At IWM Duxford, under the watchful eye of a Douglas
Dakota, Royal Enfield unveiled the Classic 500 Pegasus - a limited edition
version of the Classic 500 styled on the WWII-era RE/WD 125cc Flying Flea.
For those of us who are not history buffs, the
Flying Flea was a lightweight 125cc motorcycle that Enfield produced from the
1930s, right through to the ‘60s, but its heyday was arguably in the 1940s. The
Army had come up with this mad idea of throwing people out of planes towards
the enemy and realised that when they were down there, the soldiers needed to
get around. At first they tried bicycles but that didn’t go particularly well,
so they had they idea of dropping lightweight motorcycles from planes instead –
enter the Flying Flea. So light a solider could lift it above his head and
capable of speeds in excess of 40mph, the Flea was a runaway success. It saw
action all over the world but the Flea is best remembered for its use on D-Day
and later in Operation Market Garden. It’s this bike and the brave men who used
it, that Enfield have honoured with the special edition Pegasus.
To make the bike, Enfield scoured the history books
and teamed up with the British Army’s Parachute Regiment. Based on the Classic 500, the Pegasus edition has a
maroon and blue Pegasus emblem, the official Parachute Regiment insignia, and a
unique serial number stencilled on the tank. The painted markings are based on
a genuine WWII model, including the yellow stripe on the crankcase that
signifies the centre of mass for loading onto a plane.
The new bikes are
painted in the wartime colours of Service Brown and Olive Drab Green, and
include period-correct brown handlebar grips, leather strap with brass buckles
across the air filter, blacked out silencers, rims, kickstart, pedals and
headlight bezel. Each of bikes also comes with a pair of military-style canvas
panniers emblazoned with the Pegasus logo, plus there’s a range of themed
accessories.
As you might imagine, it rides no differently to a
regular Classic 500, so the pace is leisurely, the brakes soft and the
suspension even softer but there’s no doubting that it’s fun to ride. Dashing
down the lanes behind Duxford alongside two pals in leather jackets, with the
gentle drone of a Dakota in the background, you could almost imagine you were
off to give the Jerries a good thrashing. Motorcycling doesn’t always have to
be about lap times or fast corners. It can just as equally be about a leisure
meander to the next village and it’s this that an Enfield does so well.
Enfield are only making 1000
of the Pegasus and of those 190 will be coming to the UK. They will be priced
at £ 4999 (OTR) and orders will be taken online from July, although we don’t
think they’ll be around for long.