1971 Moto Guzzi Nuovo Falcone

Nothing like flogging an old bike in a new chassis, where have I seen that before, oh, yes! It was called an Atlas :!:
 
Do not feed the trolls...

The only vehicle ever made that didn't do something similar was the Trabant ?

47kw from a lightweight 500 would give some modern machinery a run for their money ?
If it could be done...

Do not feed the trolls...
 
I like this better :

1971 Moto Guzzi Nuovo Falcone
 
'Do not feed the trolls' ?
I wonder if a Norton Inter would be as fast as that Falcone racer ?
 
Different eras, to start with = chalk and cheese ?
Aren't you always on about mixing eras, thus making bikes uncompetitive ?

You can make an ES2 as fast, or faster, than a manx these days.
First, throw away all the ES2 bits and start again. ??
Same with a Falcone, we may suggest.
Let alone a wartime version... ?
 
I have both 59' Falcone Tourismo and a 47' Super Alce. The SA has a fixed gearing with the sprocket on the brake drum like a Commando and is like riding a 3 speed even with a bigger CS sprocket. First gear is worthless. Where the Falcone you change the sprockets and engine internals for a faster ride..Both are a hoot to ride ...........


Tim_S
 
Rohan, It is not the eras but the type of bike which should determine eligibility to race. Three heats fixes all differences in speeds. If you take any thirties four stroke single and fill it full of 2013 parts, it will go quick. If you take a Scott Squirrel two stroke and do similar, it will hose off any fourstroke. Historic racing as we know it is bullshit. There is no class for my Seeley Commando 850. What I want to race against is Ducati, Norton, Triunph, BMW, Moto Guzzi, aircooled singles twins and triples - THUNDERBIKES. Not two strokes or four cylinder superbikes. What we see in Australia as historic racing has no spectator or competitor appeal - nobody really races, it is a procession which looks like traffic on a freeway. - BORING and EXPENSIVE !
If I had my way I'd start the concept of classic racing , and hold the Australian Classic TT, Australian Classic GP, and Australian Classic Superbike Championships. And I'd run cross period with slow and fast heats and finals. In 27 races we could cover three capacity classes for each major type , and three heats. - One day's racing !
In the olden days when we raced, we got a ride in a heat, and in a final if we were quick enough. We got a ride in the next up capacity class for heats and finals, unless we had an Unlimited bike. We also got a ride in the next higher rider graded race unless we were A graders. These days it is all in togerther r gardless of major differences in racing lines or speeds, it is all based on date of manufacture and capacities - IDIOCY.
 
Now I'm confused. !

I've seen a 20s CS1 (cammy Norton), that was fast for its era, blitz the field.
And it looked 100% 1920s.
If it was racing amongst anything other than 1920s bikes, its history and relevance has been lost ?

Your allsorts racing would need to lose the 'Classic' or 'Historic' tag ?
 
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