Key performance
Technical specifications
No spec differences between these two model years.
Engine
- Displacement
- 1449 cc
- Power
- 68.0 ch @ 5500 tr/min (50.0 kW)
- Torque
- 106.9 Nm @ 3400 tr/min
- Engine type
- Bicylindre en V à 45°, 4 temps
- Cooling
- par air
- Compression ratio
- 8.9 : 1
- Bore × stroke
- 95.3 x 101.6 mm
- Valves/cylinder
- 2
- Fuel system
- Injection
Chassis
- Frame
- Double berceau tubulaire en acier
- Gearbox
- boîte à 5 rapports
- Final drive
- Courroie
- Front suspension
- Fourche télescopique Ø 41 mm, déb : 116 mm
- Rear suspension
- 2 amortisseurs latéraux, déb : 76 mm
Brakes
- Front brakes
- Freinage 2 disques Ø 292 mm, étrier 4 pistons
- Rear brakes
- Freinage 1 disque Ø 292 mm, étrier 4 pistons
- Front tyre
- 130/90-16
- Front tyre pressure
- 2.48 bar
- Rear tyre
- 130/90-16
- Rear tyre pressure
- 2.76 bar
Dimensions
- Seat height
- 684.00 mm
- Fuel capacity
- 18.90 L
- Dry weight
- 345.00 kg
- New price
- 20 250 €
Overview
We often talk about timeless icons. But when you straddle this 2005 Harley-Davidson FLHR Road King, you feel the raw DNA of the house, a formula that definitively took shape with previous models, such as the Harley-Davidson FLHR Road King 1997 or 2000. It’s not a motorcycle, it’s a rolling monument. Its Twin Cam 88 engine of 1450 cm³, with its 68 horsepower and pharaonic torque of 107 Nm available from 3400 rpm, doesn’t offer performance, but authority. You don’t listen to it, you feel it, from the palms to the vertebrae, in a deep rumble that vibrates the asphalt.

Its announced dry weight of 345 kg is a warning, not just a technical data point. Raising it from its center stand, unfortunately not very practical, requires a good hip thrust. But once in motion, this mass literally melts thanks to prodigious stability and a low center of gravity. The colossal torque allows maneuvering at a walking pace without forcing, and on the road, it devours the kilometers with sovereign nonchalance. Cruise control, a rarity at the time on a custom, confirms its ambitions of a grand touring machine, even if the windshield begins to show its limits beyond 130 km/h. The famous “faux leather” saddlebags are actually rigid and spacious suitcases, perfectly in the spirit of the beast.
However, it doesn’t make concessions. The engine, despite its counterweights, massages your legs at a standstill to the point of fearing for your jeans, and the five-speed gearbox, although solid, clunks its gears with a mechanical frankness that will surprise those accustomed to Japanese transmissions. It’s an authentic, slightly rough charm, of a mechanical system that assumes its heritage, a heritage that was already found on the Harley Davidson FLHR Road King 1998. Consumption remains reasonable for the displacement, and with its nearly 19-liter tank, stages easily exceed 200 miles.
So, who rides this queen of the road? Clearly not a beginner, intimidated by its size and its price of over 20,000 euros at the time. It’s the ideal mount of a hard-core globetrotter, the one who seeks less top speed than the sensation of a perpetual journey. Faced with more refined and more performant Japanese competitors, the Road King doesn’t play in the same league. It sells a legend, a posture, a unique sensory experience. It’s not perfect, it’s charismatic. And for many, that’s what the essence of a true custom is.
Practical info
- La moto est accessible aux permis : A
Reviews & comments
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your opinion!