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1968 Moto Guzzi V-7 - 3-Page Vintage Motorcycle Road Test Article

$ 7.89

Availability: 65 in stock
  • Make: Guzzi
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

    Description

    1968 Moto Guzzi V-7 - 3-Page Vintage Motorcycle Road Test Article
    Original, Vintage Magazine article
    Page Size: Approx. 8" x 11" (21 cm x 28 cm) each page
    Condition: Good
    GUZZI V-7
    AND NOW, A 700cc
    “MUSCLE MACHINE” FROM
    ITALY — A NEW CONTENDER
    FOR THE “SHAFT-DRIVE
    DEPENDABLE” CROWN!
    THE MOTO GUZZI V7 twin, was ori-
    ginally built to be a police motorcycle.
    When it was designed, due allowance was
    made for police accessories such as radio,
    footboards, windshield, sirens, and saddle
    panniers. As you know, a police machine
    must be able to accelerate rapidly, travel
    at extremely low speeds, sit and idle for
    long periods of time, and last but not least,
    give many thousands of miles of sendee
    before it wears out. Try to imagine what
    would happen if someone took a motor-
    cycle like this, and made a civilian grand
    touring machine out of it. This is exactly
    what Moto Guzzi has done with their new
    V7 twin. The following test contains views
    and options after having the V7 for a little
    over two weeks.
    Just about everything on this motorcycle
    is unusual. Best of all is the twin cylinder
    90 degree V-type engine. It is an overhead
    valve four stroke, with a bore of 80mm
    and a stroke of 70mm. Total displacement
    is 703.717cc, with a compression ratio of
    9 to 1. This big twin cranks out 50 horse-
    power at 6,300 rpm. Moto Guzzi, realizing
    that this bike would be used for police work,
    fitted hard chrome bores in light alloy cylin-
    ders. Many sets of pistons and rings should
    wear out before the cylinder bores will have
    to be changed. The cylinder heads are light
    alloy, and have a hemispherical combustion
    chamber. Lubrication is by the wet sump
    system just like in your family automobile.
    Because of this, no oil tank is needed.
    As you can gather from looking at the
    photographs, the V7 has no chain, and sec-
    ondary drive is by a double-joint driveshaft.
    Power is transferred from the engine to the
    transmission by a double plate, dry, auto-
    motive type clutch. The constant mesh gear-
    box has four speeds, and incorporates a
    cush drive that helps to add many more
    miles of use to the rear end assembly.
    The frame is of the duplex cradle variety....
    11944-6807-02
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