2024 Royal Enfield Classic 350 Colours Explained
Modified On Sep 2, 2024 12:55 PM By Sahil for Royal Enfield Classic 350
- 4712 Views
- Write a comment
The bike has been updated with new features and colour schemes. It now comes in 7 colour options
Royal Enfield recently launched the new Classic 350 in India, starting at Rs 1,99,500 (ex-showroom Delhi). The bike now comes with updated features and new colour schemes. It is available in a total of 7 shades: Madras Red, Jodhpur Blue, Medallion Bronze, Commando Sand, Gun Grey, Stealth Black and Emerald.
Each colour of the 2024 Royal Enfield Classic 350 comes with a different price tag, and here’s our analysis of the bike’s available colour schemes:
Royal Enfield Classic 350 Heritage (Madras Red & Jodhpur Blue)
The Classic 350 Heritage variant includes two colours, Madras Red and Jodhpur Blue, priced at Rs 1,99,500 (ex-showroom). The Madras Red is covered in a shade of red all around including the headlight cowl, fuel tank, side panels, fork covers and the fenders.
The fuel tank also features 3D ‘Royal Enfield’ badging and a pair of tank grips. The triangular side panel has ‘Classic 350’ written on it. There are silver accents all around including the headlight cover, engine casing, exhaust and the fork. The Jodhpur Blue has a sky blue shade as the base colour while the rest of the things are similar to the Madras Red colour.
Royal Enfield Classic 350 Heritage Premium (Medallion Bronze)
The Royal Enfield Classic 350 Heritage Premium variant comes in a single Medallion Bronze shade and costs Rs 2,04,000 (ex-showroom). It comes in a dual-tone brown and white colour scheme.
The bike has brown as a base colour which is complemented by a shade of white on the fuel tank and the triangular side panels. The fenders, fuel tank and side panels also get a golden stripe. The bike also gets a 3D ‘Royal Enfield’ logo on the tank and a ‘Classic 350’ decal on the side panel. It does not get the tank grips on the Heritage variant.
Royal Enfield Classic 350 Signals (Commando Sand)
The Classic 350 Signals now get only a single Commando Sand paint scheme, which is priced at Rs 2,16,000 (ex-showroom). It comes in a dual-tone desert camouflage colour scheme with sand colour as the base, which is complemented by a shade of grey. The fuel tank gets ‘Royal Enfield’ badging and the numbering on the tank, while the side panels get a unique ‘Classic 350’ logo. This one also misses out on tank grips.
Royal Enfield Classic 350 Dark (Stealth Black & Gun Grey)
The Royal Enfield Classic 350 Dark comes in two colours: Stealth Black and Gun Grey, starting at Rs 2,25,000 (ex-showroom). The Stealth Black comes in an all-black colour scheme. All the parts including the tank, side panels, headlight cowl, engine, fender, exhaust and rims are covered in a black shade. The Gun Grey, on the other hand, has a triple-tone paint scheme. The fuel tank is half grey and half black with a thick copper colour stripe in between the both, the front fender also has a similar paint scheme. The headlight cowl and the front fork cover are grey. The engine casing, exhaust and the rear fender are covered in a shade of black. The fuel tank has a black ‘Royal Enfield’ text emblem and the triangular side panels get a ‘Classic 350’ logo in a Copper shade. It gets black alloy wheels as standard and has Copper rim stickers.
Royal Enfield Classic 350 Chrome (Emerald)
The Classic 350 Chrome is the range-topping variant. It comes in a single Emerald paint scheme and is available for Rs 2,30,000 (ex-showroom). It gets a dual-tone (shiny dark green and chrome) colour scheme. The fuel tank gets dark green as a base colour which is complemented by a chrome finish and it also has 3D ‘Royal Enfield’ badging. Both the fenders have chrome as the base colour, complemented by a dark green stripe with narrow copper colour stripes. The headlight cowl, fork covers and circular side panels are covered in a shiny dark green colour. Chrome parts include the headlight cover, engine casing and triangular side panels which carry the Classic 350 logo. It also comes with alloy wheels as standard.
The bike continues to be powered by a 349cc, air-cooled, single-cylinder J-series engine that produces 20.21PS at 6000rpm and 27Nm at 4000rpm, mated to a 5-speed gearbox. It rivals the likes of the Honda CB350, Honda H’ness CB350, Hero Mavrick 440 and the Jawa 350.