New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
If you could possibly wait, how about the new V85...??I would be reticent to enter the caper on a V7, should be fine most of the time but as a returned tourer you may have lost some skills regarding packing for a trip and take too much stuff..Only to find your 750 won't pull the skin off a rice pudding into a strong wind up a long hill.I have a 2 VPC Norge and they are an absolute known quantity. In the interim, I'd ride every damn one I could for a long way each, you won't know where it "bights" under 500 miles.Did you mention your height and physical capability with a taller seat ?In any case, ride lots of them as I say, and know what you're buying, there are so damn many fully farkled Guzzies on this forum with bugger all miles 'cos the owner has discovered something he did not find out prior to purchase.'Were it me...?I'd get a Beetled 2VPC Norge and take it away for a week.Do the startus modGrease the swingarm and suspension pivotsInstall a metal fuel filterAnd bugger off..Oh and BTW most importantlyWelcome to the Fun House and work out who knows what they're talking about... (Won't take long)Less time if you're an Aussie.Love, Huzo...
It'll be the majority but not the fast majority..
I have owned and toured on 1400cc sport touring and 1700cc touring bikes and I disagree with Mr. Huzo.The 750 will take you anywhere you care to go and will run over any legal speed limit in the US. And when you get to twisty mountain roads you will have a lot more fun on the 750.When I started riding 750cc bikes were the touring bikes.
PLENTY fast enough. We're not racing on the street.
Yeh me too. (1976)My only point is and always was, is that when two or more adverse conditions arrive at the same time, you won't have a comfortable margin of safety and performance for today's world.But anyway..I'm not absolutely sure that I'm right, I just haven't been wrong on this one yet..But given enough time, I'm sure I will be eventually.
People today have gotten lazy with the transmission. If they can't pass in top gear they aren't happy. Downshift and rev that baby out! I rode the pacific coast highway on a Kawasaki KLX250S, and people have completed the Iron Butt Rally 11,000 miles in 11 days on Kawasaki Ninja 250s.
Ive did the touring thing since the mid 70s on everything from a 500cc Honda silverwing, Honda CB750, honda CB 900, two goldwings, three Harley's and three moto Guzzis, hadn't been able to tour on the 1400 tourer yet due to the TPS SENSOR issue, but I'm working on that. Here's my point. After a few hours and 300 miles I've been ready to get my arse off every one of them....:)
I'll ponder that, but my intended response might be beyond the scope of this forum.Anyway, I sense massive thread drift about to occur.If Gene wants a mid sized bike and it needs to be a GuzziAnd he doesn't want to wait for the V85And he doesn't overload it with luggageAnd he doesn't go up massive hills into strong headwindsAnd he doesn't want "buffeting"Then one of those lovely little V7 Stone jiggers may well suffice for a few weeks 'till he gets the bug and becomes serious...!
Anyway, I wouldn�t worry about the V7 ii or iii dilemma. In my experience the little b@stards breed like wildfire once you get them in the garage. You will most likely end up owning more than one [emoji106]
I test drove both and ended up with a iii. I really like the extra power, a bit more refined (but still plenty of shake and chug), the idea of improved engine oiling, and bottom line I just found it more fun to ride than a ii.......Anyway, my vote is a iii.
Look at these deals! I bought my 2014 V7 Special from them.http://www.eurosports.net/default.asp?page=xInventoryDetail&id=5977377&p=1&s=Year&d=D&sq=m00080&fr=xfeaturedinventoryhttp://www.eurosports.net/default.asp?page=xInventoryDetail&id=5977368&p=1&s=Year&d=D&sq=m00112&fr=xfeaturedinventory
Wow. In one day 47 replies to my request for information. Just amazing. Thanks everyone for sharing your thoughts. All the opinions seem well reasoned and insightful.I do have some reservations on the musings of Huzo. Hard to take advice of one who was "subconsciously hoping his wife and his girl friend might become "friends."" (See reply #25).
So, what you are saying is buy a car to tour and ride a bike to local tavern or coffee shop.
I've heard this argument before, mostly from people who are fooling themselves.Most don't have the reaction time or skills to get out of a situation with a throttle that brakes (and/or better planning) wouldn't have worked better.