New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Done already.http://suchen.mobile.de/fahrzeuge/details.html?id=225163177#DogW
Done already.[img width=800 height=600]http://i.ebayimg.com/00/s/MTIwMFgxNjAw/z/gSwAAOSwqbZXFPQQ/$/$_57.JPG[/imghttp://suchen.mobile.de/fahrzeuge/details.html?id=225163177#DogW
Front forks are missing the shields /boots.
I'm still looking for the V9's availability in California. Anyone know when there due to arrive?
When the V7 first came out, seems like folks were buying them like hotcakes around here - well, hotcakes for Guzzis anyhow. And later years these sales numbers were bank and you saw dealers were getting more of them to stock because they were selling. I have absolutely nothing but armchair experience to base this on but initially I am beginning to wonder if maybe Guzzi missed the mark with the V9, and by mark I mean only the chance at sales. They had a proven and desirable platform in the V7 and instead of capitalizing on this by sticking that new engine in it, they instead offered a bike that seems to not be selling as well and possibly confounding others who were considering a V7 - now possibly just content to wait until the V9 engine appears in a V7 platform. Anyhow, just my thoughts and taking nothing away from the new bike; rather, I'm here just talking about sales.
Owner of V9 Bobber here. Got it on August 5th, have put some 2600 miles on it as of today. I'm quite satisfied with the bike, haven't had a problem and as far as everything else is concerned, it is an entry level bike with ABS, Euro4 and 3 year warranty. Price was EUR 8990 so it competes fine with it's rivals like Triumph Bonneville, Ducatti Scrambler, Kawasaki W800, Harley Street 750, etc.I have noticed that this bike is not understood by the old Guzzi fans and that seems to be the intention. I knew nothing of Guzzi before this, it's just a "modern retro" bike that competes with others on paper, i.e. price, warranty, features, maintenance ease & cost. For example, I just wanted a mid-size shaft driven on-road bike with entry level price. Most of the entry level bikes of other manufacturers have chains, so, enter Guzzi. Or, take Honda Vt750c2b for example - a very nice bike and superior to V9 in many respects, but no ABS and a rear drum brake -> puke.The V9, especially the Bobber, is what I'd call a "crossover" bike. It's a cross-over between cruiser, scrambler, classic, naked, standard, retro, bobber, ratrod, modern (modern as in it has abs, efi, traction control, trip computer). Again, it's just a bike for someone who compares the list of features and doesn't give a flying toss about the brand but is just after a good deal and bargain.I personally disagree with the need to put V7 pieces on it but perhaps this is once again due to the fact that I'm just the modern "consumer" type of person. I don't mod, I don't customise, I don't service my own bike. I just compare the offers on the market, pick what seems best to me and consume it happily and carelessly. I'm all for practicality of course, the bigger the fuel tank the better, but I rather fill up than modify the bike, I mean, which one of the activities is easier and cheaper?On the technical note, the only thing I dislike about the bike is the dry clutch, in my opinion, bikes need to have wet clutches because they last longer, so, again, less maintenance. Everything else is fine but just entry level, you get what you pay for. The cheap seat, the stiff non-adjustable suspension, flimsy switchgear etc - all usable and completely acceptable in this price bracket.
Finally! We have a new owner! How about some pics??? I assume you are in Europe? How many kilometers per tank are you getting on the bike now?