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PeteI saw a bloke driving around Bungers today with two of those boxes in a trailer, he appeared to be lost so I guess he found you! Nice looking bike for sure.CheersBottler
I'd like to ride one. Tempted to trade in the Griso on one just on looks alone. Afraid I'd miss the Griso though.
Cut a door in the front and add a couple of windows and they become a veritable palace for a pre-schooler! ;-TPete
How often do you see Guzzi Box's going down the road--never.
I want one. Also, I wouldn't be able to fiddle with the fueling, and my life would be much simpler.
What? The box or the bike? :D
Just curios about what needs to be done once out of the box as far as dealer set up? Besides a good test ride.
Thanks Pete, don,t forget that free tank of petrol!
Aheem....My Griso SE "out the door" (we called it on-the-road) price I paid in 2010 was USD$24,300AUS$31,200EUR€21,500ouch!
??? Damn. That's way past "ouch".
Pete: Thank yuu for reminding me of days long gone when I was a mechanic at a Velocette/BSA/Ariel dealership in Mr. Vernon, New York (NW suburb of New York City). The sales pace of new bikes was glacial and the arrival of a new bike was a cause for celebration. New bikes never were uncrated during regular working hours. Once one arrived (I usually drove the shop van to New Jersey to get the BSAs and Ariels, I forget how we got the Velocettes as we sold so few) and the all-wooden crate was dragged on a dolly into the store and put in a vacant spot. Note that our store comprised perhaps 450-500 sq.ft. Selected customers were phoned and advised of the big event to take place at 7pm. All dozen or so gathered at the store after dinner and watched, fascinated, at the exhumation and rebirth of the new bike, dazzled not by any technical updates, but by new tank badges, decals and paint colors. Change came very slowly those days. The glorious moment arrived when the bike was started and run for a while. Some asked to sit on the bike. Others paid verbal compliments and left. We usually went home around 10p.'Our shop had a planked wooden floor and a pot-belly stove, on which a coffee pot resided all day during the winter months. Primitive, yes, but nothing in a modern shop can compare to memories drawn from those days of the past.Ralph