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Quick Analysis

Benelli TRK 502

33.0 pts
Unweighted: 18 advantages
EnginePerformanceDimensionsBrakesTyresFeaturesOther

OLA Roadster X

7.0 pts
Unweighted: 10 advantages
EnginePerformanceDimensionsBrakesTyresFeaturesOther
Specification
Benelli TRK 502
Benelli TRK 502
Benelli
OLA Roadster X
OLA Roadster X
Ola

Engine Specifications

Cooling System Liquid-cooled
Displacement 500
Engine Type 2-cylinder/4-stroke/8-valve
Power 35kW at 8500 r/min 7 kw
Torque 46N·m/6000 r/min 58 Nm

Performance & Efficiency

Fuel Tank Capacity 20 l
Mileage 25 kmpl

Dimensions & Weight

Kerb Weight 210 kg 127 kg
Seat Height 835mm 777 mm

Brakes & Suspension

ABS Dual Channel
Front Brake Disc Front 320 mm Caliper - Front 4 Piston Drum 2 Piston Brake by Wire
Front Suspension USD Telescopic Forks Telescopic Fork
Rear Brake Disc Rear 260 mm Caliper - Rear 1 Piston Drum
Rear Suspension Hydraulic Monoshock (Rebound & Preload adjustable) Twin Shock Absorbers

Tyres & Wheels

Front Tyre 120/70 ZR17 80/100 - 18
Rear Tyre 160/60 ZR17 100/90 - 17
Tyre Type Tubeless Tubeless
Wheel Type Alloy Alloy

Features & Technology

Headlight LED

Other Specifications

Battery Capacity (kWh) 2.5
Battery Chemistry Li-ion
Bike Image 1 https://motoautiv.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/trk502white.webp https://motoautiv.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/roadsterxplusindustrialsilver-1.webp
Bike Image 2 https://motoautiv.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/roadsterxplusstellarblue-1.webp
Bike Image 3 https://motoautiv.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/roadsterxplusceramicwhite-1.webp
Charging Time (Fast) 5.9 h
Color Options Ceramic White Metallic Black Pine Green Industrial Silver Stellar Blue
Cons Its heavy weight becomes noticeable in traffic, tight turns, and situations where quick direction changes are needed. While the suspension works well for moderate rough roads, very broken terrain can feel harsh or less controlled compared to more off-road-focused bikes. Maintenance and spare parts may cost more than typical mid-segment bikes, making long-term ownership slightly expensive. The power-to-weight ratio isn’t the strongest, so riders expecting a very punchy performance may find it a bit slow when accelerating hard. It lacks some modern electronic features that newer competitors now offer, which may disappoint riders looking for advanced tech and connectivity. Range figures are optimistic and real-world numbers may be significantly lower depending on riding style. Absence of dual-channel ABS on all variants could be a drawback for safety-focused buyers. Charging times can feel long if you do not have access to fast-charging infrastructure. Rear twin-shock suspension may feel firm for lighter riders on bad roads. Limited storage space compared to some EV scooters and urban-focused EVs. Fit and finish may vary between batches since the model lineup is very new. Battery degradation over years is still an unknown factor for early buyers.
Detailed Overview You swing a leg over the TRK 502 and you’re immediately aware that this is meant to be more than a city commuter; there’s a sense of presence, of readiness for longer roads. Under the tank sits a 500 cc, liquid-cooled, parallel-twin engine, running a DOHC layout with 8 valves. The bore and stroke (69 × 66.8 mm) and a compression ratio of 11.5:1 tell you that this engine is tuned for a healthy balance — it’s neither peaky and fragile, nor a torquey grinder. What you get instead is a smooth, flexible powerplant that builds revs steadily, giving enough grunt without being nervous or rough. At its peak, it delivers about 46.8-47.5 horsepower at 8,500 rpm and 46 Newton-metres of torque at around 6,000 rpm. That output, in plain riding, doesn’t mean blazing superbike sprints. It means confidence: enough urge to overtake on the highway, enough midrange torque for loaded touring or two-up rides, and smooth throttle response for city or mixed-road use. The 6-speed gearbox with chain final drive feels just right — shifts are predictable and the clutch (wet multi-plate / slipper clutch depending on region) handles starts and slow manoeuvres without fuss. Because this is meant for touring and everyday versatility, the chassis and suspension are built accordingly. A steel trellis frame acts as the backbone — sturdy enough to keep the bike stable at speed, yet with a bit of compliance to soak up normal road irregularities. Up front, there’s an upside-down telescopic fork (about 50 mm) with around 140 mm travel; at the rear a preload- and rebound-adjustable mono-shock with around 45 mm travel. What that gives on road is a setup that doesn’t punish you over bad surfaces but remains planted: potholes, imperfect tarmac or rough stretches are dealt with gracefully, while the bike stays composed even when you ask for speed or load it up with luggage and pillion. Physically the TRK 502 is substantial — long and purposeful. Its overall length is about 2200–2220 mm, width around 915 mm, and height roughly 1450 mm (slightly more depending on variant). The wheelbase of 1505 mm gives it stable tracking on highways and at speed, but that length and mass mean low-speed manoeuvres require some care — U-turns, tight corners, or dense traffic will need respect and a bit of strength. The seat height — roughly 800-835 mm depending on model/market — places you in a commanding riding posture: good for visibility and control, but may feel tall for shorter riders. Ground clearance around 190 mm means you’re also not too worried about speed-bumps or rough rural surfaces. When it comes to stopping and safety, TRK 502 doesn’t leave much to complaint. Twin 320 mm discs up front (with 4-piston calipers) and a 260 mm disc at the rear — both with dual-channel ABS — give you solid braking power and modulation. In everyday traffic or loaded touring, you get confident, progressive braking rather than abrupt grabs or fade, which is exactly what you want when you’re carrying luggage or a pillion. Fuel-wise, the 20-litre tank (with a bit of reserve) gives a decent riding range. Fill up and you can reasonably expect to tackle long rides or highway runs without constant fuel stops — an important detail if you plan to use this bike for touring or inter-city travel. Combined with the engine’s fuel injection and tuning, the balance between performance and range is well-struck. On the feature front, the TRK 502 comes decently equipped for its class. The instrument console mixes analogue and digital readouts (tachometer + digital speedo/fuel/odometer/trip) — enough to give you all the essential info clearly without overcomplicating the dashboard. Lighting, electrics and ergonomics are oriented toward usability: the riding position is upright, comfortable for long hours; footpegs and rider triangle are such that you don’t feel cramped even after a few hours of cruise. For everyday commuting, that means less fatigue; for touring, it means more hours in the saddle without strain. When you take it out on the open road — open highway, winding roads, rolling hills — the TRK 502 reveals what it is built for: stability, comfort, and controlled performance. It doesn’t feel underpowered even when carrying luggage or with a pillion; the twin’s smooth torque curve helps you manage traffic or overtakes with ease. On rough or uneven roads, the suspension soaks up the imperfections, and the frame feels secure. The overall setup makes it a comfortable, confident companion for trips that are more than just short city commutes. But there are trade-offs. Because the bike is fairly heavy and long, jockeying through tight city traffic or congested lanes means you’ll notice the bulk — quick zigzags or tight U-turns are not the bike’s forte. Seat height and weight can be challenging for shorter riders or those new to big bikes. The power-to-weight ratio is modest, so while it’s confident for touring or leisure riding, it doesn’t give the “sportbike thrill.” If you push it hard — say, frequent hard acceleration with two-up + luggage — you may find that intense use exposes the limits of a 500 cc twin configured for balance, not brute power. Overall, the TRK 502 feels like what you’d expect from a middleweight touring-oriented motorcycle — not a race-bred machine, not a lightweight commuter, but a capable all-rounder that lets you ride relaxed yet with enough substance. It’s ideal for those who want a single bike to handle everything: daily commuting when needed, weekend adventures, city-to-city travel, even occasional touring with a pillion and luggage, all without demanding sport bike instinct or compromising comfort. Riding the Roadster X feels like stepping into the future of everyday two-wheeler transport — silent, zippy, and stripped of the familiar fuss of fuel, gears, and choke. At its heart lies an electric mid-drive motor that quietly transforms the usual “kick-start, wait and roar” ritual into “plug in, twist throttle, go.” Depending on which battery pack you go for, the Roadster X offers a mix of convenience and versatility. Variants come with battery capacities such as 2.5 kWh, 3.5 kWh, 4.5 kWh — and at the top end under the “Roadster X+” badge, there’s an option with a beefy 9.1 kWh pack. For a regular 4.5 kWh build, the motor delivers about 7 kW of power, producing sufficient torque to handle city traffic and suburban roads with ease. On the more powerful 9.1 kWh + 11 kW variant, punch increases noticeably — you get brisk acceleration, and the scooter feels more alive when you twist the throttle. In fact, the top-end version claims a 0–40 km/h sprint in around 2.7 seconds, which is enough to feel lively when pulling out into traffic or overtaking slower vehicles. The top speed of the more powerful variant is around 125 km/h — not just “scooter- slow,” but enough for comfortable highway cruising when roads are decent (and legal). Range is one of the parts where Roadster X tries to impress. With the 4.5 kWh battery, a claimed “IDC” range hovers around 252 km. With the 9.1 kWh battery, the company goes so far as to quote up to 501 km on a full charge. That’s a headline number that would make any commuter hopeful — in real-world riding, especially city commutes with frequent start-stops or occasional highway stretches, you’ll likely get lower. But the big battery still gives you breathing room: occasional long rides, fewer charging stops, and a sense of freedom without obsessing over where the next plug point is. On roads — especially the sometimes rough, uneven roads of many Indian towns and cities — the Roadster X is set up thoughtfully. It uses a traditional telescopic front fork and twin-shock rear suspension, a tried-and-tested combo that balances comfort and stability. In everyday riding — potholes, speed-breakers, unpredictable patches — this setup might not feel like a plush cruiser, but it tends to handle typical urban/suburban unevenness without harshness. The frame — a double-cradle steel chassis built for strength — helps maintain composure, even when roads get unpredictable. Maneuverability is key in daily commuting and tight traffic, and Roadster X is more nimble than bulky bikes. Its dimensions (wheelbase, saddle height, overall width) give it relative agility compared to bigger motorcycles. The weight is modest enough that dipping through traffic, parking, or navigating narrow lanes doesn’t demand excessive effort. In a place with mixed traffic — scooters, bicycles, pedestrians, rickshaws — this translates to easier life. Stopping and safety – often underrated — get decent attention. The higher variants come with a front disc brake (plus rear drum), and a “brake-by-wire” system that, paired with what the designers intended, blends mechanical and regenerative braking intelligently. For city speeds, that gives enough braking bite and some confidence in sudden stops or unpredictable traffic movement. On the user-experience and convenience front, Roadster X feels modern. The instrumentation is a 4.3-inch colour LCD display — clean, digital, and likely easier to read than older analog-plus-LED clusters. There are selectable ride-modes: Eco, Normal, and Sports — letting you prioritize efficiency, balanced riding, or performance depending on mood or road. It supports smart features: connectivity via app, ability to locate charging stations, energy-insight readouts (helpful to track how your riding style affects range), and even reverse-assist (rare for two-wheelers, and useful when maneuvering in tight parking spots). On-board LEDs for headlamp and taillight + tubeless alloy wheels add to modern EV-two-wheeler sensibility. For folks thinking about cost — one of the main reasons people look at electric bikes — Roadster X tries to keep things reasonable. The entry-level variant starts at a base ex-showroom price that’s very competitive compared to many internal-combustion bikes, while the higher variants offer a compelling value if you plan to ride regularly and cover good km. For someone commuting daily, doing errands, or even occasional longer rides — especially if fuel and maintenance costs matter — Roadster X presents a tempting proposition of “silent, no-fuss, and economical as long as you have access to charging.” Riding the Roadster X in real life, you’d likely notice a few things. Around town with mixed-speed traffic and lots of stops, the instant torque and smooth power delivery make riding almost effortless — no gear shifts, no vibrations, no noise. Traffic lights, roundabouts, slow-moving vehicles: you glide through them without the jerks or lurches typical of small-petrol bikes. On decent stretches of road or highway, the top-end variant opens up, allowing confident overtakes and stable cruising. Of course, it’s not a luxury or premium superbike — but that’s not its aim. What it aims for — and largely delivers — is a practical, cost-efficient electric commuter/mobility bike that gives you the freedom to move without worrying much about fuel, frequent maintenance, or noise. For city dwellers, young riders, daily commuters, or people wanting a sensible transition toward electric two-wheelers, Roadster X could well represent the “sweet spot.”
Expert Review MotoAutiv Team MotoAutiv Team
FAQ (Manual Override) Q: What engine does the TRK 502 use? A: It uses a 500 cc, liquid-cooled, parallel-twin DOHC engine with 8 valves. Q: What is the power and torque output? A: The engine puts out about 47.5 PS at 8,500 rpm and delivers around 46 Nm of torque at 6,000 rpm. Q: What kind of transmission does it have? A: It comes with a 6-speed manual gearbox and a chain final drive. Q: What is the fuel tank capacity? A: The fuel tank capacity is 20 litres. Q: What is the seat height and ground clearance? A: The seat height is roughly 800–835 mm (depending on variant/market), and ground clearance is about 190 mm. Q: What is the kerb (or wet) weight of the bike? A: The bike weighs around 228–235 kg (depending on specification and additional gear/load). Q: What are the brakes and wheels/tyres setup? A: Up front there are twin 320 mm disc brakes with 4-piston calipers; at the rear a 260 mm disc. Both front and rear tyres sit on 17-inch alloy wheels, with tubeless tyres. Dual-channel ABS comes standard. Q: What is the claimed mileage / fuel efficiency? A: Mileage typically ranges around 30–34 km per litre (city and highway use). Q: What kind of suspension does it have? A: It uses a 50 mm upside-down (USD) telescopic front fork (about 140 mm travel) and a rear mono-shock with preload adjustability and around 45 mm rear suspension travel. Q: What kind of instrumentation and features does it offer? A: The instrument console combines analogue (tachometer) and digital displays (speedometer, fuel gauge, trip meter, etc.). It includes electric start, digital fuel gauge, trip meter, passenger footrests, and typical adventure-tourer ergonomics. Q: What is its top speed / performance potential? A: The top speed is around 160–165 km/h, and it can do 0–100 km/h in approximately 7.5–8 seconds depending on load and conditions. Q: What battery options are available? A: Roadster X comes with 2.5 kWh, 3.5 kWh, 4.5 kWh, and for the top-end “Roadster X+” also a 9.1 kWh battery option. Q: What is the motor power? A: The standard variants get a 7 kW motor, whereas the top-end Roadster X+ uses an 11 kW motor. Q: What range can I expect per full charge? A: Depending on the variant: up to about 252 km with the 4.5 kWh battery, and up to 501 km with the 9.1 kWh battery (as claimed). Q: What is the top speed? A: The top speed varies: lower-capacity variants are rated around 105–118 km/h; the top-end variant claims up to 125 km/h. Q: What is the acceleration (0–40 km/h)? A: For entry-level battery versions it’s around 3.4 seconds; for higher battery/motor versions it drops to about 3.1 seconds; the top-end variant does 0–40 km/h in about 2.7 seconds. Q: What kind of display and electronics does it have? A: It features a 4.3-inch colour LCD display powered by the company’s software (MoveOS 5), and supports features like ride-modes (Eco/Normal/Sport), navigation, advanced regenerative braking, cruise-control, tyre-pressure monitoring, over-the-air updates, and app connectivity. Q: What kind of suspension and chassis does it use? A: Front suspension is telescopic fork, rear uses twin-shock adjustable rear suspension; chassis is built on a sturdy double-cradle steel frame for torsional rigidity. Q: What are the brakes and tyre specifications? A: It uses a front disc brake (on certain variants) along with brake-by-wire + regenerative braking. Wheels are alloy with tubeless tyres. Q: What is the approximate kerb weight and ground clearance (for 4.5 kWh variant)? A: Kerb weight is about 130.7 kg and ground clearance is around 180 mm. Q: What is the ex-showroom price range? A: Entry-level versions start around ₹74,999, mid variants about ₹84,999, and higher variants around ₹99,999 (ex-showroom).
Fuel System Electric
Price Variants | 662000 X+ | 189999 X | 124999
Pros The TRK 502 is built for long rides, offering a relaxed riding position and a comfortable seat that help you stay fresh even after hours on the highway. Its suspension and chassis balance make it stable on rough patches, allowing it to handle mixed road conditions without feeling nervous. For its price, the bike comes loaded with practical touring features like hand guards, a large windscreen, good ergonomics, and a solid, confidence-inspiring build. The bike feels substantial on the road — its size and weight give it a strong presence, making it feel like a true adventure-tourer. The engine is smooth and predictable, making it friendly for newer riders while still offering enough power for everyday commuting and long-distance travel. Offers multiple battery options, letting buyers choose between affordability and long-range practicality. Strong motor performance, especially on the higher variants, giving quick acceleration and confident highway cruising. Modern, muscular street-bike design that stands out among commuter EV motorcycles. Smooth ride quality thanks to a stable double-cradle frame and well-tuned suspension setup. Regenerative braking adds extra range and reduces brake-wear in city traffic. Packed with features like ride modes, cruise control, navigation, and app connectivity. Good ground clearance for Indian road conditions. Relatively lightweight for an electric motorcycle, making it easy to handle in daily commuting. Competitive pricing for the hardware and features provided.
Starter Electric
Transmission 6-speed Automatic