Hercules W-2000


The Hercules W-2000 was a motorcycle made by Hercules in Germany. It was the first production motorcycle with a Wankel engine.
It was designed in the late 1960s, first shown at a German trade show in 1970, and production started in 1974. Production halted in 1977 after 1,800 were built and the tooling was sold to Norton Motors.

Development

, which became Hercules' parent company, was the second licensee of the Wankel engine, on Dec 29, 1960, and Sachs was the first motorcycle manufacturer with a license. Sachs had prior experience with Wankel applications in personal watercraft and power tools. The 1970 Hercules motorcycle prototype had shaft drive. It may be on display at Zentrum Industriekultur in Nuremberg.

Specifications

Information in the specifications box are from Cycle World unless noted.
Fuel consumption as listed seems rather optimistic. The Hercules Wankel Interessengemeinschaft says a low 5.8 L/100km and 8.5/100 at the high end. Das Motorrad claims an average 7.2/100, so approximately 39mpg / 33mpg

Engine

The engine was an air-cooled single-rotor Wankel designed by Sachs as a snowmobile engine, that produced at 6,500 RPM. The rotor spun about the frame's longitudinal axis, with power taken to the transmission through a 90° bevel gear.
Fuelling was originally supplied by a 32 mm Bing carburetor. An electric starter with backup kick starter was standard.
Gasoline had to be premixed with two-stroke oil until 1976, when 199 more units were produced with automatic oil injection.

Reception and legacy

A contemporary Cycle World review summarized the machine this way: "Less performance for more money takes this rotary out of the realm of practicality." It received criticism for insufficient ground clearance and unimpressive acceleration.
A Rider retrospective written in 2015 called it an "exercise in simplicity, with clean, spare design that projects industrial efficiency", especially in contrast to the overbuilt Suzuki RE5, while noting both rotary powered machines are "'orphan bikes'...innovative but not commercially successful." Another 2008 retrospective noted the high insurance costs and said "Every buyer with an ounce of common-sense, or logic, avoided the Hercules like the plague and the bike sold only to real biking geeks who delighted in the absurdly quirky."

In collections

Examples are at the Deutsches Museum in Munich, Germany; Deutsches Zweirad- und NSU-Museum in Neckarsulm, Germany; Museum Autovision in Altlußheim, Germany; Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum in Birmingham, Alabama;
The Ontario Science Centre in Toronto, Canada;
Motorcyclepedia Museum in New York; National Motorcycle Museum in Iowa; and a museum in Grassmere, Australia.