New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Yeah, I thought that they already had a small bike.... DonG
Obviously I'm not Shorty , but yes that is a Bonneville Hack . Come to Cedar Vale and see it in person , and meet the , er , well "eccentric" guy that owns it Dusty
Yes. 2005 Bonneville with unknown age Dnepr sidecar. img free
Ha! Since I've not had the pleasure of meeting you, your height's not so obvious! I don't think making the trip to Cedar Vale this year is in the cards for me, I'm sure I will miss a good time with a bunch of good folks.The name Shorty brings back some good memories for me. I always called my Grandfather "Shorty". Shorty got his first motorcycle right after I got my first bike at age 15. He said he always wanted a bike but didn't want to be a "bad influence" on his grandkids. We had many fun rides together. We would pack up our bikes and head out for a week or so, covering several thousand miles. Good times!
NOGuzzi is a niche brand recognized for its venerable 90degree V twin, please don't chase the crowd building small displacement bikes. Others manufacturers have the resources to compete in the small bike market and they probably do it better than Guzzi ever could.Guzzi had their kick at small displacement 350 and 500 cc V Twins and they were not very successful. Build a 1000 ~ 1200cc true performance bike with top quality components. Make the ergos friendly for us older fellas and style it to appeal to the younger buyer.If it were red and had a bikini fairing with a dayglow orange patch and a nice pair of black exhaust pipes it would probably sell.
I don't see a point in building any "small" bike except a Falcone.A large part of Guzzi's attraction to both old fogies and young hipsters is its unique, retro character. For young hipsters, that's probably the only attraction.Only a traditional bike will set a small Guzzi apart in the market. But the old 350cc transverse v-twin just won't be powerful enough or different enough. A Falcone would be completely unique. For hipsters, 25 hp is enough. The more it looks like the old model, the better.Speaking as an old hipster, Moto
Small Bike ethos is in fullswing with these guys. Read the statements about why they do it. Interesting operation. They sell tickets for Saturday tours which includes a tour of the shop, a twenty mile rural tour with on the bikes with the owner/builders, and lunch as a group at a local sandwich shop.MII (Made in Indiana) I'm planning a visit.https://www.janusmotorcycles.com/
7K for 250cc bike seems excessive. For the same cash I would get Vespa 300, way more fun to ride and definitely more practical when comes to baggage loading capacity. In addition I would be riding a real thing not some retro looks like replica
I agree 7k is steep for a retro 250. But when you figure it's a USA shop, with 7 guys paying USA cost of living, and hand building many of the components, and trying to be profitable, I can see why they need to go for that. Plus every single bike is a custom build. There's no assembly line. These items are all fabricated in house, then of course all finish and assembly is in house:And lets face it, while the Vespa is a lot more technology...they are very very different machines
The Janus has a Chinese engine.
Benelli copy of a Honda with Guzzi badges.