely, it surges forward with the kind of linear grunt that makes overtakes happen before you've even realised you attempted one.
But the gearing is tall. First gear feels like it was designed for drag strips rather than traffic signals, which means crawling in bumper-to-bumper Indian traffic becomes a clutch-slipping workout. Second doesn't help much either, because by the time you've stopped feathering the clutch, you're already going too fast for city chaos. Out on the highway though, the tall ratios come alive. The bike lopes along at triple-digit speeds barely breaking a sweat, like a heavyweight cruiser that could happily munch miles till the petrol runs out.
This is where the Scout is at its most convincing: on the open road, big chestfuls of torque rolling in smooth waves, each gear feeling long-legged and unhurried. Around town, however, it's about as convenient as wearing cowboy boots to a yoga class.
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