Back in the late 70's production races were fought out using Guzzi Le Mans, Ducati 900 ss, and Laverda Jotas. The sound alone has not been beaten since.
Absolutely, I went to a few endurance races in the early eighties, as you say Guzzi's, Dukes and Laverda's plus some BMW''s roaring around Paul Ricard topped off with a bit of howling four cylinder Kawasaki , unforgettable!
the first bike I rode in a "practice day" before track days was a Mk1 Guzzi LeMans, my road bike at the time. It was quick enough to make me realise I could race. Traded it to a local dealer for a CB900F and started racing...... now I have a Le Mans 1 (and several other Guzzi's) great things
❤ Love my Guzzis, but a favour the Tonti Tourers and Loop Frame Tourers. It is both impressive and a testament to Guzzi that it took a track day flogging and remained tractor like in it’s reliability. Bravo.
I bought my 75 Lemans 40 years ago. I have toured on it and tracked it a few times. Have done around 160,000km on it. Still have it and will keep it to the end. Great bike. I was impressed by Charlies performance as the Lemans isnt an easy bike to hussle on. Well done.
@@bigberthaontour I had to do the engine, gearbox and rear drive soon after I bought it as it was owned by some clown who only ever used a shifter, hammer and tightened ever nut until it stripped. I should have bought something else , but i persevered and spent a lot of cash. Since then I have done upgrades to the ignition, suspension and so on. ATM I am converting it to upright handle bars (shock...horror) as I just turned 70 and can't handle the clip ons anymore. That should give me a few more years on it. These are great bikes. So easy to work on, good handling, reasonable power, good sound.
@@GSXRwant1 the upright bars are a tough choice but definitely required for any level of comfort…can’t say it’s my go-to for a relaxing ride with its current riding position. Would be interested to see how it looks after the conversion, are you going to keep the screen?
@@bigberthaontour Well it does look a bit odd...Now I'm having second thoughts. I might just leave it with clip ons after all. Thing is I have a 79 Ducati Darmah as well so it can be the touring machine. Besides I have a 1250GS also so...
Thanks for the memories. I took my guzzi on a track day in the late 90's and was probably the best day I've had on a bike ever (been riding 50 years). I rode it to the track and lucky I had new tyres and my girlfriend brought extra fuel cause I used it all, with just enough to get home afterwards. It really surprised a few people how fast it was (I had a race specced engine)
I am a 78 yo Dutch male.I owned a V7 750 and a 850 GT. I often made holiday in the North of Italy and met Sgr Luciano Gazzola who was a test driver for Moto Guzzi and did Le Mans racing , together with Luciano Piazzalunga. I even met ingegnere Giulio Carcano. He had left Guzzi and designed sailing yachts. He circled around in Mandello on a trotter moped. He and his wife were cat lovers and they had about 15 cats. When I met Carcano for the second time he remembered only my dog, a beautiful Irish Setter.😢
Hermoso video mis felicitaciones a los dos por compartir esa misma pasión por las motos y mas aun en una Clásica Moto Guzzi . Un saludo a la distancia !!
I owned a 76 Le Mans in the blue color, a cheap kind of silver. It was replaced by the later Mk2, a tad more sophisticated but with the same heart. The Mr I models now attract big bucks as the “collector” merchants keep up their practice of forcing the oldsters up every year. The word “classic” destroyed a fine hobby and put the most mundane of old motorcycles out of the reach of many. This one went on down the road: your wife, ( not THE wife), rode it very well.
l owned a brand new LeMans, in my opinion the most iconic...certainly looks... Moto Guzzi ever..When these bikes were on sale you had a choice of Ducati 900SS, the Lemans and the Laverda Jota. It handle in true Italian style,. like it was on a railway line on long sweeping bends. It was just such a beautiful motorcycle. I'm very glad l can say l owned one in 78
Le Mans and Le Mans II are in my view the most beautiful bikes ever made. I had a Laverda 750SF myself and loved it, but would have traded it immediately for a 850 Le Mans 😀
@@bigberthaontour beautifully filmed ,fantastic narration -by the way both look great on the bike : correction your wife look stunning on and off the bike. You just look great on the bike :me being a heterosexual bloke 🎉😂LOL
My 2007 Griso 1100 sees several track dazys a year. It’s an absolute hoot and does very good on shorter twisty courses. It has a soul not found on Japanese bikes. Always lusted after a LeMans. Beautiful machine. Thank you for sharing your day.
Some memories there...my first 'proper' job was at Three Cross Motorcycles in 1978-9. Built loads of those up from the crate. Good bike then, and a good bike now!
I only rode a Le Mans once. It belonged to a good friend in the early eighties. A hell of a bike in it's day. My friend used it on a daily basis and racked up a fairly considerable mileage in the few years he owned it. I bet he wishes he hadn't sold it now.
My neighbour's mate offered me his Le Mans for a grand total of $7k Aud, about 15 years ago. It was in beautiful condition and I had the money. I sat on the thing, put my feet up on the pegs, reached over the tank to the low bars and declared that the seat was too hard, the bars were too low and the pegs were too high. I didn't even take it for a test ride! And they say that a fool and their money are soon parted. This fool still has his money. That bike's fetching the best part of $30k now, here.
Fantastic! A bike I always wanted back in the day. Unfortunately, as we were a couple and doing a lot of touring, we opted for a MkllA Commando and, later, a BMW R100, which was more comfortable but like a shed on two wheels. I managed to acquire a Guzzi Mille recently which allowed me to experience that wonderful engine and handling. Great.
Slick enjoyable watch. Well done on punting the Le Man on track so impressively. As an ex-owner (yes, mistake of my life) of the later day incarnation 1000S I can concur. Tonti's flat out handle, despite the telegraphic nature of gear changes. As a racer back then first thing I did to my 1000S was ditch the linked brakes for the reasons you state. Big twins and rear pedals do not work well together. Love the mess you made of those pegs. The side stand was always the road grinder for me.
Riding a slow bike fast is so much more fun than riding a fast bike slowly! Let´s see how many japanese supersport bikes will still be running at that age. I am considering bringing my Griso 1100 to a trackday, knowing that it will be the heaviest bike out there.
Very impressive that it still holds it's own in today's competition. There's huge satisfaction to be had in running rings round faster bikes with slower pilots. I rode a friend's Le Mans back in the day. It was my dream bike at the time. I recently bought a V100 Mandello (in red, obviously) which for me is like a futuristic version of the Le Mans.
We can only dream, I feel everything coming out of the factory is a bit lukewarm and running on nostalgia these days. A proper fire breathing v-twin sportsbike with Guzzi style would be ideal!
Great to see the old beast on the truck. I have a 76 T3 Cali and was staggered by its handling. The geometry is pretty much that of the Le Mans, stable yet flickable. I love the linked brakes by the way if not the massively heavy throttle. Look forward to the next video.
Lovely to see in action . Owned my mk2 for (Blimey) 35 years ! . Keeping up with some modern stuff ,impresive . Iv always likened it to riding henry the 5th,s war horse .
I owned for 7 year's and lived basically because I never had a car a 1983 850 Mach 3 le Mann , absolutely thrashed this bike put over 130,000 kms on it only doing basic maintenance. I've owned 36 bike's and the Guzzi was my favourite.
I had a Mk2 LM, it went very well on sweeping A roads. I used to use the link brakes mostly, the gear change was pretty slow, everything had to be done in advance and then come out of corners on a rising throttle. Great memories and I wish I still had it. My 1100 Stone has to satisfy my MG urges nowadays.
The linked brakes work lovely for road riding, makes for a very controlled and relaxed feel to riding fast roads, I just find at track pace they’re not ideal. The Guzzi spends most its time on the road though so the link brakes are staying put! 1100 stone is defo the nicest Cali! 🤘
My '86 Le Mans arrives on Friday, so I'm digesting everything Guzzi and this video, along with your other track day video on your 850, are the best I've seen. Very cool, nice work both of you!
my dad picked up a 86 mk3 a couple of years ago. It had been sitting covered in a garden since 1989, needed work but he only paid £200. A cousin has it now and is doing it up. That wasn't a typo. £200. Has about 18,000km on the clock.
I own a 76' first series 850 Le Mans and you are correct, they handle spectacularly even for today's standards. Very torquay as well and a splendid motorcycle over all. As they say, they don't make em like they used to😁
Can't imagine many Guzzi fan's taking their LeMans to a trackday. But nice to see it going round the corners so well. Certainly had a lot more character than those sole less newer sports bikes.
Probably wouldn’t be my first choice but we wanted to go on a track day and it’s all that’s in the garage that is remotely suitable! But on that performance I think it might do a few more :-)
Well, are you sure? They did very well in the BOTT etc. Guzzi’s are still a regular sight at clubraces on the european mainland for sure. It is also rather easy to find a 20 till 30bph extra… on a 2 valve… and some weight “shaving” is also rather easy 😊. Nice video!
@@motolab.EuropeanMotorcycles I'm clearly underestimating the beast! What's the main upgrades to get the horsepower? I always thought they came quite aggressively tuned from the factory
@@pmcg7823 funny you should mention that we had just done it before the trackday. Been weeping for about a year but wasn't enough to bother me, but then I didn't think they'd appreciate it at scrutineering!
Thanks for another great video, I had to check my garage though...phew my "Gina" is still there!! very similar to yours and always draws attention when out and about. On the plus side also, I can get around 250miles to a tankful...that's what a real classic sports tourer can do...all day long! Brilliant
I have raced an 850T based machine here in the states for 22 years now. Much of what Charlie and Owen describe is correct. And at 64 years of age with two artificial hips, and numerous torn rotator cuffs, the old girl takes all of my effort for an eight lap sprint on short circuits! Lol! One tip kids, take those silly "screens" off those open bell mouths! You gain five HP instantly! Really!
@@bigberthaontour Simply improves air flow into the carburetor. The velocity stack's are well designed and they really do what they were designed to do. Remember, the more air you suck in and blow out as efficiently as possible, well that makes HP! Especially in two valve pushrod motors. Oh, and bolt an open mega system on that thing!
I loved my old Guzzi Sport 1100 carb! It was so rewarding to ride hard! Total pig of a bike to ride around town with its 40mm Dellortos , but it’s one of my two favourites in my 36 years of motorcycling.
@@bigberthaontour you would not be disappointed! Lumpy cam, huge valves, brilliant handling and brakes. The carb had Marzocchi M1R forks that could be adjusted on the fly and WP rear. Keep the revs up and it was a gem! It was tuned like an endurance racer.
@@bigberthaontour I think only hundreds of the ‘95 carb Sport were built, but several thousand of the injected model in the years after. They had different rear wheel sizes(17 as opposed to 18 on the carb) and different forks(WP upside down forks on the injected). It took me a while to learn how to ride it, despite having quite a few years of experience by that stage.
I had a le mans 2 and loved it, my girl with her long legs didn,t 😁 and because we liked to ride duo and she was not going to get her own licence i had to trade the lovely italian for a comfortable german. But seeing you two have so much fun brings back some great memories 👍
Gorgeous motorcycle. I’ve never lived near enough to a Guzzi shop to want to buy one but I’ve always admired them. Anyway, it’s like the automotive motto for po folks; It’s always more fun to drive a slow bike fast than drive fast bike slowly.
I bought a brand new mark 2 in 1981, still my fav bike of all time. Wish I had never sold it, but you don't know at the time. I noticed your bike is a mark 2 but has a mark 1 fairing, I always much preferred the mark 1 look but never got around to swapping the fairings.
Guzzi won the 'Bol d'Argent' in 1980 on the Paul Ricard circuit ahead of Kawasaki. The 'Bol d'Argent' was a 6 hours race preceding the 'Bol d'Or' organized over 24 hours.
I had a mkl and mklll back in the 80s. Great bikes but they were along way behind the GSXR 750 srad of the 90s. But still bikes full of character and fun to ride. ( many of the mkll were converted to mkl looks.) 😊
40mm Mikuni flat-slides with a quarter turn twist grip will make opening the taps easier and will add horsepower out of the box. Get a kit for a 900 BMW and jetting will be just about spot-on. It’s fun winding on the throttle into right handers and feeling the torque response tip you in, isn’t it. Not so much fun on left handers though! Put the Mikunis on my rebuilt engine recently, and it started fifth revolution of the flywheel without using the throttle at all, just the chokes. Next morning it started first stab of the starter. It has a Tri-Spark electronic ignition in it which is also worth the investment.
Es fällt nicht leicht zu entscheiden wer schöner ist , das Motorrad oder die Beifahrerin 😂 wenn Owen mit ,,beiden" wenig Probleme hat dann hat er den Jackpot gewonnen 😊
Your like reminded me that I should have another look at your wife, eh, bike, bike! But wait a minute! That picture at 0:54 min can’t be of a 1977 bike because the cylinder heads are too square, and where first introduced on the LM3 in ‘82 😁
I booked my V7 special edition with the arrow exhausts looking forward to it :) maybe drive it to Italy if comfortable. Like a 10 hours drive for me so I do not know :) what u as a couple do looks very fun and inspiring to do.
nice vid, i had a Le Mans 2 in the 80´s, but i was to big for that small bike, the handling tho was outstanding, now driving a Cagiva Gran Canyon (with 70 plus). same super handling everything predictable. And only 75 horse, ut fun to drive..... keep on rolling...👍
I put a Tarozzi fork brace on my '79 1000SP just to keep the fork seals from blowing out (no snap ring or groove in the forks - weird), and was very surprised at how much more stable it was - highly recommended.
I could lend a V7 Sport for one day. Just on the road, I am no racer. I can tell you, that V7 Sport has excellent handling. During the last 50-ish years bikes have grown lighter, and brakes and suspension have developed, step by step things got better. But it is amazing how good that V7 Sport was. I expect this 850 Lemans to be pretty much like the V7 Sport. Slightly faster. Yes, installing a better fork feels great. Those are the things that really make a difference.
I have to admit that a girl on a moto guzzi is top but the girl on Le mans on a racetrack it georgeous and a holly gral to the classic moto racing sport. Congrets and big salute to the guzzi enthusiast on the island....
About shifting gear, do read that famous book of Bernt Spiegel. Many bikers have never learnt how to switch gears, they developed dangerous bad habbits themselves. Thing is your foot. But a bit of pressure to the pedal before you switch. That helps a lot. And, only remove that foot pressure after the clutch was released, or, in case you do not use the clutch, only remove the foot pressure when you feel the gearswitch is ready. That means, never do a short kick to the pedal. That may work with most gearboxes, but one day you'll end up switching to neutral, and result is no traction and leaving the tarmac or worse. Just because nobody has taught you how to shift gear the way the pro's do it. That is, the German pro's who NEVER have a gearshift going wrong. All you need to do is practise that, until it is second nature. And practise such details every time you ride. Gearswitch to neutral? Than you are doing it wrong. Keep pushing your foot longer, push until you are in the next gear, never let go earlier or you'll regret it.
Just dragged mine out of mothballs, hasn't been run in 30 years haven't even seen it in 10, not looking it's best but it could have been worse. Financial crisis was the motivation, to recommission and sell, but every time I look at it and see one of these videos I waver!
@@bigberthaontour sadly my rose tinted spectacles are more effective than my back, I rode a Fireblade about ten miles recently and was crippled! Be nice to ride it one more time though.....
Back in the late 70's production races were fought out using Guzzi Le Mans, Ducati 900 ss, and Laverda Jotas. The sound alone has not been beaten since.
Absolutely, I went to a few endurance races in the early eighties, as you say Guzzi's, Dukes and Laverda's plus some BMW''s roaring around Paul Ricard topped off with a bit of howling four cylinder Kawasaki , unforgettable!
The Jotas had a lovely sound, there's something about a triple that sets it apart.
Yep remember them. I always lusted after the Laverda Jota and Motto Guzzi, but ended up buying a Suzuki GS1000S with Blue n White colours, in 1980.
@@Yorkshiremadmick it was a good bike and lovely in that colour scheme so I can't disagree with your choice.
People forget how bad Japanese frames were.
Timeless motorcycle, more beautiful than most of the machines available today. It's a keeper, as well as your fast lass, appreciate both.
The best bike I've ridden! Been riding 50 years. Ticks all the boxes!!
the first bike I rode in a "practice day" before track days was a Mk1 Guzzi LeMans, my road bike at the time. It was quick enough to make me realise I could race. Traded it to a local dealer for a CB900F and started racing...... now I have a Le Mans 1 (and several other Guzzi's) great things
This is beautiful cinematography, fantastic execution, what a tribute to the Guzzi !!!
Thank you. Glad it’s been enjoyed. After 15 years of photography I’m still learning how video works but we’re slowly getting there!
I drooled over these when they came out.
Read every test, and have loved them ever since.
❤ Love my Guzzis, but a favour the Tonti Tourers and Loop Frame Tourers. It is both impressive and a testament to Guzzi that it took a track day flogging and remained tractor like in it’s reliability. Bravo.
I bought my 75 Lemans 40 years ago. I have toured on it and tracked it a few times. Have done around 160,000km on it. Still have it and will keep it to the end. Great bike.
I was impressed by Charlies performance as the Lemans isnt an easy bike to hussle on. Well done.
@@GSXRwant1 that’s incredible you’ve had it so long. How many rebuilds of the engine in that time?
@@bigberthaontour I had to do the engine, gearbox and rear drive soon after I bought it as it was owned by some clown who only ever used a shifter, hammer and tightened ever nut until it stripped. I should have bought something else , but i persevered and spent a lot of cash. Since then I have done upgrades to the ignition, suspension and so on. ATM I am converting it to upright handle bars (shock...horror) as I just turned 70 and can't handle the clip ons anymore. That should give me a few more years on it. These are great bikes. So easy to work on, good handling, reasonable power, good sound.
@@GSXRwant1 the upright bars are a tough choice but definitely required for any level of comfort…can’t say it’s my go-to for a relaxing ride with its current riding position. Would be interested to see how it looks after the conversion, are you going to keep the screen?
@@bigberthaontour Well it does look a bit odd...Now I'm having second thoughts. I might just leave it with clip ons after all. Thing is I have a 79 Ducati Darmah as well so it can be the touring machine. Besides I have a 1250GS also so...
@@GSXRwant1 oh wow, what a stable! What about a slightly raised clip on? Just a tad less aggressive
Thanks for the memories. I took my guzzi on a track day in the late 90's and was probably the best day I've had on a bike ever (been riding 50 years). I rode it to the track and lucky I had new tyres and my girlfriend brought extra fuel cause I used it all, with just enough to get home afterwards. It really surprised a few people how fast it was (I had a race specced engine)
I am a 78 yo Dutch male.I owned a V7 750 and a 850 GT. I often made holiday in the North of Italy and met Sgr Luciano Gazzola who was a test driver for Moto Guzzi and did Le Mans racing , together with Luciano Piazzalunga. I even met ingegnere Giulio Carcano. He had left Guzzi and designed sailing yachts. He circled around in Mandello on a trotter moped.
He and his wife were cat lovers and they had about 15 cats. When I met Carcano for the second time he remembered only my dog, a beautiful Irish Setter.😢
She is a very fine dame your LeMans! Beautiful in every way. Class, timeless design and a sound to savour. Wow.
I bought a LeMans 1000 in 1987. Quirky and full of character.
Hermoso video mis felicitaciones a los dos por compartir esa misma pasión por las motos y mas aun en una Clásica Moto Guzzi . Un saludo a la distancia !!
I almost wept as you came around the OUTside of something......wonderful and sounded beautiful.......
I owned a 76 Le Mans in the blue color, a cheap kind of silver. It was replaced by the later Mk2, a tad more sophisticated but with the same heart.
The Mr I models now attract big bucks as the “collector” merchants keep up their practice of forcing the oldsters up every year. The word “classic” destroyed a fine hobby and put the most mundane of old motorcycles out of the reach of many.
This one went on down the road: your wife, ( not THE wife), rode it very well.
l owned a brand new LeMans, in my opinion the most iconic...certainly looks... Moto Guzzi ever..When these bikes were on sale you had a choice of Ducati 900SS, the Lemans and the Laverda Jota. It handle in true Italian style,. like it was on a railway line on long sweeping bends. It was just such a beautiful motorcycle. I'm very glad l can say l owned one in 78
I've not ridden the Ducati but had a Jota for a while...was an awesome machine but found it very cumbersome in comparison...Jota out, Guzzi in!
Funny how the Ducati 900 is now a $100k motorcycle 🥵
Wow. So quick in the twisty bits. Absolute payback. Real thoroughbred.
I’ve had my hot-rodded Guzzi LeMans IV for over 36 years. Fantastic bike.
Great filming as ever and great to see the old girl (the Guzzi that is 😆) performing so well 👍 ….. your young lady looks good as well of course!
Thanks, glad our vid is being enjoyed.
Le Mans and Le Mans II are in my view the most beautiful bikes ever made. I had a Laverda 750SF myself and loved it, but would have traded it immediately for a 850 Le Mans 😀
They are a very unique looking bike, feel lucky to own one
@@bigberthaontour beautifully filmed ,fantastic narration -by the way both look great on the bike : correction your wife look stunning on and off the bike. You just look great on the bike :me being a heterosexual bloke 🎉😂LOL
My 2007 Griso 1100 sees several track dazys a year. It’s an absolute hoot and does very good on shorter twisty courses. It has a soul not found on Japanese bikes. Always lusted after a LeMans. Beautiful machine. Thank you for sharing your day.
Wow that’s a rare one to see on a track day…but definitely capable too. Probs sounds the best out there too!
Enjoyed the ride along, have a blessed week my friends, my current bike is a 1974 XLH
Some memories there...my first 'proper' job was at Three Cross Motorcycles in 1978-9.
Built loads of those up from the crate.
Good bike then, and a good bike now!
I only rode a Le Mans once. It belonged to a good friend in the early eighties. A hell of a bike in it's day. My friend used it on a daily basis and racked up a fairly considerable mileage in the few years he owned it. I bet he wishes he hadn't sold it now.
My neighbour's mate offered me his Le Mans for a grand total of $7k Aud, about 15 years ago. It was in beautiful condition and I had the money. I sat on the thing, put my feet up on the pegs, reached over the tank to the low bars and declared that the seat was too hard, the bars were too low and the pegs were too high. I didn't even take it for a test ride!
And they say that a fool and their money are soon parted. This fool still has his money. That bike's fetching the best part of $30k now, here.
Fantastic! A bike I always wanted back in the day. Unfortunately, as we were a couple and doing a lot of touring, we opted for a MkllA Commando and, later, a BMW R100, which was more comfortable but like a shed on two wheels. I managed to acquire a Guzzi Mille recently which allowed me to experience that wonderful engine and handling. Great.
Slick enjoyable watch. Well done on punting the Le Man on track so impressively. As an ex-owner (yes, mistake of my life) of the later day incarnation 1000S I can concur. Tonti's flat out handle, despite the telegraphic nature of gear changes. As a racer back then first thing I did to my 1000S was ditch the linked brakes for the reasons you state. Big twins and rear pedals do not work well together. Love the mess you made of those pegs. The side stand was always the road grinder for me.
Riding a slow bike fast is so much more fun than riding a fast bike slowly! Let´s see how many japanese supersport bikes will still be running at that age. I am considering bringing my Griso 1100 to a trackday, knowing that it will be the heaviest bike out there.
Hi I had its predecessor the Centuro Raceco remap and Termignonis, yellow, bloody brilliant
Very impressive that it still holds it's own in today's competition. There's huge satisfaction to be had in running rings round faster bikes with slower pilots. I rode a friend's Le Mans back in the day. It was my dream bike at the time. I recently bought a V100 Mandello (in red, obviously) which for me is like a futuristic version of the Le Mans.
Cracking video, thank you. I have my fingers crossed that Moto Guzzi will reinvigorated the Le Mans marque with the new 1000cc engine.
We can only dream, I feel everything coming out of the factory is a bit lukewarm and running on nostalgia these days. A proper fire breathing v-twin sportsbike with Guzzi style would be ideal!
The guzzis always sounded like a built small block muscle car. No silly games, all business.
They're brilliant riding machines, i'd happily ride my 8v 1200 all day every day if work and other things didn't get in the way.
My favourite historic Guzzi! I’d love to see it racing its contemporaries.
Lovely to see her being used for what she was built
Beautiful I owned one of these forty years ago in Australia for a year or so loved it
Great to see the old beast on the truck. I have a 76 T3 Cali and was staggered by its handling. The geometry is pretty much that of the Le Mans, stable yet flickable. I love the linked brakes by the way if not the massively heavy throttle. Look forward to the next video.
Thanks. Linked brakes are awesome on the road. I used to have a T3 and loved the almost laziness of using them.
@@bigberthaontour I think that’s it really. A relaxed ride. Mine did a trip to Spain and back with no bother.
If you swap the heavy carburettor springs for ducati 900 springs, it makes it easier to open the throttle fully and hold it there.
I had a mk2 and absolutely loved it.
Nice, I have a Guzzi Le Mans Mk4 (Coke colours) close ratio box. It's a beast!
And the sound, oh the sound, gives me goosebumps.
Lovely to see in action . Owned my mk2 for (Blimey) 35 years ! . Keeping up with some modern stuff ,impresive . Iv always likened it to riding henry the 5th,s war horse .
Had mine for about same time ,will never part .
great video - enjoyed it at lot - thanks for going to the trouble of making it.
I owned for 7 year's and lived basically because I never had a car a 1983 850 Mach 3 le Mann , absolutely thrashed this bike put over 130,000 kms on it only doing basic maintenance.
I've owned 36 bike's and the Guzzi was my favourite.
I had a Mk2 LM, it went very well on sweeping A roads.
I used to use the link brakes mostly, the gear change was pretty slow, everything had to be done in advance and then come out of corners on a rising throttle.
Great memories and I wish I still had it.
My 1100 Stone has to satisfy my MG urges nowadays.
The linked brakes work lovely for road riding, makes for a very controlled and relaxed feel to riding fast roads, I just find at track pace they’re not ideal. The Guzzi spends most its time on the road though so the link brakes are staying put!
1100 stone is defo the nicest Cali! 🤘
Really enjoyed the vlog. Gorgeous Guzzi.
I used to have a LM3, still miss that bike. You guys are brave… parking that thing on the side stand
Beautiful lady on legend bikes is amazing! I love GUZZI!
super Video... I own a Guzzi since 1981
I love Moto Gazzi's They handle and sound great .
My '86 Le Mans arrives on Friday, so I'm digesting everything Guzzi and this video, along with your other track day video on your 850, are the best I've seen. Very cool, nice work both of you!
Thanks mate. Enjoy your new purchase, very special machines to own, feel lucky to have one myself!
my dad picked up a 86 mk3 a couple of years ago. It had been sitting covered in a garden since 1989, needed work but he only paid £200. A cousin has it now and is doing it up. That wasn't a typo. £200. Has about 18,000km on the clock.
My compliments both for the bike and the wife
Fantastic,I love my Guzzi.
I own a 76' first series 850 Le Mans and you are correct, they handle spectacularly even for today's standards. Very torquay as well and a splendid motorcycle over all.
As they say, they don't make em like they used to😁
Can't imagine many Guzzi fan's taking their LeMans to a trackday. But nice to see it going round the corners so well. Certainly had a lot more character than those sole less newer sports bikes.
Probably wouldn’t be my first choice but we wanted to go on a track day and it’s all that’s in the garage that is remotely suitable! But on that performance I think it might do a few more :-)
Well, are you sure? They did very well in the BOTT etc. Guzzi’s are still a regular sight at clubraces on the european mainland for sure.
It is also rather easy to find a 20 till 30bph extra… on a 2 valve… and some weight “shaving” is also rather easy 😊. Nice video!
Truly inspirational 😊 Now I need to fix that leaky main seal on mine😂
@@motolab.EuropeanMotorcycles I'm clearly underestimating the beast! What's the main upgrades to get the horsepower? I always thought they came quite aggressively tuned from the factory
@@pmcg7823 funny you should mention that we had just done it before the trackday. Been weeping for about a year but wasn't enough to bother me, but then I didn't think they'd appreciate it at scrutineering!
Simply gorgeous! Thanks for the video.
Thanks for another great video, I had to check my garage though...phew my "Gina" is still there!! very similar to yours and always draws attention when out and about. On the plus side also, I can get around 250miles to a tankful...that's what a real classic sports tourer can do...all day long! Brilliant
Miss my 1100 sport really much by seeing this.
Luckily I still have my 96
@@cota2472000 Nice. That is with injection?
No.Mine has the Carburetorsand Conentional forks@@Fivevalve
I loved my 1000S 👌🏻😎 the Le Mans Mk1 was my poster bike as a teenager 🙌🏻😎
My mate Rich has the 1000s and it’s so nice to ride. Tad more comfy and refined than the Lemans but still very much a proper Guzzi!!!
I have raced an 850T based machine here in the states for 22 years now. Much of what Charlie and Owen describe is correct. And at 64 years of age with two artificial hips, and numerous torn rotator cuffs, the old girl takes all of my effort for an eight lap sprint on short circuits! Lol! One tip kids, take those silly "screens" off those open bell mouths! You gain five HP instantly! Really!
Still thrashing it mate, great to hear! Not that I'll understand the physics but how come there is such a big gain from removing the screens?
@@bigberthaontour Simply improves air flow into the carburetor. The velocity stack's are well designed and they really do what they were designed to do. Remember, the more air you suck in and blow out as efficiently as possible, well that makes HP! Especially in two valve pushrod motors. Oh, and bolt an open mega system on that thing!
@@krtt750 will definitely be trying that later! Maybe not the megaphones, don’t think it’ll get by trackday noise testing in the UK like that!
I've never seen one at that lean angle before, I will have to try it on mine.
Sticky tyres, a couple of laps to warm them up and a grippy race track make a world of difference!
Nicely done, you two. 'Rear of the Year' at 3.16m. I have a 1980 Le Mans (lafranconi Organ on youtube). Good to see yours getting some gas
I loved my old Guzzi Sport 1100 carb! It was so rewarding to ride hard! Total pig of a bike to ride around town with its 40mm Dellortos , but it’s one of my two favourites in my 36 years of motorcycling.
Easiest bike doesn’t win the fun category! Would love to try one of those
@@bigberthaontour you would not be disappointed! Lumpy cam, huge valves, brilliant handling and brakes. The carb had Marzocchi M1R forks that could be adjusted on the fly and WP rear. Keep the revs up and it was a gem! It was tuned like an endurance racer.
@@NoName-ds5uq sounds good, been added to my list of “bikes I need to try!”
@@bigberthaontour I think only hundreds of the ‘95 carb Sport were built, but several thousand of the injected model in the years after. They had different rear wheel sizes(17 as opposed to 18 on the carb) and different forks(WP upside down forks on the injected).
It took me a while to learn how to ride it, despite having quite a few years of experience by that stage.
🤩 the last clip/scene was inspiring. 👍👍
Lovely bike. Been looking at one of these. Great looking bike.
I had a le mans 2 and loved it, my girl with her long legs didn,t 😁 and because we liked to ride duo and she was not going to get her own licence i had to trade the lovely italian for a comfortable german. But seeing you two have so much fun brings back some great memories 👍
Great video and your wife is to be commended Charlie bossed the 850 LeMan
She gets on with it really well…not the simplest things to ride if you’re not used to them either!
Gorgeous motorcycle. I’ve never lived near enough to a Guzzi shop to want to buy one but I’ve always admired them. Anyway, it’s like the automotive motto for po folks; It’s always more fun to drive a slow bike fast than drive fast bike slowly.
I bought a brand new mark 2 in 1981, still my fav bike of all time. Wish I had never sold it, but you don't know at the time. I noticed your bike is a mark 2 but has a mark 1 fairing, I always much preferred the mark 1 look but never got around to swapping the fairings.
Guzzi won the 'Bol d'Argent' in 1980 on the Paul Ricard circuit ahead of Kawasaki. The 'Bol d'Argent' was a 6 hours race preceding the 'Bol d'Or' organized over 24 hours.
This is soo great to watch. Thank you so much.
That’s great to hear, really glad it’s being enjoyed
Good job by both of you on the Guzzi, it held its own out there and probably surprised a few with its cornering abilities👍
I had a mkl and mklll back in the 80s. Great bikes but they were along way behind the GSXR 750 srad of the 90s. But still bikes full of character and fun to ride. ( many of the mkll were converted to mkl looks.) 😊
Guzzi aren't famous for rapidly updating with the times beyond the MK I! But as a road bike I'd always take character over performance!
40mm Mikuni flat-slides with a quarter turn twist grip will make opening the taps easier and will add horsepower out of the box. Get a kit for a 900 BMW and jetting will be just about spot-on. It’s fun winding on the throttle into right handers and feeling the torque response tip you in, isn’t it. Not so much fun on left handers though! Put the Mikunis on my rebuilt engine recently, and it started fifth revolution of the flywheel without using the throttle at all, just the chokes. Next morning it started first stab of the starter. It has a Tri-Spark electronic ignition in it which is also worth the investment.
Anatema blasfemo! Scomunicato!
@@banmadabonlol. I haven’t found a set of Dell’Ortos I didn’t dislike.
I had the 500 (V50), what a great handling bike. Nothing wrong with the bike that a can of WD40 couldn't fix ;-) The 850 was the stuff of dreams.
Nice video guys. Good luck with your channel.
Es fällt nicht leicht zu entscheiden wer schöner ist , das Motorrad oder die Beifahrerin 😂 wenn Owen mit ,,beiden" wenig Probleme hat dann hat er den Jackpot gewonnen 😊
Yes it does feel like that sometimes Wolfgang :-)
I fancied a Guzzi 750 S3 that a local bike shop had - it was tiny but was the abs. business looks wise. I think the mark 1 L Man was the best.
Your like reminded me that I should have another look at your wife, eh, bike, bike! But wait a minute! That picture at 0:54 min can’t be of a 1977 bike because the cylinder heads are too square, and where first introduced on the LM3 in ‘82 😁
Ha, can’t get anything past Guzzi owners…way too observant!
I booked my V7 special edition with the arrow exhausts looking forward to it :) maybe drive it to Italy if comfortable. Like a 10 hours drive for me so I do not know :) what u as a couple do looks very fun and inspiring to do.
Wonderful light Blue Eyes! 😍
Moto Guzzi 👍
Great film, lovely bike.
Grüße 🖖 von einem Guzzi Fahrer. Danke für diesen schönen Beitrag.
Gern geschehen 🇩🇪🏴 grüße von wales
nice vid, i had a Le Mans 2 in the 80´s, but i was to big for that small bike, the handling tho was outstanding, now driving a Cagiva Gran Canyon (with 70 plus). same super handling everything predictable. And only 75 horse, ut fun to drive..... keep on rolling...👍
@@mobylas yeah I do love it be exactly the same problem…at 6’3” it’s not a comfy place to be!
Most interesting video for me so far!
You are definitely improving your videos I see a lot of potential in you owen❤ :)
Nice. I guess you also upgraded the suspension. My old Guzzi Spada got quite bouncy two up.
I think its got a set of Koni's on the back
I loved the vid
I wish a video like this was around for the honda vfr 750
i'm curious how that would do on a track with the weight
@@drunkenhunter I mean if you want to lend me yours… 🤣
Really good video, lovely bike.
I put a Tarozzi fork brace on my '79 1000SP just to keep the fork seals from blowing out (no snap ring or groove in the forks - weird), and was very surprised at how much more stable it was - highly recommended.
I could lend a V7 Sport for one day. Just on the road, I am no racer. I can tell you, that V7 Sport has excellent handling. During the last 50-ish years bikes have grown lighter, and brakes and suspension have developed, step by step things got better. But it is amazing how good that V7 Sport was. I expect this 850 Lemans to be pretty much like the V7 Sport. Slightly faster. Yes, installing a better fork feels great. Those are the things that really make a difference.
You are the winner of the race with the old "cement mixer" :-) #Guzzisoundisthebest#
Great video, fab couple !
Fantastic intro to the video
Beatifull bike Indeed !!
I still have my '78 Series 1 Mark 2 ("Chip taillight").
I have to admit that a girl on a moto guzzi is top but the girl on Le mans on a racetrack it georgeous and a holly gral to the classic moto racing sport. Congrets and big salute to the guzzi enthusiast on the island....
She might be fifty years old but she sounds amazing and definitely deserves her place on the track
A stunner being ridden by a stunner, you're a very lucky man
Couldn't agree more!
That's a nice video.
Go Lemans!👍
I have a 1100 California 1997 its bye far the best bike I've ever had
About shifting gear, do read that famous book of Bernt Spiegel. Many bikers have never learnt how to switch gears, they developed dangerous bad habbits themselves. Thing is your foot. But a bit of pressure to the pedal before you switch. That helps a lot. And, only remove that foot pressure after the clutch was released, or, in case you do not use the clutch, only remove the foot pressure when you feel the gearswitch is ready. That means, never do a short kick to the pedal. That may work with most gearboxes, but one day you'll end up switching to neutral, and result is no traction and leaving the tarmac or worse. Just because nobody has taught you how to shift gear the way the pro's do it. That is, the German pro's who NEVER have a gearshift going wrong. All you need to do is practise that, until it is second nature. And practise such details every time you ride. Gearswitch to neutral? Than you are doing it wrong. Keep pushing your foot longer, push until you are in the next gear, never let go earlier or you'll regret it.
Just dragged mine out of mothballs, hasn't been run in 30 years haven't even seen it in 10, not looking it's best but it could have been worse. Financial crisis was the motivation, to recommission and sell, but every time I look at it and see one of these videos I waver!
Selling not an option! Get that tractorrrrrr back on the plough!
@@bigberthaontour sadly my rose tinted spectacles are more effective than my back, I rode a Fireblade about ten miles recently and was crippled! Be nice to ride it one more time though.....
Beautiful bike
Amazing bike!
Couple of guys from Australia that post guzzi tuneing and there's a German firm that will do engine work (if you are well funded)