New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
thanks so much to you all for the responses and the pics!Kev m, to answer your question, I want to be "hands on"--and I want to very free from dependence on shops and dealerships. I started out knowing nothing, but with the ex500 I ride now I learned to do valve checks, rear suspension service, replaced all the bearings and steering stem bearing, rebuilt forks, replaced tires and chains and cables and lines, rebuilt calipers, and I'm sure I did other service items I'm forgetting--but I have never been past the valves in the engine. I did all of that because I had pretty awful experiences at both shops and dealerships in the beginning. I realized it was better and cheaper to do the work myself and I decided that when I got another bike it would be more a pleasure to work on than the kawi. I heard that the guzzis were this way--simple to work on--and that's the attraction for me. The other thing is durability. I've been riding the ex500 70k and I feel like I'm still getting to know the thing in many ways, and I think: it's a shame this engine won't last three times as long. So I read about those high mileage guzzis and thought: ah ha. And I also read years ago the Common Tread piece you linked. That's one of the first things to get me interested in sportys. What scares me about the guzzi is all the talk about uneven quality. I truly do not want something that's going to leave me stranded on the side of the road. If I can fix it on the side of the road, that's okay. And again I don't want to be dependent on specialist mechanic. Coming here for advice is fantastic, but I want to be able to do things myself most of the time. That's one of the main reasons I'm considering these two bikes. And I'm posting here in part to see if people with real experience think what I'm thinkinng about them is true. Oh, and I think you mentioned weather. I ride all over the Southeastern U.S.A. And I plan to go beyond. I will be riding in heavy rains sometimes. I will ride in very hight heat--stop and go traffic in 100 plus temps. I also ride when it's in the 30s. Pretty cold. Would any of this be a problem for the guzzi? I wonder if the traffic and high heat situations woudl be bad for the sporty too.
A bike that is stone reliable, requires only minimal maintenance, easily hits 100K with no problems: Honda CB750. Don't laugh. I bought a used '92 from my cousin with 18K on it. I put another 45K on it with the only thing done outside of normal maintenance and was a chain and sprocket set. Pic is at Yosemite.
"objectively better" depends on the metrics being measured.Few mechanical things in life are "objectively better" than everything else because people value different things.If they didn't politics would be easy.
butter
Mmmmmmm butter...It's almost as good as Bacon.But bacon is "better".
Yes Sir.
Thanks to you all again. I am reading (and re-reading) your replies, admiring the pics, and exploring links given.(Thanks for the links to the Guzzi parts places). I'm also reading about what each bike would involve--tire sizes and availability on the cali, belt vs shaft (I know only chains). Either bike is gonna be a new world to me--so the comments here are a great help.
I know 3 people with over 100k on rubbermount Sportys. Two of them with over 200k.I'm not sure I've met IRL someone with over 100k on a single Guzzi yet. Maybe I have and just didn't know it.
Bodine, Central FL, north of Orlando. Dusty, I have heard similar arguments made for the older frame mounted Sportsters. I have not had the chance to ride one of those. I shy away thinking they might be too visceral--especially for my passenger. Hoping to find a california "just right." Ncdan, I used to ride Tennesee Walkers growing up--as well various "mutts" with Tennesse Walker in them. So I'm getting a rough idea.