New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Hiya Rolf! Of course, you're always welcome. I was laying in the hospital recovering from a cancer operation. Brad was there surfing on his phone, and said, "Haven't you been looking for a Monza for a long time?" "Uhh, yeah." "There's one on Ebay in Pennsylvania, looks like it is unmolested, and the price is right. Want me to hit the buy it now?" Knowing full well a guy shouldn't make any decisions with some major drugs floating around in his system, I said, "Uhhh, no." He said, "Are you sure? I'll deliver it..you know as well as I do that they don't come up for sale very often." "Uhhh, let me see it." Naturally, he was giving me a little something to cheer me up, and it did. I actually got a little excited. It's a hoot, and will *probably* be my last motorcycle purchase. If you want to go to the Wisconsin rally, I'll bring it up to Brad's place for you to ride..
So how about it, WHY?
Because I want to be like you, Kev. Picked this one up this week and had one wonderful warm day to ride before the cold set back in. Seriously though, I like medium and small displacement bikes because I have a tendency to twist the throttle and end up going too fast on larger displacement bikes. Most of the roads that we ride are back country roads. If I was on my old Ducati Monster or hopped-up Harley I'd still be doing 90 mph on the straights. It is nice to be able the twist the throttle coming out of a corner, feel the engine pull, and be doing the speed limit on my 750cc Guzzi. An added bonus is that I can enjoy the sights more.
When touring these days far from home, I guess I've set myself up to reduce as close to zero as I can, the tension that builds when you feel your bike is being forced to try hard and the thought that something will give up on you starts to worm it's way into your thoughts. <snip> I know it's a bit trite, but I wouldn't jump on a ZX14 Kawasaki rocket ship and remove 1 plug lead so it was harder to forget and be "tempted" to ride too fast just 'cos it felt like an overweight 1050 triple. <snip> We all have a different purpose, what bugs me is when one guy tries to apply his philosophy to someone else with a different agenda.
Yeah Kev, not so much on this thread 'cos I reckon most of us are "live and let live" types, but it happens a fair bit in general buggerising around, you'll see and/or hear an insecure type bagging your choice because it doesn't fit his picture of the world.
Oh yeah but doubting it. Seems like that's half the conversations motorcyclists have their whole friggin lifetimes (anti-Harley, anti-BMW, anti-JAPanInc., Anti-cruiser, anti-sportbike, anti-whatever. I still get stuck engaging those types sometimes, but more and more I try to just move on.
Is it harder to sit on 120 kph on a Hyabusa than it is on a 750 Breva ? You look at the speedo and hold the throttle where it needs to be.
Funny you should mention this Huzo.My Breva is in mph, 60mph = 4000rpm. so far so good. On a longer trip I must confess that (in fact most of the time) I use the the rev counter as my speedo. The dial on the speedo is just so darn busy with all the mph markings on the outside and kmh on the inside. At the 4000 the Breva is starting to sing, but it LOVES 5000 rpm. I'm sure I have the throttle setting the same but the rev counter says otherwise. 5000rpm and 75mph without doing anything. As I am on the superannuation these days I can't afford so I usually find a car that is going (just) above the correct speed to keep mine in check. As soon as a hill comes in to view then I will pass until I find the next car to follow.
Kev, this is all dem big block heads need to know..
Wrong question, IMO. The real question is "What is it about Guzzi that doesn't attract the young'uns?
Doubtless you're only joking Tazio, but did you read post #105 ?
After reading this whole thread I went back and read the OP. Boy, how topics wanderI don't know if it is illusion or fact, but I feel that I ride these three bikes faster in the twisties than I did on any of my previous bikes. It is more fun to ride a slow bike fast!
Thanks for the testimonials, watch this space tomorrow.