New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
The USA 2015 V7 models have the wet alt. not just the II's.
Pete, are you serious about traction control? The V7 already has that...ie. so little power it can't spin the rear wheel.Peter Y.
RE traction control....OK, points well made. TC is probably nice to have in low traction conditions. More importantly, it's a smart marketing tool that probably adds nothing to the cost of manufacturing the bike. Rather than lose a sale to a competing bike that does offer TC, why not throw it in. Of course that logic leads to cruise control but let's let that dog sleep.I totally agree that the suspension on the V7 is the real wart on its nose. Oddly enough most buyers don't agree so they spend their money on loud mufflers and ride happily into the sunset.Peter Y.
Moreover, if you are so inclined, you can disable TC alone by momentarily holding in the starter button with the engine running (don't worry, the starter won't run), or you can disable both TC and ABS by pulling the fuse.
This is something I was recently sneered at on another board about. "Why would such a 'Weak' bike need TC?" Well, in all honesty it is unlikely that most people who ride a V7 on sealed roads will ever need it. But as has been mentioned here before by people way more computer savvy than me if you are using a RBW system adding a TC controller to a bike already equipped with ABS requires nothing more than a few lines of code in the EMU. Why not do it.Also the ability of a bike to spin it's wheel has nothing to do with 'Power' and everything to do with 'Torque'. The coefficient of friction betwixt tyre and road surface is also paramount. FWIW I took the bike I have here for a quick strop up the corrugated, be-potholed dirt just up the road from the workshop to test the hypothesis put forward elsewhere that the TC and ABS are so crude as to make the bike a 'Bad Proposition'. Well, all I can say is it seemed OK to me. I obviously don't travel in the rarefied atmosphere breathed by the demigods who make such observations so I'll just have another beer and tomorrow enjoy riding a new bike I haven't experienced before.From what I've experienced so far the thing that will let it down most is its Poverty Pack suspension.PetePS. Kev, I used to drift a Honda 50 step-thru through roundabouts! Easy! I don't do that stuff any more and was never good at it but power is not a requirement to drift, only youth and stupidity![/quote]But... drifting requires no ECU interruption (correction) of said activity. ABS/TC will certainly not like drifting.
Valid point but I'll be buggered if I'm going to try and experiment! Especially on a customer's brand new bike! :o ;DPete
Pete, as per that sixth gear option, did you run the bike up into speed enough to comment on how differently the bike feels in sixth at speeds of 70-80mph (not sure what km this translates into) as opposed to the previous fiver? In my several test drives of the previous models I never remotely felt the bike was taxed but on many occasions I did yearn for a sixth gear at those speeds and I'm just curious.
I just ordered my 2016 V7II Stone (red) today, immediately after my dealer was informed that MG USA is ready to take orders for May delivery....
We've heard reports here that the motor runs just slightly slower, about 150 rpm calculated, 200ish observed.But considering how tight my V7 felt at highway speeds for the first couple thousand miles, I wouldn't put much into early impressions.
Mate? It's a customer's brand new motorbike. How would you feel if the bloke who sold you a bike took it out on its first test ride and thrashed the living piss out of it? :DPete
So what's the answer to this "poverty pack suspension"?? I'm assuming the changes are a set of GT Emulators, stronger springs and different fluid up front and a decent set of shocks in the rear. I had to do these things to my 650 Strom to get it ready for my touring needs. Is there anything else that would need to be done?
Sib,Do you have confirmation that Red is actually a V7 II Stone color for this year? I thought the options for the US were Flat Black and some other combination this year. Or -- Guzzi NA could come up with a "Special Shipment" of the Red, like they did with the original Norge bikes back in '07-'08.
Do you have confirmation that Red is actually a V7 II Stone color for this year?
So what are your thoughts on this? Most of my Calis have not had tachs, but one did and they all seemed in a nice sweet spot on the big roads around 4300-4600rpm. For me that usually equaled about 70-80mph in 4th, 80-85 in 5th. Obviously, very different engines here so my analogy is kinda pointless, but still. Right now, on a broken in V7, what is it usually turning around 75mph?