Balutar-class swoop/Legends

The Balutar-class swoop was a model of speeder bike manufactured by the Mandalore-based MandalMotors company. Due to its Mandalorian construction, the Balutar-class swoop was often colloquially referred to as a Mandalorian speeder bike or Mandalorian swoop. Just over two and a half meters in length, the Balutar small size belied its powerful engine, and featured a low center of gravity that provided an incredible ease of control for its rider. During the pan-galactic Clone Wars between the Galactic Republic and the Confederacy of Independent Systems, Jedi Master and Grand Army of the Republic General Obi-Wan Kenobi, made use of a Balutar-class speeder bike while on Mandalore's moon of Concordia. When his investigation of the moon's abandoned beskar mines led to Kenobi's capture by the rogue Mandalorian splinter-faction known as the Death Watch, Duchess Satine Kryze—leader of the opposing pacifistic New Mandalorian faction—utilized a Balutar-class swoop of her own to track down the incarcerated Jedi and rescue him.

Characteristics
Constructed by the Mandalorian MandalMotors company, the Balutar-class swoop was compact, measuring only 2.66 meters in length. Despite its small size, the Balutar possessed an engine more powerful than commonly seen in vessels of its proportions. The swoop's power generator was located at the vehicle's nose, resting above the main airscoop. The Balutar-class swoop's low center of gravity was located directly beneath the seat of the driver, contributing to the significant ease with which an individual could control the vehicle. When manufactured to stock, the Balutar was without weaponry, however the swoop bike could be outfitted with an additional pair of twin cannons, enabling it to perform the task of a small patrol craft.

Role
A compact speeder bike with room for a single pilot, the Balutar-class swoop served primarily as a means of personal transport. In addition, the otherwise unarmed swoop could be modified into a police patrol craft, a role in which it would commonly be augmented with supplemental twin cannons.

History
The Balutar-class swoop was designed and engineered by the Mandalorian starship company, MandalMotors —a prominent Mandalorian corporation and driving force behind the economy of Mandalore, headquartered in the Outer Rim world's capital city, Keldabe —sometime prior to the year 21 BBY. By the start of the Clone Wars, a galaxy-spanning conflict between the Galactic Republic and the Confederacy of Independent Systems, several Balutar-class swoops had come to reside at the starport of a Concordian city. When Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi's investigation into the rumored Confederate allegiances of the Mandalorians led him to Mandalore's moon, Concordia, the Jedi borrowed one of the port's Balutar swoops to travel to the Concordian mines left abandoned by the Mandalorians when they ceased their search for beskar iron ore. There, Kenobi stumbled upon the secret base of the violent renegade faction of Mandalorians known as the Death Watch. Brutally defeated by a pair of Death Watch soldiers, Kenobi was incarcerated within the mines, though he managed to contact his friend and leader of the pacifistic New Mandalorian faction, Duchess Satine Kryze. Kryze made use of another of the Concordian starport's Balutar-class speeder bikes in order to track down Kenobi and mount a rescue. Balutar swoops were also used on CCarlac by the Death Watch.

Behind the scenes
The Balutar-class airspeeder made its first unnamed appearance in Star Wars canon in the Star Wars: The Clone Wars television series' second season episode, The Mandalore Plot, which originally aired January 29, 2010. Further information, including the name of the speeder bike was provided with the release of the Star Wars: The Clone Wars: Incredible Vehicles guide book in 2011.

The name Balutar appears to come from the Mandalorian language of Mando'a, developed by author Karen Traviss, specifically the word ba'balut, an adjective meaning "on patrol", or the similar word tabalut, meaning simply "patrol".