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Anyone had any experience with this one or others?https://www.motoracingshop.com/en/quick-shifter-healtech-for-moto-guzzi-v85-tt-19-21.htmlinditx
Not me and I never will. It’s torture on the mechanicals and will quietly go about the business of damaging the gear dogs .It slams the next gear in before the motor has the chance to drop the required revs to suit the new ratio and the spinning flywheel is forced to drop 1,000 or so rpm in half a second without the cushioning effect of the clutch disengaging.
I am hardly an expert on quick shifters. A few months ago I didn’t know what they did nor what they looked like. I had to ask here what was the device mounted on my new V100. I also have a new 2025 V85. Having played some with the quick shifter I can say I wished my V85 had one. But I think their only real application is for drag racing. Hold the throttle WFO and hit the shifter at what you think the best RPM to do so. It shifts gears faster than any automatic.Down shifting or shifting at less than full throttle the shifts are no where as smooth. Its not a way to make a manual transmission into an automatic. So unless you want to go racing, forget about it.The reason I think the V85 could use one is it takes longer to pull in the clutch, shift gears, and let out the clutch while backing off the throttle and reapplying throttle than its takes my V85 to accelerate through that gear, at least the first four.Pete
Great replies, thanksI was wanting to use the clutch less as I age but it sounds like an A/S at least with the Guzzi is not the answerinditx
Did you test ride a new Stelvio by chance?Can you compare the 2025 V85 to older models by chance?Thanksinditx
“Get off my lawn you Dam kids!!” I don’t want any dam electronic ignition, all it’s going to do is break!”Sometimes we all need to take a moment and relax.
Sorry Huzo, all I meant was less clutch could be good on older hands that have arthritis rearing it’s ugly head.I am not using an A/S to drag race or for track days, I do neither of those, at least not anymore.inditx
Hey Huzo,Not sure if you were asking me this or BullDog.At any rate, you’re beyond my depth so for now, I’ll be content with accepting a quickshifter only if it comes with the bike, read no aftermarket ones and probably not use it much anyway.inditx
A quick update;I spoke to one of our favorite MG dealers and he said that if it was a factory blip/quickshift, it was actually less wear and tear on the tranny, drivetrain etc.The big problem is with aftermarket shifters as the ECU and the bike cannot compensate for them.Ymmvinditx
Either the guy at the dealership is lying or has no idea what he is talking about. A quickshifter will create more wear however it likely won't be enough wear for anyone to notice during their ownership of a guzzi. There are some junk aftermarket quickshifters (dynojet) that relied on a pressure switch however the ones that use a strain gauge are just as good as the factory because they are functionally identical. They both cut the ignition for a set amount of time when the strain gauge senses the shift. I used annatori on my gsxr when I was younger. The more you raced those bikes, the more often you had to get the dogs recut.
To provide evidence that quick shifters damage gearboxes over the long term, I’d have to have two identical bikes from new and then have two riders do the same kilometres under the same conditions simultaneously over 50,000 km or more and then compare the innards, one using a qickshifter and one not.Clearly not possible, so I’ll have to rely on critical thinking and common sense, with a bit of engineering accumen and recognition of the bleeding obvious thrown in…But follow me through this.I can accept that a quick shifter will pop the gear through in more or less the same fashion as a skilled rider, but here’s the thing…again.It never was about the the gears themselves, it’s about the shock loading that is transmitted through the internals when forced to accelerate or decelerate the spinning flywheel with absolutely minimal cushioning.I will ask a set of questions and seek an answer to each before moving on, to see where our opinions begin to diverge.#1If you are doing 50 mph in 6th gear at 3,000 rpm and select 5th gear, what is your approximate rpm immediately after the change has gone through ?…(within 100 rpm).