audiomick Posted January 14 Posted January 14 All I can see there is: Video nicht verfügbar Dieses Video ist nicht verfügbar
audiomick Posted January 14 Posted January 14 Yeah, German engineering. There is quite a lot of stuff on various channels (particularly youboob) that is not visible here due to copyright issues. 1
p6x Posted January 14 Author Posted January 14 Looking at the assembly line, I am wondering if any other brand have such an incredible industrial tool? Noticed there aren't many females shown... this is surprising as the Ducati production line have quite a lot of them. I really liked the test jig for the engine that only requires compressed air... the complete bike assembly data is being recorded and checked as it moves through the setup points. They achieve zero defect, at least in the assembling process. They cannot completely check-proof the various assembly parts for quality; or do they have a quality control for the parts they don't manufacture themselves? The robot putting sealant on the carter....
Tomchri Posted January 14 Posted January 14 That 2013 HP4 was an exelent 60years present. Made 28000km with it. Some of those had some serious white finger problems. Mine was fine. Cheers Tom. Sent fra min SM-S906B via Tapatalk 2
gstallons Posted January 15 Posted January 15 I wonder if there is a bike assembly video of the M/G plant ?
p6x Posted January 15 Author Posted January 15 2 hours ago, gstallons said: I wonder if there is a bike assembly video of the M/G plant ? I have not seen any so far. I have seen vintage photos when bikes would be completely assembled at a single post. I think I read somewhere that the new V100 power train was not manufactured at Mandello del Lario. I could guess that Piaggio/Aprilia have better facilities and ship the units completed and tested to Mandello. This has to be verified though. As Moto Guzzi, Aprilia's historical manufacturing plant was in Noale Italy. Piaggio who owns the two brands has a state of the arts facility in Scorzé Italy. I would think that Piaggio's assembly line is pretty much a carbon copy of that of Ducati. I can see that in the long term, Mandello del Lario will become more a sanctuary than a very active Guzzi headquarter. Sort of an empty shell. It may remains a Museum of the Moto Guzzi brand. I am planning to find out this summer, as I am thinking of heading to Italy on a memory tour. 1
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now