Moto Morini has a history going back to 1937, but these new bikes are nothing like your father’s Golden Eagle. The Italian company’s motorcycles found their way around the world off and on, however now under new ownership (again), the brand is looking to distribute a new line of affordable twin-cylinder 650cc motorcycles.
Alfonso Morini started by making loophole motorcycles in Italy in the 1930s. They made since at the time because you didn’t need a driving license to operate one, they were cheaper than cars, and were taxed at a lower rate. After the war, though, the company switched to making two-stroke 125cc motorcycles, which quickly led to 125cc four-stroke bikes that even won a grand prix in 1951 at Monza, and 175cc screamers.
Moto Morini, though, was an innovator. The brand became famous for its V-twin 3 ½ bikes and its 500cc enduro bikes from the 1970s, as well as for being the first to incorporate a six-speed transmission. But, by the late 1980s the brand was stagnant and snapped up by the trademark-happy Cagiva brand, which also acquired Husqvarna, Ducati, and MV Agusta around the same time. Though Moto Morini tried again in the early 2000s with some large-displacement performance bikes like the Corsaro and 9 ½, the new company wasn’t able to survive.
In 2018 the company became part of the Zhongneng Vehicle Group. Znen, as it’s often called, has made 50cc and 150cc near copies of Vespa scooters, quads, and inexpensive electric scooters. But Znen has ambitions to make Moto Morini relevant again, and especially in the U.S., where the company recently announced it would launch a dealer network.
Today, the reborn Moto Morini makes two bikes, a classic naked-styled bike called appropriately the Seiemmezzo, or the “six and a half,” and the X-Cape, an adventure bike. The Seiemmezzo, stylized with an extra M, comes in STR, or street style, and the SCR, or scrambler, style. It has the same parallel twin that CF Moto uses in its new 650cc bikes.
The X-Cape has the same 650cc engine with the same bore and stroke. It can, however, come outfitted with Marzocchi forks, Brembo brakes and heated grips. It also has available aluminum cases and trunk and off-road accessories like engine and hand guards.
Eventually the brand will reportedly import a 97-horsepower 750cc V twin engine, but there’s no word if the monstrous 1187cc and 998cc V-twins from 20 years ago will return.
from Bike EXIF https://ift.tt/0NnscKz
No comments:
Post a Comment