New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
One question is whether you would be buying it to ride or buying it as a piece of artwork. If you want to ride it and it has sat for decades, you will have to replace every piece of rubber and plastic on it or it will leak like a sieve. Lots of other reasons to go through it also.
The plan would be to keep it in climate controlled storage and ride it a handful of times a year, I would need to find a shop with the knowledge to bring it back to life.
The ones with the 16” front wheel weren’t liked much by the Guzzi crowd. It’s a near 40 model old, not terribly collectible Moto Guzzi. Post a picture or a link. But, around $3,500 to a very high of $4,500. Or, I could be way off base. Old doesn’t mean sought after or valuable. Especially regarding Moto Guzzi motorcycles.
I would say $5K tops in non running condition. 87's were red & white and had 16" front tire. I set them up new & they ran like crap with stock jetting.
Thanks for the info guys, much appreciated.Located in Ontario, the owner thinks it is very valuable mid teens U.S.D. It's reasonably close to me so I might go up for a looksee but I'm not going anywhere near that price. Art I will consider your offer, where are you located?K
Took me a while to figure out the problem with my '87 LeMans SE. Adjusting the accelerator pump on the right side to match the left has the performance of the bike where it should be.
I may be in the minority but I think right now there are wonderful bikes, Guzzis very much included, that once seemed expensive to me but now in comparison with new bikes seem dirt cheap. $4K or $6K in 2026, whether we like it or not, does not go very far in daily life. Meanwhile any Le Mans from 1976 through 1991 is a wonderful motorcycle that can be fixed forever and will always be a pleasure to own and ride. I’d agree that if you have to pay somebody else to resurrect a bike that’s been sitting it doesn’t make sense financially, but otherwise I’ve found that here are bikes out there that I like a lot, at prices that seem to me low. With a couple of months of spare time effort and circa $2K of parts (that’s what it seems to take) you can have a very nice bike that’s more maintainable that’s anything you could buy new today.Have you looked for example at how much new BMWs cost in 2026? Go to the dealer and you’ll likely see a row of them with OTD price tags starting with a ‘3’, meaning circa $32K for a GS. That makes zero sense to me.In 2018 I bought an ST4 Ducati with 7K miles in mint cosmetic condition for $4K. The original owner paid more than $15K in 1999, when considering Staintune pipes and other upgrades. In the end I was into it $6K (cylinders had be resealed) but it still looks wonderful and I have no plans to sell it after 8 years. My current projects are a 1200 miles since new ‘86 Laverda SFC 1000 that I bought about a month ago ($12K, I wanted it, there are only about 10 in the US and I may have paid too much), and a 10K miles ‘01 BMW K1200RS ($5K, in almost perfect shape, just a weekend project). Meanwhile I’m selling my immaculate V85TT and anybody could buy it from me for $6K with bags. These values do make sense to me.From my point of view a nice LM IV at current market prices is very attractive because it looks better than anything new, rides nicely, and is simple to own and fix forever. (Typos fixed)