Indian Girder Concept
Indian Motorcycle has unveiled the Concept Girder, a design study that celebrates the brand’s engineering heritage and marks the 80th anniversary of the girder front fork, first introduced on the 1946 Indian Chief, which adapted it from the military-spec Indian 841 model.



The concept pays tribute to one of Indian’s key post-war innovations, the girder front end that replaced the earlier leaf-spring system and became a defining feature of the company’s motorcycles through the late 1940s and 1950s.


The Concept Girder combines modern construction with visual cues inspired by Indian’s classic design language, including valanced fenders and a low-profile front end.


The frame and suspension are designed to showcase the reinterpreted girder fork, linking it to the original component that marked a step forward in ride quality and stability eight decades ago.


The machine’s red and silver livery references Burt Munro’s land speed streamliner, a nod to the New Zealander’s record-setting runs and Indian’s long association with performance and innovation.


The Concept Girder is powered by Indian’s Thunderstroke 116 V-twin, an air-cooled 1,890 cc engine used across the Chief and Springfield line-ups. The motor remains one of the few large-displacement, air-cooled twins in production, delivering traditional character and torque-focused performance.


Indian describes the Concept Girder as a heritage-inspired design exercise rather than a pre-production model.


The project aims to highlight Indian’s legacy of engineering development while showcasing the brand’s modern design direction and craftsmanship.









