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I'd like to be 22 years old too, neither of which is going to be the case.
Is it “trash” and “drivel” because after a long term test the rider doesn’t love it and wouldn’t buy one? She was complimentary of the bike but it didn’t seem to hit the right buttons for her. So what. If you want one, buy one and hopefully enjoy it for many years. Brand loyalists do tend to get a bit hurt when others don’t feel the same as they do. That doesn’t make the others wrong.
That’s just fine, Bill, but this isn’t a review of the v7III. She is riding a v7 850, a bike with significantly more power, altered frame and different suspension just to point out a few of the more significant updates to the line. Your experience with the v7III may not be as relevant as you thought. However, I do agree, CC would be helpful, I would hate to try and decipher her when her dander is up!
I don’t care whether she ended up loving it or hating it. I think 10,000 miles is enough to get the bike, and that she was ‘meh’ about it is fine. but the video itself was just ‘meh’: 10,000 miles of riding, you’d think there’d be more to say than what was. I mean, that’s more than almost any other professional journalist out there would ever do.And all we got was ‘meh’.
The notion that Guzzi is an acquired taste that often takes thousands of miles to develop, is a common thread among Guzzi riders. Perhaps I’m an outlier, but the first Guzzi I road I immediately took to, hook, line and sinker. But, I’ll be the first to admit my taste in a great many things are off center.
...at least those made by real manufacturers. The notion that Guzzi is an acquired taste that often takes thousands of miles to develop, is a common thread among Guzzi riders. Perhaps I’m an outlier, but the first Guzzi I road I immediately took to, hook, line and sinker. But, I’ll be the first to admit my taste in a great many things are off center.
A model that has been out of production long enough to see 4 presidential cycles, doesn't qualify as "late model" in my book! I'm 54 now, I was in my 30s the last time a MGS rolled out of the factory.
As Dirk said. Yet, I do agree with you Mark, that not everyone is going to fall in love with such a bike. However, that's no excuse for flat lazy work.As I recall, when they finally got around to talking about the feel of the bike on the road, they mutually concluded that it just didn't have enough "character", saying something like, Guzzi had just made it too refined and smooth. That argument has been raised before else where, and can't be denied that the new small blocks are indeed more modern in their feel, but she wouldn't know that, having never ridden any other Guzzi. It seemed pretty clear that the guy had not ridden any late model Guzzi, and was just bringing up something he heard, she not knowing, just agreed with him! It's just a foolish position to take, as even in its more refined iteration, the v7 still has more "character" than 85% of bikes on the market.
...I'd like to be 22 years old too, neither of which is going to be the case.