Key performance

90 ch
Power
🔧
1901 cc
Displacement
⚖️
376 kg
Weight
🏎️
180 km/h
Top speed
💺
650 mm
Seat height
20.8 L
Fuel capacity
💰
30 490 €
New price
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Technical specifications

Engine

Displacement
1901 cc
Power
90.0 ch (67.2 kW)
Torque
170.9 Nm @ 2900 tr/min
Engine type
V2, four-stroke
Cooling
Air
Compression ratio
11.1:1
Bore × stroke
103.2 x 113.0 mm (4.1 x 4.4 inches)
Valves/cylinder
2
Fuel system
Injection. Closed loop fuel injection, 54 mm bore
Starter
Electric

Chassis

Frame
Cast aluminium
Gearbox
6-speed
Final drive
Belt   (final drive)
Clutch
Wet, multi-plate. Gear Drive Wet Clutch.
Front suspension
Telescopic Fork
Rear suspension
Single Shock w/ Air adjust
Front wheel travel
119 mm (4.7 inches)
Rear wheel travel
114 mm (4.5 inches)

Brakes

Front brakes
Double disc. ABS. Floating discs. 4 piston caliper.
Rear brakes
Single disc. ABS. Floating disc. 2-piston caliper.
Front tyre
130/60-B19
Front tyre pressure
2.48 bar
Rear tyre
180/60-R16
Rear tyre pressure
2.83 bar

Dimensions

Seat height
650.00 mm
Wheelbase
1668.00 mm
Ground clearance
130.00 mm
Length
2506.00 mm
Width
1000.00 mm
Height
1385.00 mm
Fuel capacity
20.80 L
Weight
376.00 kg
Dry weight
362.00 kg
New price
30 490 €

Overview

What sets a premium bagger apart from just another big-displacement bike dressed up with saddlebags? The answer may lie in what you feel when the Thunderstroke 116 rumbles to life between your legs. The 2021 Indian Chieftain Limited makes no attempt to seduce through subtlety. Its 1901 cc spread across a two-valve-per-cylinder V-twin, its cast aluminum frame, and its 376 kg wet weight set the stage from the outset. We're talking about a land cruiser, certainly, but a land cruiser that delivers 90 horsepower and, more importantly, 170.9 Nm of torque from just 2900 rpm. The kind of firepower that pins you into the saddle at the first roundabout and doesn't let go until the horizon.

Indian Chieftain Limited

The evolution of this engine alone tells the story of Indian's ambition against Harley-Davidson's Milwaukee Eight. In 2018, the Thunderstroke was already gaining power so it could hold its head high against the competition. The 2019 Indian Chieftain Limited review then revealed the arrival of three engine maps — Tour, Standard, and Sport — along with rear cylinder deactivation at standstill to spare the rider's thighs. Then displacement grew, compression climbed to 11.1:1 with a 103.2 mm bore and 113 mm stroke, and torque gained serious heft. The result, on the 2020 version and then on this 2021 model year, is an engine that delivers its power everywhere in the rev range, with no flat spots or hesitation. No need to thrash it: a whisper of throttle below 2000 rpm is enough to feel the twin's thrust surge through the chassis.

On the presentation front, the Limited justifies its €30,490 price tag with a higher level of finish than the standard Chieftain. More generous chrome, machined spoke wheels, premium paint options. It was this model that, at its launch, debuted the large 19-inch front wheel shod with a 130/60 tire and the more conventional fender that suits it so well — an aesthetic choice that has since become the norm across most models in the range. At the rear, the 180/60 on a 16-inch rim provides stability, while the single air-adjustable shock tries to tame those 376 kg on rough pavement. The seat, perched at just 650 mm, makes the machine approachable despite its size — a point that matters when you're shopping for a used Indian Chieftain Limited and want to plant both feet flat without worry.

The onboard equipment puts this machine on ground where few competitors venture at this level of standard spec. The Ride Command system, revised in 2020 and now compatible with Apple CarPlay since 2021, drives a 100-watt audio system whose equalizer adjusts volume according to speed. Add keyless start, an electrically adjustable windshield, cruise control, ABS brakes with dual floating discs and four-piston calipers up front. The six-speed belt final drive fades into the background, smooth and silent. You quickly understand that this machine is built for the demanding touring rider — the one who devours back roads on Saturday morning and strings together 500 kilometers of highway on Sunday without flinching. The track rider will move along, and so will the beginner: with a 1668 mm wheelbase and 130 mm of ground clearance, the Chieftain Limited demands experience in tight corners. But on its home turf — the long American highway or the French national roads — it reigns with a quiet confidence that very few baggers can claim. The entry price is substantial, that's true. But what you're buying here is far more than a motorcycle: you're treating yourself to a certain art of travel.

Standard equipment

  • Assistance au freinage : ABS de série

Practical info

  • La moto est accessible aux permis : A

Indicators & positioning

Weight-to-power ratio
0.24 ch/kg
🔄
Torque / weight
0.45 Nm/kg
🔧
Volumetric power
48.4 ch/L
In category Custom / cruiser · 951-3802cc displacement (2621 motorcycles compared)
Power 92 ch Top 39%
50 ch median 85 ch 158 ch
Weight 376 kg Lighter than 7%
239 kg median 309 kg 380 kg
P/W ratio 0.24 ch/kg Top 65%
0.18 median 0.26 0.52 ch/kg

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