Showing posts with label italian motorcycle magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label italian motorcycle magazine. Show all posts

Monday, 15 June 2015

MV Agusta Turismo Veloce 800 - intensely enjoyable



 


It's been a very busy few weeks with a few bike launches, including that of the MV Agusta Turismo Veloce 800 in the South of France. It was one of most tiring, intense day's motorcycling I've done for a long time as we rode at what felt like a manic pace (as is the Italian way on these things) with the roads rising up higher and higher above Nice, and the corners getting tighter and tighter. We ended up negotiating tunnels hewn from solid rock, Alpine melt water dripping off onto the road surface, and trying to get shots done with a procession of motorhomes, cyclists and other tourists dashing past.

The MV is a fine motorcycle, and did exactly what its name suggests, touring very quickly, with the added fun of using a quickshifter that works well and a slipper clutch too - we'll have a full review in the next Issue 8 of the mag.

#mvagusta #mvagustaturismoveloce

Wednesday, 14 January 2015

Smashing Speedometer Stories

I recently decided I'd had enough of my Guzzi S3's Veglia blue-faced speedometer reading at least 25 miles per hour over what it should at standstill, let alone at speed, and sent it to Andy Barraclough at Speedy Cables (www.speedycables.com) to get it overhauled properly - and what a fabulous job they did - see the pics below. 

Speedy Cables sent it back fully stripped, overhauled, recalibrated at 1600 revs/mile, mileage set to what it was when it went in, and has been treated to a new bezel, glass and speed cup. In fact, the beautiful restoration even looks a bit too smart compared to the scruffier rev counter next to it, but doubtless once the bike racks up some more miles it'll start to weather a bit. I'd never bothered too much about the speed because I've always ridden it just getting a feel with the revs from the motor and the gear I was in, but after using a sat nav on the bike a month or so ago (report soon..), I realised it was actually useful to know what speed you're going at, some of the time.

There's a story behind the low mileage though....see further down the page








Back in 2004, I was living in Italy, in Tuscany. Bit of a long story, but I ended up lending my S3 to an American to take part in the Moto Giro that was taking place in Sicily that year -on the strict understanding that if he crashed it, he'd have to pay for it. Three days after he left for Sicily, I got a phone call. American drawl on the other end of the line. "I'm in a hospital in Palermo, with a broken collar bone, arm in plaster and severe bruising. Sorry. It was a hairpin, and I took it too quickly. Ended up going straight on and over the bank the other side of the bend. The bike flipped over a couple of times. It's badly damaged, and the speedometer has just disappeared..."

The important thing is that he was okay, just about, and to be fair, he paid out for me to get the bike to how it was before his mishap. He discovered that Guzzis are not made for taking fast, tight hairpin bends. So, the S3's original kmh speedometer that was on the bike when I bought it, and was showing approximately 45,000km was last seen just before flying off into a grassy meadow somewhere near Marsala, Sicily, Italy. It's probably still there.

The end of the story is that I bought a replacement 160mph speedo in excellent condition and with just around 2,000 miles on the clock from Motorworks UK, who in those days sold Guzzi spares. It read fine for a few years, until it decided three years ago that its needle would sit at 25mph at standstill. Now that's been sorted, finally.






Friday, 20 September 2013

Cog on - MV 175 project bike





If you're ad the mag regularly, you might remember that we had ambitiously set out on a couple of project bikes, one of which being a 1957 MV Agusta 175 AB model, in unrestored (read bad, no terrible) condition. If you're wondering what happened to it - well, it is still in the boxes we stripped it down into in the last issue, and that's because it has taken almost a year of searching to find these fine original and correct but weird plasticky NOS cogs to replace the knackered ones that came out of the motor (see bottom pic).

Someone in the MV design department in 1957 thought it'd be fun to experiment with a type of fibrous new-fangled (at the time) plastic for these gears, instead of the metal most other manufacturers employed. Didn't they realise that 50 years later, some poor bastard (i.e. me) would be trying to make this bike relive its glory days?

Anyway, I've managed to source a new oil pump with gear attached, and the other gear which goes, er, somewhere... Hopefully it'll all make sense once I've replaced the bearings, got the crank fixed, etc. etc. Please don't hold your breath.

Saturday, 22 December 2012

Issue Five out in January - and Happy Christmas!




Finally, Issue Five of the magazine is done, and will be on sale, hopefully, on the 10th of January. 
Yes, it has taken ages, but hey, steady as she goes as we've been navigating the choppy waters of recession, and at least we're still here with more hardcore Italian motors.

More details soon, but it's the usual mix of home-built, brand new, and very old Italian motorcycles, and the car in this issue is a stunna.....keep an eye out here on the blog/Facebook page/website - but in the meantime, Happy Christmas and a peaceful New Year and happy and healthy 2013 to all our readers, subscribers, supporters, the brilliant advertisers who have stuck by us (you know who you are), friends, and enemies.

We'll be emailing everyone in the New Year about new subscriptions - use it or lose it!!