New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
I liked the 1100 motor but the fueling was awful. Lots of pinging even on the highest grade fuel readily available.
A bit of haggling and it's yours for $3800
Or wait it out a few weeks/months then with little to no haggeling you'll get it for substancially less. If someone steps in and pays at or near $4200 a fool and his money are soon parted. Flame proof suit still on but I challange someone to prove me wrong on an actually selling price in the last 6 months for an 11 year old Griso. Not a friends next door neighbor friends cousin barbors and actual known sale.
Perrazimx, do your own research.My advice would be not to worry too much about the money, but to try to decide if you like the bike well enough to pay enough to get it, even if it's above somebody's idea of the market value. If you buy Guzzis never planning to sell them, you're buying wisely. A couple hundred bucks for convenience now won't make any difference at all in the long run. My opinion. Worth what you paid for it.Moto
So reverse about 6 threads back. I've owned a 2007 Griso + a few other Guzzi's to include Eldo's, 850T's, T3's. Converts, small blocks (modern and vintage), Quotas, Bassa's. I'm fairly well versed on Guzzi's. I'm saying having owned a 2007 Griso I wouldn't pay (and would ne hard pressed) more than $2500 for a clean example. I could care less if you mortgage you house or sell you liver to buy one. It doesn't increase their likeability, value or salability. Post up a Guzzi, any Guzzi and folks will fawn all over it! Taking about great they are and how it is a lot of bike for the money. If they were closer or had space in their garage they'd be all over it. The reality is the bike could be for sale next to their empty 30 car garage and the bike would still be for sale. The new Guzzi market is abysmal at best, try selling an ordinary 11 year old model for top dollar, ain't happening. For the record I bought my 2007 Griso OTD for 7,000 rode it for 6,000 miles and sold it a couple years later for $5,500. Since then I do not think the value has increased but steadily declined. Now the leftover 4V Griso's are being are being deeply discounted further killing the earlier 2V Griso values. Again its your money spend it how you want.
Look, I don't care about your opinion. I'm just saying don't be challenging people to prove you're wrong. Prove you're right yourself if your correctness matters so much to you.FWIW, kbb.com says trade in for an excellent example should be $3540 and retail $5550 in my zip code. I don't care if they're right either.I recommend we all enjoy riding and leave the market research to the horse traders. If you're too concerned about the prices you'll miss the fun.You're taking this all too seriously. Moto
Sold my 07 griso last year for $5500. Low miles, (under 5k) with a lot of extras. It now lives in St. Cloud Minn. I would probably give him exactly what he paid me to have it back. I liked it that much. Oh well.Randy
Thanks for the opinions...I'm causally looking for a Griso..First thing is to find one locally so I can take a ride...The Guzzi is a lot heavier than my Ducati and vintage Triumph ......I'm not one of those guys that goes by so called "Blue book" prices....I buy what I like and if it's 10 percent more ,so what, it's a motorcycle not a retirement fund...
" it's a motorcycle not a retirement fund...Bloody BINGO...!!!Both of you nailed it, I wish more people thought like this.Here's mine.