Hipsters are a confusing bunch. They go to great (sometimes ridiculous) extents to avoid being considered mainstream. Deconstructed coffee, for instance, is one such fine example. Considered one of the most hipster trends out there, deconstructed coffee (as the name suggests) is the ingredients needed to make coffee served to you in separate beakers for you to make yourself, instead of just receiving a ready-to-drink cup of coffee. Now, while I steer clear from the infamous coffee fad, I can’t escape hipster motorcycles. These days, they’re just everywhere, and have started to make such good business sense that the bike you see here is actually named ‘FB Mondial HPS 300’, where ‘HPS’ actually stands for ‘Hipster’. Thankfully, the first part of that name holds a much deeper meaning.
FB Mondial is a company that dates back to 1948. It saw quite a lot of success in racing, with multiple world championships accrued between 1949 and 1957. The company ran into the ground due to financial issues in the late 1970s and was only resurrected in 2014 with the first concept of the bike you see on these pages. Go back 70 years and the company founders would have never imagined that their motorcycles would go on to be built in China and sold across the world as a fashion statement; but this is the way things have gone. So let’s take a look at what the new Mondial has to offer.
On the face of it
The HPS 300 isn’t trying reproduce the company’s racing DNA – its specialty lies elsewhere. It is here to offer something else, which should be apparent from its oh-so-unique design. But it’s not just unique, it’s proportionate and, in my eyes, is one of the best-looking motorcycles under Rs 5 lakh. Almost every piece on the bike appears as if it has had considerable thought gone into it. The headlight, for instance, is teardrop-shaped and not round like on most retro motorcycles. The tank has just the right amount of bulk and the tail is chopped at just the right point. What also add to the bike’s character are the large, spoked 18-inch front wheel and 17-inch rear wheel. Similarly, the short front fender and side-mounted exhaust add to the scrambler-esque appeal. The view while riding is not that bad either. In front of you is a handlebar that arches inward with retro balloon grips and bar-end mirrors at both ends. And there is the offset instrument cluster that is fully digital and heavily inspired from the one on the Ducati Scrambler. Step back and you’ll catch a strange mix of scrambler, flat tracker and café racer in there, but somehow, the whole thing works.
Offset digital gauge is a nice touch.
Balloon grips look and feel nice.
Don’t let the pictures fool you into believing that the HPS 300 is a large motorcycle. The bike is surprisingly compact in the flesh, with a seat height of 785mm and a kerb weight of 147kg. I am about 6ft tall and I just about fit on the motorcycle. Individuals with larger statutes will find the ergonomics unpleasant, to say the least. The problem isn’t in the setting of the pulled-back handlebar, but in the uncomfortably high and rear-set foot pegs. The placement of the pegs is more extreme than a KTM and given the small stature of the bike, cramps in the knees, hips and back aren’t very far off in the distance. The pegs themselves are also quite slippery; it was more than once that I found my right foot sliding off after a gear change.
That’s all the space the pillion gets.
Let’s talk numbers
The engine, as with the rest of the bike, is made in China at the Piaggio-Zongshen facility. It makes 22.8hp at 9,000rpm and 22Nm of torque at 7,000rpm and it is in this department that the HPS is the least impressive. The motor has a gruff feel to it, which is decently controlled at lower speeds but gets harsh above 6,000rpm. However, its lack of refinement doesn’t mean the bike is a dud in the performance department. Our Vbox tests revealed a 0-100kph time of 11.82sec and we noticed a speedo-indicated top speed of 141kph, which admittedly did take a long time getting to. These numbers are decent, but are towards the slower end of the current 250cc crop.
Exhaust heat shield can get toasty.
A radiator guard is much needed.
Low belly pan is prone to scratches.
Proceed with caution
Motoroyale has brought the HPS 300 to India as a CKD, and that makes it expensive. At 3.37 lakh (ex-showroom, India), the HPS 300 costs a good deal more than much more powerful and better equipped bikes like the newly-launched CB300R (Rs 2.41 lakh), BMW G 310 R (Rs 2.99 lakh), KTM 390 Duke (Rs 2.44 lakh) and the Royal Enfield Interceptor 650 (from Rs 2.50 lakh). However, the HPS 300 does come with an air of exclusivity since it is the only bike of its kind on sale in India – that is, until the KTM-powered hipster Husqvarnas arrive this year.
from Autocar India - Bikes via YouCabri
Review: 2019 FB Mondial HPS 300 review, test ride
Reviewed by YouCabri
on
March 08, 2019
Rating:
Reviewed by YouCabri
on
March 08, 2019
Rating:

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