New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Been there, done that, moved on.That said the wet weight on a Jackal is probably around 600 (especially accessorized), so the difference is probably 150, but feels like less due to center of gravity.And though I'm enjoying smaller bikes a lot, I never had a problem around town with a Road King.
Tennessee Yellow Jackets.
VA, how can you be comfy tossing the new Cal under the buss before ever taking it for a spin?
I just think it is butt-ugly.Sorry, I won't ride a bike that I don't like the looks of.But who am I? I've got the Christmas tree of Guzzis!
And it's beautiful for sure. In some cases, though, beauty is in the function, and even though I consider my Stelvio ugly, I still like it.But once I'd looked at the 1400, read off the weight and dimensions, etc., I don't need a test ride to know I'll never buy one.Lannis
Just my humble opinion, but Moto Guzzi should have done up the Coppa Italia like this:BTW, this isn't a PhotoShop job. Looks a lot like Christmas candy. Frikkin' gorgeous.
Was wondering if the US dealers had heard from Piaggio about prices and dates.
I had a few minutes between calls this afternoon. so I stopped by at Matthews Fun Machines. They said 19k.
Mathews has a page up with the 1400's details .... looks like the base unit they are showing, but call for price.... (and don't spread bad rumor$) http://www.matthewsfunmachines.com/showcaseproductdetail.htm?id=18129121&brand=1701&type=&pos=32
Is that a guess or the official word?And which model, the stripped one or?
Just wondering if I'm the only one who finds the market the new California pitched at confusing. When I first heard about it I was quite intrigued by it, I assumed they would take advantage of the technology they had over the traditional big heavy cruiser / touring end of the market ie overhead cams four valve heads the ability too design decent frames, suspension and brakes and come out with a higher revving / powered cruiser with taught agile handling and reasonably light weight for its class. They could have built a very unique bike, a cruiser with forward controls that goes handles and stops complete with Italian styling, You can be sure Ducati would never go there and its dynamics would be far superior to the likes of anything Harley is putting out.Instead they aim it directly at the Harley Road king, a market that has enormous brand loyalty to Harley and understandably so. For that market you need enormous capacity long stroke engines,(which MG doesn't have) 2 valve push rod engines are perfectly suited (no advantage in OHC and 4 valve heads here). Just look at where the torque peaks at in at on the new California (2750) hell not even Harley produces it that low, and yet despite their efforts to engineer this smaller capacity, shorter stroke higher revving engine to produce torque down low it wont produce anywhere near the torque of that enormous capacity, long stroke Harley engine and as such in this class of bike will be considered to small a capacity engine lacking torqueOn top of that they give it huge wheelbase, much bigger than the Harley and as if that weren't enough they kick the steering angle out to extreme levels to the point where I wonder if it will actually handle any better than the road king. Yes it is a bit lighter than a road king but in this class of bike they simply don't seam to care about weightIt may just be me but I just can't help but feel they have lost an opportunity to tap into what could have been a new market, and have instead gone after the most copied and heavily occupied segment there is, armed with engineering that is not suitable for that class of bike
Just wondering if I'm the only one who finds the market the new California pitched at confusing....
I assumed they would take advantage of the technology they had over the traditional big heavy cruiser / touring end of the market ie overhead cams four valve heads the ability too design decent frames, suspension and brakes and come out with a higher revving / powered cruiser with taught agile handling and reasonably light weight for its class. They could have built a very unique bike, a cruiser with forward controls that goes handles and stops complete with Italian styling, You can be sure Ducati would never go there and its dynamics would be far superior to the likes of anything Harley is putting out.
Since when is a 1400cc engine not high capacity? That's 85.4 cu. in., close enough to H-D's iconic twin cam 88 that the difference is insignificant. It's smaller that 1600 or 1800cc, but consider performance, to wit:
^^^ Not 80; 1400cc = 85.4 cu in. Hey, either size matters, or it doesn't. Plus, there are probably still more TC 88 engines in circulation than all of the 96, 98, 101 and 103 engines, combined.
But it doesn't matter. Cubic inches matter to the average pirate, and the new California doesn't measure up for those who place importance on displacement.
GUYS GUYS GUYS - WHO CARES about the "average" Harley rider. Guzzi is never going to pull the majority of Harley riders away from the brand anyway - no matter what the CC or performance or look or ________________.Guzzi is HOPING to pull a percentage, a small one for HD, the fringe riders who have additional priorities. And maybe a few BMW riders who are fed up with BMW.And maybe a few GW riders who are looking for something with more flair.Etc.A SMALL percentage of Harley sales alone would be a boon to Guzzi.