Another one ?? says the wife.

Respect

The most handsome LM ever
I have a modified Magni LM, but I would trade the extra power and handling for a LM1 style and heritage in a second
 
:bounce1 guys it was my birthday ... I got a mop and you are all going lovey eyes over a motorbike ...... Least the bike lives in the barn and the mop lives in the cupboard.........
 
As one who has f*cked up at least one Significant Birthday in the past concerning Mrs Og,
i would take the above post to be a (quite gentle - all things considered) big hint and warning! :eek:
 
but proff laughs in the face of danger:rob right up until she rams that mop up his nose:D:D:D:D
 
I have studied all the above photos and studied the item in detail.

The beautiful red colour is the proper Ferrari red. All the mechanisms work perfectly and I've checked all the serial numbers.

I have now concluded that it is indeed not a Mk1 but it is instead an early MKII....
















MOP. :D

Bike is the same apparently. Frame no. puts it as one of the first of the MkIIs the give away is also the brake callipers behind the fork legs whereas they are in front on MkIs. Never mind, it still looks, sounds and rides like a MkI so Proff is "not bovvered". Similar one sold by auction house in London recently, same year and spec (ie early MkII done to look as MkI) for £7,150!

I've had to put new carpet in my workshop under it and give it my very best bike cover. Trouble is, I keep removing the cover as I just want to stare as it. I most definitely have first dibs on this so no one else is ever getting it.



PS Pinklady is my wife who had her birthday the other day. Proff would never spoil his wife as much as I do mine. Mind you Pinklady (Ann) might shove the Mop up Proff for distracting me with that bike. It scared the horses a fair bit when we revved in up just as she was giving horse riding lessons.:)
 
I have studied all the above photos and studied the item in detail.

The beautiful red colour is the proper Ferrari red. All the mechanisms work perfectly and I've checked all the serial numbers.

I have now concluded that it is indeed not a Mk1 but it is instead an early MKII....
















MOP. :D

Bike is the same apparently. Frame no. puts it as one of the first of the MkIIs the give away is also the brake callipers behind the fork legs whereas they are in front on MkIs. Never mind, it still looks, sounds and rides like a MkI so Proff is "not bovvered". Similar one sold by auction house in London recently, same year and spec (ie early MkII done to look as MkI) for £7,150!

<anorak>

the fork legs are interchangeable, but not the same. mk 1s have thinner walls. mk 2s also have air suspension valves in the fork tops. if you find air valves on a mk 1 it's prolly got later stanchions.

either type are reversible so the calipers are at the back. indeed, you will notice on such bikes, the drains are now at the front in what is clearly not the original place as designed.

the real giveaway with the forks is the distance between them. mk 2s are further apart & use a correspondingly different mudguard with bevelled edges. that's how i knew from the pictures that the bike had mk 2 forks, at least.

no mark 1 ever had a flap over the filler cap either.

other than that and the fairing, there is not much difference between the mk 1 and 2. different mounts for the instruments by the look of yours.

i reckon most 2s are now in mk 1 guise as they are much more sought after. oddly, in comparison to other makes, such transformations seem much less significant to guzzi owners generally.

sure, there is a difference in price but not the snobbery i'd have expected.

i reckon yours was priced a little cheap, and looks and sounds a very nice bike. just paint the black back onto the top and bottom* of the petrol tank and try and find an original seat.

at the risk of boring the shit out of everyone, i'll tell you the difference between the, so called "series 1 and series 2" 850 lemans (never officially a mk 1 of course).

series 1
very rare now. only made for a few months.

round rear light.

front indicators mounted on the frame.

plain heel plates on the footrest mounts.

series 2
oblong rear light.

front indicators mounted on the bottom fork yoke.

embossed heel plates on the footrest mounts.

if there are any other differences, i don't know what they are.



*paint it straight across like the factory did it. it's very tempting to follow the curve of the tank. lots do it that way, but it always looks bad.
 
A couple more pics.
As Cookie sez it's a Mk2 but apparently it's been in this guise this since before 1980
Round Barrels [not nicasiled] and all the LeMan bitz.
Pipes { Hand made to owners specs basically Shorty Leman race pipes} were added this year and are the closest to the original factory sound that I've personally ever heard...If you come to the WeeKend, bring Tissues, LOTS of Tissues...:drool:drool
Also got lots of spares, including a set of Round barrels with new pistons, a race cam and all the original front [black] case and other parts...
plus it's all stainless nuts and bolts

Sid is besotted and spends a lot of time drooling over her.:comfort

DSCF1019.jpg


DSCF1016.jpg


DSCF1018.jpg
 
Looks the dogs danglies Proff :cool:
 
Tidied up garage a bit and turned bikes around. Unfortunately, the guzzi is too heavy to push so I had to start it up:augie
Luckily, PinkLady was not around or else she would have complained again that I was frightening the horses (feck em, they had better get used to the sound of bikes around here).

Picture of Beauty and The Beast:

PA300369.jpg


It looks tiny compared to the other bikes on that side of the workshop.

PA300368.jpg


NB Airhead BM is nearing completion on workbench.

PS that spilt oil is not from the Guzzi, some old git managed to kick over an oil tray as he struggled to get his leg over the bike.:rob
 
Go looking for old codgers on '79 R100RS's and get up the inside of them...
The other quick giveaway on the bike is the dipstick in the extended tube, from LMII or Spada.
So few are original. So what. My LMII won awards for originality. A classic 'shouldn't have sold it' moment...
Watch that alloy cover - they can cause overheated alternators. They plastic originals were vented. What's under the timing case? Careful - as in extreme cases the chain can get tensioned as it wears until on the over-run the loose chain hits the back of the other.
Go and enjoy it though!
 
Go looking for old codgers on '79 R100RS's and get up the inside of them...

I have a 79 R100RS arriving next week: don't go giving the silly old bugger ideas :rob :D
 


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