Key performance
Technical specifications
- Power
- 120.0 ch (87.6 kW) → —
- Torque
- 100.3 Nm @ 7000 tr/min → 100.3 Nm
- Gearbox
- — → 5-speed
- Final drive
- Belt (final drive) → Belt (final drive)
- Front tyre
- 140/70-18 → 140/70-18
- Rear tyre
- 280/30-18 → 280/30-18
- Wheelbase
- 2010.00 mm → 2012.00 mm
Engine
- Displacement
- 1250 cc
- Torque
- 100.3 Nm
- Engine type
- V2, four-stroke
- Cooling
- Air
- Compression ratio
- 11.3:1
- Bore × stroke
- 97.5 x 72.1 mm (3.8 x 2.8 inches)
- Fuel system
- Injection. ESPFI
- Valve timing
- Single Overhead Cams (SOHC)
- Starter
- Electric
Chassis
- Frame
- Steel tubing and cast aluminium
- Gearbox
- 5-speed
- Final drive
- Belt (final drive)
- Front suspension
- Aluminium twin swing arms and fully adjustable hydraulic monoshock
- Rear suspension
- Aluminium single sided swing arms and fully adjustable hydraulic dual shock
Brakes
- Front brakes
- Single disc. 6-piston inverted caliper
- Rear brakes
- Single disc. 2-piston caliper, floating disk
- Front tyre
- 140/70-18
- Rear tyre
- 280/30-18
Dimensions
- Seat height
- 660.00 mm
- Wheelbase
- 2012.00 mm
- Fuel capacity
- 18.20 L
- Dry weight
- 304.00 kg
Overview
Confronted with the standardization of roadsters, the Travertson V-Rex arrives as an aesthetic declaration of war. This American naked bike, with its excessive wheelbase of over two meters and its monumental 280 mm rear wheel, does not seek to appeal to the masses. It imposes its own law, a blend of mechanical brute force and radical architecture that more closely resembles a mobile artillery piece than a production motorcycle. Its mixed steel and aluminum frame primarily serves as a platform to showcase these aluminum swingarms and the 1250 cm3 V-twin engine.

Without official power figures, it is the torque, announced at 100.3 Nm, that sets the tone. Paired with a belt final drive and a five-speed gearbox, this air-cooled four-stroke engine is designed for waves of propulsion rather than stratospheric revs. With a bore of 97.5 mm and a compression ratio of 11.3:1, it must deliver its force with a tractor-like generosity, ideal for moving the 304 kg dry weight of the whole. The claimed fuel consumption of 5.2 L/100 km seems almost anecdotal in the face of such a presence.
The cycle part embraces its extreme choices. The low seat at 660 mm contrasts with the scope of the chassis, promising a position perhaps more comfortable than its appearance suggests. The adjustable hydraulic dual rear shock suspension and the unique lateral monoshock contribute to the mechanical spectacle, as does the inverted six-piston front brake caliper. But it is the geometry and these disproportionate tires, a 140 at the front and this 280 at the rear, that redefine the notion of road holding. One imagines an aircraft carrier-like stability in a straight line, a certain inertia in corners.
The Travertson V-Rex is not a motorcycle, it is an object of conviction. It is aimed at the collector who prefers visual impact to technical specifications, at the one who considers a garage as a gallery of raw art. Faced with a Ducati Streetfighter or a KTM 1290 Super Duke R, it does not play in the same category. Here, performance is measured in looks elicited, in degrees of astonishment. It is the quintessence of American custom pushed to its most sculptural extremes, a dreaming machine that has the luxury of being able, incidentally, to ride.
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