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Hi everyone,during the life of the tonti bikes there were two major changes... swingarm length and headstock length...Anyone know why they lengthened the steering stem?what benefit does it bring?
The California II preceded the T5 with the tall neck. It was for more strength in the steering head area.
What about changes for the Californias? EV etc, I thought there were some tweaks there?
My long-stem Mille does not handle better than my short-stem T.
Is one more comfortable than the other?
IIRC the early "16 front wheel models with tall necks handled too quickly and they put on longer forks which slows the steering.I have the SP II w 16" wheel and a Cal III with the w i d e bars so I can't tell if one turns quicker. Its easier on the Cal III due to more leverage.
Two Checks - what make/model/size of frt tire do you have on your SP II? What about rear? Do you find windy day stability a challenge? What about lousy pavement (re stability)? Seems that with fork mounted fairing + 16" frt wheel you could have a fairly sensitive steering stability at speed...?
IIRC its a 110-90 but in honesty I haven't ridden it in some years but it's going out to be made roadworthy soon.
That is one damn stable mount at 80 in a moderate rain. Some mods could be made but it's a good foul weather fairing.
I am curious after reading this.Are the Tonti frames built to the same dimensions and geometry with the distinction between models being different swingarms lengths? Or are the frames themselves dimensionally different?
Are the Tonti frames built to the same dimensions and geometry with the distinction between models being different swingarms lengths? Or are the frames themselves dimensionally different?It would seem odd that my '98 EV would be the same as a 1000s or LeMans iV. It might explain why the EV handles so well despite floor boards.
Quote from: Cdn850T5NT on Today at 04:33:04 PMTwo Checks - what make/model/size of frt tire do you have on your SP II? What about rear? Do you find windy day stability a challenge? What about lousy pavement (re stability)? Seems that with fork mounted fairing + 16" frt wheel you could have a fairly sensitive steering stability at speed...?IIRC its a 110-90 but in honesty I haven't ridden it in some years but it's going out to be made roadworthy soon.That is one damn stable mount at 80 in a moderate rain. Some mods could be made but it's a good foul weather fairing.
John, Basically, yes. They're "the same". There are running changes and detail variations model to model, but your '98 EV has a frame that is very much like the original, 25 years earlier.That's why the 1990s and 2000s Californias handle so nice. They're direct descendents of the V7 Sport and 850 LeMans.Tonti's frame was a good design that endured from 1971 to 2011. 40-years!
Frankly, I don't think a Tonti bike would be out of step for any bike designed in 2020 for the same range of power and handling. It works. And works well.
I agree. It's really too bad that Guzzi didn't expand on the Bellagio idea. Tonti frame with CARC swingarm. It had all sorts of possibilities!
Really, I find no need for a CARC on my EV. I guess they got the tires and length and stiffness of the drive shaft to match the torque curve, because the rear end of the bike is totally benign and stable.
The EVs are good, but mainly the longer travel with the mono-shock CARC on the Bellagio would be better on rough roads than the twin-shock Californias. Add USD forks to a Bellagio and WOW! Great fun! Well, a guy can dream, can't he?