docc Posted April 15 Posted April 15 For me, I find the cast Frame Side Plates ("stilettos") of our V11 Spine Frames, and the Centauro/1100 Sport-i, to be objects of absolute beauty. The original Daytona/ SPOrT 1100 side plates? "These things are industrial grade. Almost indestructable" -Starlord 1 1
audiomick Posted April 16 Posted April 16 (edited) 20 minutes ago, docc said: The original Daytona/ SPOrT 1100 side plates? "These things are industrial grade. Almost indestructable" -Starlord I like them. They have their own "form follows function" charm. Edited April 16 by audiomick 2
docc Posted April 16 Posted April 16 18 minutes ago, audiomick said: I like them. They have their own "form follows function" charm. The original Moto Guzzi (spine) Frame Side Plates were on Dr. John's 1987 (2-valve/square fin) ProTwins racer. That first SpineFrame was hand built in Pennsylvania and the side plates (which Dr. John was quoted as saying, "They are a great place to stuff a sandwich " [paraphrase] ) are inscribed "HOLLOWAY" on the left and "DR JOHN" on the right. Get the book, you'll love it . . . reference courtesy of https://www.motoitaliane.it/en/prodotto/dr-johns-moto-guzzi/ 1
Pressureangle Posted April 16 Author Posted April 16 47 minutes ago, docc said: For me, I find the cast Frame Side Plates ("stilettos") of our V11 Spine Frames, and the Centauro/1100 Sport-i, to be objects of absolute beauty. The original Daytona/ SPOrT 1100 side plates? "These things are industrial grade. Almost indestructable" -Starlord I'm not so enamored, nor prefer the early ones. But hey, *something* has to be there and get to all the attachment points...form follows function. I haven't looked close enough to ask whether the later style are cast or forged...I'm guessing cast. It appears by the picture that the earlier porkchops had a narrower swingarm through the pivot. I can't recall on the 'Sport whether they're flat, or widened, or in between. Ah, pic says wider; 1
docc Posted Thursday at 12:04 AM Posted Thursday at 12:04 AM I would love to know who designed the beautiful, cast Frame Side Plates. Marabese Design? Rodolfo Frascoli? Did the Centauro have them first (1996)? If so, I would suggest Rodolfo Frascoli of Marabese Design (at that time) is the designer.
audiomick Posted Thursday at 12:21 AM Posted Thursday at 12:21 AM (edited) 22 minutes ago, docc said: ... cast Frame Side Plates. Did the Centauro have them first (1996)? ... I found some picture at Stein-Dinse. Assuming they are accurate, the Centauro did indeed have a similar side plate to the V11. I can't tell from the pictures, though, if they were exactly identical. Centauro: V11: The part numbers are very close, though. Centauro: 01415850 One V11 version: 01415890, another V11 version: 01415830. Maybe the difference is only the colour. PS: it seems the Daytona RS had them too: https://www.motorcyclespecs.co.za/model/moto guzzi/moto_guzzi_daytona_rs 94.htm And a picture from the Wikipedia Franken-Guzzista, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons Edited Thursday at 12:27 AM by audiomick 1
Pressureangle Posted 3 hours ago Author Posted 3 hours ago My sideplates came today from TLM Netherlands. They took the nuts off the pivot bolts. I am angry, and my email said so. I am still angry. I didn't need the side plates or the footpegs, or even 2 pins. I needed a pin and a nut. Angry 1
docc Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago On 4/14/2025 at 6:49 PM, Pressureangle said: I ordered a set of 1100 Sport-i sideplates with pivot pins included from TLM. Either way they should work. Are the NOS or take-offs from a parts bike? Did you have to order the plates as right and left part numbers and the pins as separate numbers?
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