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Completely different bikes. I've met a FEW people who have liked them both equally, but not many.I've had both. The only trouble with the SP (whether it be an SP-NT, an SP-II, or SP-III) is that many people, like me, cannot ride with their legs behind the fairing where they belong- there's not enough room. On the SP-NT, you can remove the fairing lowers, and lose both the obstacle and the protection, which many people do. On the SP-III, I don't think you can do that.We wanted an SP-III really bad, tried it 2-up, and didn't fit ... So it was an SP-NT without the lowers for us.Lannis
Ahem. Properly sized people fit the SP "just" right. Perfect grip on the tank with knee pads just touching the fairing.
Then properly sized people have to be pretty short. I'm 5-8 and my knees hit it.
Then I would think they would have a different problem....touching the ground.
It looks like you're calling the (original) 1000 SP an SP-NT... I suppose it's arguable but I think NT is Nuovo Telaio... not Nuovo Tipo (telaio being "frame" and there is I suppose nothing "nuovo tipo" about the original SP). It was the 1000 SP II that actually has the new frame... taller, back-gussetted head-tube.Just nit-picking, sorry ☺.
No problem ... I've always just lumped the 78-79 "1000SP" and the 80-83 "SPNT" together when it comes to riding position and fairings because they're so similar. All that changed with the SPII and SPIII ...Lannis
Didn't know the 80-83 were different. Can you recall in which significant ways?
I bought a '83 SP new and kept it for nineteen years and 70K miles. Made my arms and shoulders hurt til I put bar-backs on it. Front end was a bit flexy with two-up and loaded bags and tank bag, a fork brace fixed that. Had the soft clutch hub, replaced that at 30K miles. I liked it then, today I would rather ride a Cal II. Rode a few back in the day when I wrenched on Guzzis, they felt like a longer, plusher G5. My Cal 1100 works for me today.Larry