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......I would buy a V85 if I wasn’t so old, my new 14 Stelvio still works for me.
The V100 is such a fantastic bike, that the clunk when going from neutral to first is such a minor niggle that it is easily forgotten. It would be like meeting Sophia Loren and coming away from that meeting only concerned that she had one hair out of place.
"The V100 is such a fantastic bike, that the clunk when going from neutral to first is such a minor niggle that it is easily forgotten..."
Hold it wide open and run through the gears with the quick shifter once and maybe that will change your mind. Then try knocking it down three gears while breaking hard into a corner without touching the clutch once.
Not when you have two other bikes that don't clunk and jerk forward when going into first gear...for what this bike costs, it should have the best working transmission of all three, but instead it has the worst...that's not a "minor niggle", that's a major annoyance, and a big reason why I've only put 400 miles on it over the last 10+ months...
So did you ride one before you bought it ?
That will do nothing to erase the fact that it crashes when you engage first gear from neutral. No one said it’s gutless, just crude. Also without pivoting…What is the perceived benefit in a quick shifter on a bike such as this, I’m not saying there isn’t such a benefit, just that I cannot identify it? Last time I checked, the ability to smoothly roll on/off the power and coordinate your control inputs when riding a big twin, was a statement of your ability and finesse..(or lack of…).
Nope...but then I don't recall test riding any of the bikes I've owned over the last 40 years before I bought them...didn't test ride the V7 or Scrambler 400X before I bought them either, but the transmission in them is WAY better than the V100...
I was under the impression, maybe wrongly that the first gear clunk eventually goes away or is minimized given mileage. Or maybe one just gets use to the clunk?
My other bike (Honda) has a wet clutch. When the oil gets old, it starts to clunk going into first. Change the oil and filter and all is well again. Yeah, shouldn't have to change the oil at 500 miles, I get it. The oil brand and type have a lot to do with the clutch/transmission's smoothness. I'm sure it has factory oil in it but that doesn't mean it's the best oil for it. It means Guuzzi got a good deal on oil for recommending that brand. I use Amsoil and it works great for my Honda! It wasn't so great for the Suzuki I owned.
Quote from: Turin on April 27, 2025, 09:12:58 PMI finally got the chance to demo both the V100 Mandello and the Stelvio. Both were very impressive. I preferred the seating position on the Stelvio. The Mandello fet quicker with better throttle response. ( set up?) Neither bike "feels like" a Guzzi. I can get over that. I can see myself parking one in my garage someday.Turin, both bikes have multiple throttle settings, did you note what setting each bike was on?
Someone correct me if I'm wrong here, but doesn't the Guzzi transmission use actual gear oil, like the rear drive, and doesn't share the engine oil? I know changing the weight and quantity of oil can affect "non-adjustable" front forks, wonder if changing the weight of the trans fluid could help? I think the rear drive takes 75w140, not sure what the trans takes though...
I am a little confused here but which bike are we talking about. The V100 transmission shares oil with the engine..."