The review I wrote last year after demoing the Meteor 350:
Royal Enfield Meteor 350
This is an eclectic throwback to the “good old days”. I liked this bike, and I liked riding it. It reminded me of my old Honda CB360 from when I was a high school boy, 40 plus years ago. Though honestly my CB360 would run away from this machine. OK, perhaps more it reminded me of my even older Honda CD175. They both had about the same top speed. More on that in a moment.
Leisurely. That’s the best one word description of riding this bike. It keeps up with traffic, barely. But it’s not frantic about it either. You spend most if your time at about ¾ throttle, but the bike isn’t buzzing or feeling unhappy about it. Riding through town, or on the back roads it’s just fine.
It’s a happy feeling bike. I was grinning on it. Royal Enfield has embraced their old bike origins and make it all work. The funky old look of the switches, the ignition key down behind your knee. The long throw clutch, all of it.
Ergonomically, it’s 100% sit up and beg. You ride upright. It’s the sort of posture that you can do all day long, especially since the wind isn’t beating you up, and you’ve got excellent control of the bike in this position. The seat is comfortable, as are the hand grips and the foot pegs. The controls are obvious and instinctive.
This is not an interstate capable bike! At one point things opened up and I was able to let ‘er rip! As it were. It finally got up to 57 mph before I ran out of room. Downshifting only made the engine wail more, it didn’t go faster. I was sitting upright, so maybe if I tucked down it could have reached 60, but I rather doubt it. The bike wasn’t straining or buzzing (much), it just didn’t have the power to go faster.
There is nothing that stands out performance wise, which means the whole package works as a whole, for just what it is, a leisurely fun bike.
Yes, there were some warts. And they deserve mention.
The gear shifter has a heel shifter for upshifting, and the toe shifter is positioned so that you all but can’t get your toe under it, forcing you to use the heel shifter. I don’t like that, and would change it. But, once you figure out the heel shifter, it ain’t bad. It’s not intrusive the way many are. It’s a small flat pedal you catch with the inside of your heel. It doesn’t get in the way or prevent you from moving your foot around on the pegs. In fact, I might try something like this on my big Harley. So on the one hand I don’t like it, and on the other I’m thinking of copying it? Yea, I’m confused too.
The engine makes some ugly noises. Scraping clanking noises. Noises that to me are a reason to stop and check the oil, and to start planning a major repair job for the winter. This does not sound or feel like a high quality bike. Which, at it kinda isn’t. It is a Royal Enfield, and has a darn cheap price tag. But…
The bike also smells like burning plastic. I never found it, but there was a very distinct burning plastic scent to it.
The rear view mirrors are pretty useless, somehow. They don’t angle well and the visibility in them is small.
All in all, a really fun, nostalgic, bike. If of questionable longevity.