Even if you don't track the sales of individual motorcycles, cruiser enthusiasts need only look at the new models making their way to the market for 2005 to deduce the health of this class. The 2005 Victory Hammer offers a prime example. Any time a manufacturer designs a bike specifically to lure riders not traditionally part of the existing market segment, you know the market has got to be pretty good. Developing a new motorcycle costs too much money to approach willy-nilly, so a new model directed at a group other than the typical cruiser-faithful says the company is bullish on the state of the market.
Victory has a history of looking at the long term when it comes to creating motorcycles. Only in its seventh year of operation, Victory understands how long it can take for a motorcycle line to take off, largely thanks to the 50-year history of its parent company, Polaris Industries. (Just look at the postmortems of Excelsior-Henderson and Indian Motorcycles published in previous issues of Motorcycle Cruiser to learn how simply bringing a competent motorcycle to market is just the first hump a fledgling manufacturer must surmount. The second challenge, often the backbreaker, is the crushing debt acquired while producing the first bikes.) Polaris' deep pockets and Victory's understanding of where it can/will fit into the cruiser market have enabled Victory to create an established line of motorcycles. Now, rather than designing a bike consumer research predicts will be the core of the cruiser market's desires, as the company did with the Vegas, Victory has released a bike designed for a niche within the cruiser market.
The riders Victory hopes to snare with the Hammer tend to be between the ages of 35 and 45 (though not exclusively) and have been involved in riding bikes other than cruisers-even (gasp!) sportbikes. These riders don't want what they might term "an old guy's bike." Traditional or classic styling, whatever you want to call the inspiration of many OE cruisers, doesn't appeal to them. Instead, they want something with an aggressive look that makes a statement. They also want the performance to back up the attitude.
While several manufacturers build power cruisers-some have been around for quite a while, as the comparison in the April 2000 issue of Motorcycle Cruiser will attest-Victory didn't just look to the OEMs for cues when penning the Hammer. The engineers considered what was popular in the aftermarket and custom bike world. The trend toward the "pro street" look-big rear tires and abbreviated rear fenders-has recently garnered much attention. Once the designers had the broad strokes of the Hammer laid out (a fat rear tire, six-speed overdrive transmission, power cruiser), they had to refine their vision to the level people expect from an OEM. This was the crucial step where the Hammer idea could gather speed or fizzle, and is what separates customs from mass-produced bikes.
Putting lengthy lead-in time aside, the Hammer is still all about its freakin' huge rear tire. The 8.5-inch-wide wheel required to hold the 250mm tire is wider than those on many cars. While maintaining the basic steering geometry, the chassis is an all-new affair. The swingarm had to be adjusted to accommodate the monster Dunlop. The 10mm-narrower engine allowed the frame rails and footpegs to be relocated for more ground clearance. A 43mm inverted telescopic fork rakes out to 32.9 degrees (0.1 degrees more than the Kingpin and 0.2 degrees less than the Vegas). While the Hammer's wheelbase is 0.1 inches longer than any other Victory, the bike looks smaller than most of its siblings. The impression is supported by the Hammer's 92.7-inch overall length-3.6 or 6.4 inches shorter, depending on which Victory model it is compared to. (Big fenders can add a lot to the bike's size. Just look at the Kingpin.) The low-profile rear tire also appears quite slender from the side, slimming the Hammer's profile even more.
The Hammer's style is, perhaps, the most integrated of any Victory to date. From the small front fender to the color-matched headlight shell to the swept-back bar, the Hammer's shape causes your eyes to naturally trace its lines from front to rear. As with recent Victories, the tank sculpts itself around-almost into-the seat for a seamless integration between rider and bike. Unlike any other Victory, though, the Hammer features a color-matched pillion cover similar to those found on sportbikes. The rear fender is also unusually shaped, with the lower edge forming a straight line from the side panel, under the frame rail to the sportbike-inspired bobbed rear fender. The attention to detail doesn't end with the bodywork. The engine is subtly restyled, too. The only warts on the whole package are the stamped steel rear axle adjusters and the charcoal canister under the left side of the swingarm on California models. Consider Victory's $70 chromed billet axle adjuster covers part of the price of admission to the Hammer club.
Since the Hammer will be part of the power cruiser class, Victory decided the standard 92-cubic-inch engine wasn't beefy enough. While they could have simply installed a set of larger jugs to bump up displacement, the engineers took this opportunity to further refine the Freedom engine. New heads escort combustibles into and out of the 4mm-larger 101mm cylinder bore. The 102mm stroke remains the same. The resulting power delivery of the Freedom 100/6 is a 10 percent increase in peak horsepower and a 22 percent jump in torque. Since research showed Victory owners prefer to ride the torque of an engine instead of spinning it up to redline, the 100/6's fuel maps and cams were massaged to give the most bang to the torque curve.
According to Victory, the oil sump was narrowed 10mm largely due to press feedback about cornering clearance. The smaller sump also carries a quart less oil. The six-speed transmission is a big deal. The first five gear ratios remain unchanged from the 92-inch Freedom engine. Fifth gear is a 1:1 direct drive ratio, while the new sixth gear is a true overdrive with a 0.864:1 ratio for a 13.6 percent reduction. At 75 mph, that equates to a 450-rpm drop-enough to satisfy Victory riders who wanted the engine to settle down at highway speeds. The new cam drive with a silent timing chain coupled with hydraulic lifters and a hydraulic cam drive tensioner were designed to lessen the engine's mechanical noise. Helical-cut primary gears will also help keep unnecessary sound from the ears of riders.
Victory worked closely with Dunlop to create the 250/40 R18 Elite 3 tire that is the centerpiece of the Hammer. Since fat-tired custom cruisers sometimes struggle to do more than go in a straight line, much of the bike's development was directed at tire profile and handling. The goal for the final production model was balance. As with the engine's power delivery, the Hammer was meant to excel in a variety of situations rather than dominating just one.
One place where the Hammer will take no prisoners is its color palette. Victory chose attention-getting, aggressive colors to make the bike stand out-and attract riders of other classes of brightly colored bikes. The standard colors are black, Cosmic Sunburst (which bears a striking, though candy-colored, resemblance to Art Friedman's signature orange helmet), Flame Yellow, Indy Red and the custom-order-only color, Toxic Green. Both the red and green bikes can also receive a tribal tattoo pattern.