Clifton
Cruisin' Guzzisti
I would like one as well. But then there's the new 1300GS which is a little lighter yet produces much more power........
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My dealer this week said his District Sales Manager was with the press and they all love the bike.
News blackout till next week.
Although they have no pricing or specs, dealers will hold reservations on a$1,000 refundable deposit.
I totally agree that unless you are off road and despite tightening the spokes and re truing the wheels (in my past life I used to build bicycle wheels for road racers), which should in theory keep the seals tight, they still leak so much at 60,000 kms, that I went to tubes to stop the leak and I wish I could find a pair of cast wheels. This mirrors my experience on my Griso also, where I found cast wheels and haven't looked back. I wish I could say that I used the better ability of the wire wheels off road, but with my condition, if the Stelvio falls over on a fire road or dirt track, I'm probably walking out!I was so filled with anticipation about this model. Then I saw it in photos. Meh. Not me. Nope.
Furthermore, what is this fascination with wire spoke wheels on a motorcycle that may see 10% of its life on a gravel or dirt road and 90% on the street?
They are a BITCH to clean compared to my cast wheels and when those individual prints start to go, you will shit your pants at the time and money required to refurbish them.
I gave my old spoke wheels to my best friend. Hopefully he remains my best friend in a couple more years when those bad boys start to leak air badly.
Compared to my incredible and totally awesome 2012 Stelvio NTX, I’ll not budge. The NTX is just a far better motorcycle in my estimation. Real luggage, real foot pegs, real fuel capacity (8.5 gal). Just real everything. Purpose built.
I’ll stick with my 91.5 horsepower at 7,300 rpm and 69.4 lb-ft of torque at a lofty 6,500 and the fact that the engine also makes at least 50-60 lb-ft of torque from idle to redline at 8,000 rpm.
Besides, my Stelvio is PFP. (Paid for Period!)
I found cast wheels and haven't looked back.
I like the ratios on my V100 Mandello. That said, it's a tough shifting gearbox that the Cycle World review in the last couple days says has been updated for smoother shifting including a slipper clutch. IMO, first gear will be too tall for crawling on technical off-road terrain without a lot of clutch feathering........ my BMW R1200GS also has this problem and if you throw in some rocks and uphill grade, it becomes a handful really fast and the clutch gets abused. The new Stelvio and big BMW really aren't intended for this. I wonder when a manufacturer will copy the old Honda trail 90 with their lever switched high/ low range transfer case in the final drive for going off road with some lower gearing. That would be something useful beyond all this electronic gadgetry along with a bigger front wheel for rougher terrain. We are stuck with these shaft bikes and can't play with sprocket sizes.I too am leery of buying a first year, "all new" BMW and tech for the sake of tech turns me off, such as keyless, electric activated central locking luggage. Currently I have a late airhead that quit running (no spark) and a California 1400 that its starter might activate after pressing and holding the button for a few seconds, so I don't trust it now. But these are both prior models that have nothing in common with their newer offerings. The 14 R1200GSA was trouble free other than the electronic suspension turning harsh, and my 21 V85 has been completely trouble free.
Even though the Stelvio is heavier and has much less power than a R1300, it doesn't weigh that much more than a V85 and produces a lot more power than a V85, so I think I'd be ok with that.
For those who have ridden a V100 one thing I'm interested in knowing is what do you think of the gear ratios and overall final ratio as it relates to a sport tourer? And assuming Guzzi leaves them the same how it'll be for an adventure tourer? Sport tourers work pretty well with a close ratio box and a tall overall FD for a relaxed 6th. Adventure tourers also want a relaxed 6th for riding I-80, etc., but need a lower first for crawling up a section of washouts on that gravel road.
My dealer hadn't heard anything about how Guzzi will handle initial orders. He said I can send a deposit to them and be first on their list. But then stated Guzzi may handle it like they did for the V100 Mandello where customers placed their order on line with Guzzi.
I remember back in the eighties in Europe, big trail bikes were very popular as touring bikes, especially France and Germany. Road tyres and lotsa luggage. Transalp, Africa twin etc into the 1990's. They were everywhere especially France. I've always felt that popularity led to the rise of the adventure bikes for the reasons you give.Ditto! I wouldn’t move off of my cast wheels for any spoke wheel.
Everybody who buys an Adventure bike, thinks they are going to go riding it off-road.
Then, they see just how much work and how utterly dangerous it is to try and take 550lbs off-road. It is a serious endeavor indeed and only a handful of world class riders can truly manhandle such a behemoth in the rough!
The true reason Adventure bikes even came into existence in my opinion, is that they are by far, the most comfortable and most easily controlled motorcycles simply by virtue of the riding position.
Public response of Adventure bikes has certainly confirmed this viewpoint to me.
I think that's a fair statement.From what I have seen here in Australia 'Adventure' bikes equate to the mad obsession with 4 wheel drive Ute's.
Rarely seen off road.....
Correct me if I am wrong but doesn't the Mandello have 6 mount points?First real-world ride review I've seen!
"This is the best Moto Guzzi ever to come off a production line."
Engine Differences from the V100
"First the EFI system gets a downstream O2 sensor to give the Stelvio a Euro 5+ rating—the V100 will also get this as a running change. Guzzi augmented the thickness of the rear of the engine cases where the swingarm attaches for increased strength to handle the additional stresses from the Stelvio’s ADV mission. That’s it."
"Every gear has been reworked to improve shifting, and the clutch is a new self-assist anti-hopping (slipper) unit that is also meant to improve shift actuation and feel."
"Revised geometry, increased length, and additional engine mounting points for the Stelvio (from 4 on the V100 to 6 on the Stelvio). The head-tube area has been stretched and has more rake to make room for the 19-inch front wheel."
I'm personally pretty excited by it. Got my piggy bank set up, haha.
The best MotoGuzzi to ever to come off a production line? I think not by a long shot and unproved motor lets see after this about seven years of use.First real-world ride review I've seen!
"This is the best Moto Guzzi ever to come off a production line."
Engine Differences from the V100
"First the EFI system gets a downstream O2 sensor to give the Stelvio a Euro 5+ rating—the V100 will also get this as a running change. Guzzi augmented the thickness of the rear of the engine cases where the swingarm attaches for increased strength to handle the additional stresses from the Stelvio’s ADV mission. That’s it."
"Every gear has been reworked to improve shifting, and the clutch is a new self-assist anti-hopping (slipper) unit that is also meant to improve shift actuation and feel."
"Revised geometry, increased length, and additional engine mounting points for the Stelvio (from 4 on the V100 to 6 on the Stelvio). The head-tube area has been stretched and has more rake to make room for the 19-inch front wheel."
I'm personally pretty excited by it. Got my piggy bank set up, haha.
Yes that is one fugly motorcycle!Disappointed beyond belief.
Sorry Moto Guzzi, but I’m keeping my Stelvio NTX. Your new one leaves me COLD…
What a terrible shame.