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Harley Davidson V4 Nova Prototype
For a company that's been manufacturing motorcycles for a
century, Harley-Davidson hasn't often rocked the two-wheel world back on its
heels. Even the V-Rod, as radical a departure from Milwaukee orthodoxy as The
Motor Company has ever produced, breaks very little technological ground
compared to bikes from its competitors overseas. But for a brief, shining moment
25 years ago, Harley sat poised to blow the roof off the motorcycle market-and
its own reputation as a manufacturer of stodgy, technically unsophisticated
products-with a dazzling new model powered by a water-cooled V-4, code-named
Nova.
After several years of development and testing, and with a
planned release date of mid-1981, the Nova project had at least 30 engines and
12 complete, running motorcycles to show for its efforts. The engines had more
than 2,000 hours of testing, and the bikes had logged 100,000 miles on the road.
Engine tests and handling evaluations had all been completed without
experiencing any major structural failures in either the chassis or the engine.
One of the prototypes even met strict California emission standards.
First, because of the established product line's loyal following, they set into
motion an advanced V-twin project with the goal of updating the shovelhead Big
Twin and Ironhead Sportster. The eventual result was the Evolution engine. Source HD Nova Project
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Any corrections or more information on these motorcycles will be kindly appreciated. |