New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
I disagree with your agree of disagreement.
I agree, with your disagreement of his agreement with disagreement.I.e. BMW's got a bad case o' ugly!
Just like my wife who would care less the looks of what she's riding....as long as it handles great and feels good! When are you and Jay women folk coming down to eat AMAZING cured meats, great BBQ drink high proof liquior and cheap beer?
Sure works, though.
I don't need a bike that is so much more capable than me that I feel inadequate lol.I much prefer something charmingly as inept as myself.
Styling is definitely important in a motorcycle because it keeps the design in check. This is where BMW went off the rails and what makes the V85TT so special. If you want a Bavarian shafty then you end up with a 1,250cc powerplant...and for what? So you can have have unnecessary servo activated variable valve timing, a forward facing clutch, electronic suspension that needs its own IP address, oh and get this, strategic liquid cooling. The whole point of having the cylinders stick out like the arms of a deranged cheerleader were for avoiding additional complexity and plumbing. Now you have double radiators along with the utterly useless A arm front suspension making the beam of these bikes ready for the 2019 boat show circuit.OK- so you say...well not fair 'cause going by weight you should be comparing it to a BMW FU something or other- like an F850. Again, no shaft so not a real contender plus they are violently ugly. V85TT fills a niche left open by the other manufacturers and as a bonus are easy on the eye too. Very important.
Quote from: MadMike on November 21, 2018, 08:53:42 PMStyling is definitely important in a motorcycle because it keeps the design in check. This is where BMW went off the rails and what makes the V85TT so special. If you want a Bavarian shafty then you end up with a 1,250cc powerplant...and for what? So you can have have unnecessary servo activated variable valve timing, a forward facing clutch, electronic suspension that needs its own IP address, oh and get this, strategic liquid cooling. The whole point of having the cylinders stick out like the arms of a deranged cheerleader were for avoiding additional complexity and plumbing. Now you have double radiators along with the utterly useless A arm front suspension making the beam of these bikes ready for the 2019 boat show circuit.OK- so you say...well not fair 'cause going by weight you should be comparing it to a BMW FU something or other- like an F850. Again, no shaft so not a real contender plus they are violently ugly. V85TT fills a niche left open by the other manufacturers and as a bonus are easy on the eye too. Very important.I concur!
remember "simple by design"
You’ve already hit the real issue here, the appropriate BMW comparison with the V85 is the F series GS line, not the boxers. If you think the absence of shaft drive means it’s “not a real contender”, so be it, but you’d better hope the new Guzzi works anywhere NEAR as well. As for the distinctive GS look, it appeals to quite a few folks, being BMW’s top selling line. You don’t have to like it, of course. That said, I like what I’ve seen of the V85 too, and hope it lives up to it’s promise.
I've looked at the F750 GS and would predict it will be the main challenger to the V85. Issue will be price, as BMW seems Hell-bent on importing bikes with all the bells and whistles. I was quoted an 'out the door' price of $16,500 on a new one. A fully loaded V85 should be a couple of thousand less 'out the door'. IMHO the V85 is a better looking bike. I find the looks of a GS to be an acquired taste. Having said that, I'd be really tempted by a F750 GS that doesn't have the extra $2,500 in doodads that I'm not interested in.
BMW's forward facing clutch seems like a good idea.No?What am I missing here?
"The German brand lost its way after this model in terms of weight, complexity, and various levels of ugly."And that way over priced, ugly bike, with too many complex gadgets is a perennial best seller in the BMW line up. Any color out sells the whole of Guzzi offerings many times over. Go figure.
And McDonald's outsells every local and regional burger joint.I don't care about that either.
I concur with Mad Mike. Having had a few Beemers, I can say that in my opinion, they started to come unglued with the first "canbus" models around 2005. Also, at that time, the prices took about a 20% bump model to model. A subtle change started among the ownership as the tax bracket of new owners moved ever upward. In 1999,, you could go to a BMW rally and find a slew of airheads (remember "simple by design") with many owners capable and willing to do their own service, and to help you out if you needed it. These folks always had a cold beer and a smile at the ready so it felt like an extended family. A current Guzzi rally reminds me of this time. Personally, as I am new to the brand,I just thought I was getting a cool bike, but this bonus of community was unexpected, but very welcomed. Contrast the modern BMW rally. If you have a problem, you had best just whip out the credit card as opposed to a wrench.
Apparently new motorcycles are not "modern vehicles" then...
I no longer want to ride an airhead. But, I can buy an MG with modern features that I can still work on myself and go to rally's with many others of like mind. I don't want to drive Pintos and Chevettes, didn't want to in the day either. There is a difference between vintage and shit. Airheads were never shit but Pintos and Chevettes were, so I don't really get the analogy.
Let me know how you make out with the rally/roadside repair on the ECU, ABS or other electronic compoent when it goes tit up on your Guzzi? Or by wrenching on your modern Guzzi were you talking about fluid changes and valve lash checks an maybe spark plugs and air filters changes te same things you can perform on a BMW or just about any other manufacturer?