MV AGUSTA ENDURO VELOCE
For this was the motorcycle that Stefan Pierer himself told me last June, after he'd purchased an initial 25.1 per cent slice of MV Agusta from its then-owners, that in his opinion MV should not be making! "Adventure bikes are a big market sector, but they're also the most difficult segment, and the most competitive to be present in," he told me. "Nobody is waiting for such a model from MV Agusta."
Yet, six months later at last November's EICMA Milan Show, the MV Agusta stand saw the renewed unveiling of what had been called the Lucky Explorer 9.5 when the covers first came off it two years earlier. Now redubbed the MV Agusta Enduro Veloce, and with the benefit of two further years of development in the company's CRC R&D base in San Marino, now itself renamed MV Agusta Centro Stile, the bike the boss didn't want built has entered production and is available at MV dealers around the world. Maybe that's happened simply because too much money had already been invested in it for it to be terminated, the very same reason that McKinsey pundit Tue Mantoni was prevented from cancelling the 675 Daytona project when he was appointed Triumph's Commercial Director in 2003 and wanted to turn the brand into a British Harley-Davidson. Tipping wads of cash down the drain by binning a project in which so much time and money had already been invested is likely to have sat just as badly with Stefan Pierer as with Triumph owner John Bloor and look how well JB's decision to gainsay Mantoni and build the iconic 675 Daytona paid off!
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Denne historien er fra October 2024-utgaven av Motorcycle Sport & Leisure.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Honda CRF1100L ES Africa Twin
Without panniers he was adventuring nowhere - so at least Bertie's got something sorted now
BMW R 12 nineT
Chad gets a track day surprise when BMW's R 12 nineT turns out to be surprisingly fun on track
Test fleet: VOGE 525 DSX
After testing the Voge's abilities on a long ride, it was time to take it to the Cotswolds and see how it would manage on the rougher stuff
Portuguese Perambulations
Nearly over before it had begun, a brief workshop stint allows Spain and Portugal to be explored
Highway to Heaven
Three friends take on the challenge of riding the length of Canada, from Vancouver in the southwest to Inuvik in the north. The road is long, the conditions merciless, and wildfires are tearing through the country. To top it all off, the final leg of the journey is the ultimate test of gravel riding skills, nerves, and courage - it's the legendary Dempster Highway...
Battlaxes at the ready!
We tend to take tyres for granted, never really looking at them in any detail, or at how they work, just hoping that they keep us shiny side up at all times. Even in the wet
Ducati Riding Experience
When I rode the Ducati DesertX to France last year, I did have a bit of an explore on some easy fire roads and gentle green lanes in the wilds of the Médoc area, but was left with the feeling that, had I the experience, the DesertX would have been capable of taking me along some more extreme trails to some even more exciting places. If only there was a way of finding out just how well the Italian adventure bike could cope with some more extreme terrain...
Four pot flyer
Many said that sports bikes, and particularly bikes in the traditional Supersports class that was populated by 600cc inline fours, were dead. Maybe they spoke too soon?...
Eastern adventurer
With an increasing interest in smaller capacity adventure bikes, the market expands with a new entry
First Time Lucky?
It's ironic that the first all-new MV Agusta model to hit the marketplace right after Italy's No.1 trophy brand was acquired by Austrian giant Pierer Mobility, owner of off-road titans KTM, should be the company's first dual-purpose model of the modern era, powered by MV's all-new 931cc three-cylinder engine that's destined to form the basis of a whole series of new models in coming months and years.