2011 Van Veen OCR 1000 Rotary Engine Motorcycle

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Only 38 Van Veen OCR 1000 rotary engine motorcycles were made during its initial production run in the mid- to late-70s. Plans are in the works to build 10 more.
Only 38 Van Veen OCR 1000 rotary engine motorcycles were made during its initial production run in the mid- to late-70s. Plans are in the works to build 10 more.
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Andries Wielinga (left) and PR man Dirk Knip with the first of 10 new OCR 1000s.
Andries Wielinga (left) and PR man Dirk Knip with the first of 10 new OCR 1000s.
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Cockpit of the 2011 Van Veen OCR 1000 rotary engine motorcycle has a speedometer, fuel gauge, odometer and indicator lights.
Cockpit of the 2011 Van Veen OCR 1000 rotary engine motorcycle has a speedometer, fuel gauge, odometer and indicator lights.
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The new Van Veen OCR 1000 rotary engine motorcycle looks almost identical to the original prototype.
The new Van Veen OCR 1000 rotary engine motorcycle looks almost identical to the original prototype.
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The original prototype of the Van Veen OCR 1000, shown during testing in the mid-1970s. Production of the original OCR ended around 1981; it cost twice as much as a contemporary BMW R100RS.
The original prototype of the Van Veen OCR 1000, shown during testing in the mid-1970s. Production of the original OCR ended around 1981; it cost twice as much as a contemporary BMW R100RS.
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Test riding the new 2011 Van Veen OCR 1000 rotary engine motorcycle.
Test riding the new 2011 Van Veen OCR 1000 rotary engine motorcycle.

2011 Van Veen OCR 1000
Claimed power:
100hp @ 6,500rpm
Top speed: 135mph (claimed)
Engine: 996cc oil/water-cooled two rotor Wankel
Weight (wet): 647lb (294kg)
Fuel capacity/MPG: 5.8gal (22ltr) / 24mpg (est.)
Price: $125,000 (est.)

Four slightly faded snapshots in my oldest photo album bear silent witness to my first encounter with the Van Veen OCR 1000 rotary engine motorcycle in 1974. On the same page is a picture of a red Honda Gold Wing. They were two world firsts I photographed as an adolescent motorcycle enthusiast at that year’s Cologne exhibit, not realizing how much influence both machines would have on motorcycle history.

The Gold Wing created a new class of touring motorcycle, and 37 years later it’s a familiar face in the motorcycle world. The Van Veen, on the other hand, was gone almost before it appeared, but in European circles it was a style icon of unprecedented magnitude. There, it still fires the imagination of a generation of motorcycle enthusiasts.

Inspired by the promise of emerging rotary motorcycle technology, the Van Veen was ahead of its time. Unfortunately, it never got the chance to prove how good — or bad — it really was. Even today, the OCR 1000 looks contemporary and familiar. In Europe, any motorcycle enthusiast 50 years or older knows the machine, but hardly anyone has ever seen one in the flesh, let alone ever ridden one. That’s hardly surprising, given the fact that only 38 were built before supplier Comotor stopped building the Van Veen’s rotary engine, putting an early end to production.

  • Published on Sep 1, 2011
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