Cycle News

Cycle News 2015 Issue 19 May 12

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/510271

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VOL. 52 ISSUE 19 MAY 12, 2015 P59 effortless—just press the starter button and the TFT color dash tells you what mode you're in. Press it again to select the next mode, then keep press- ing until it shows the mode you want, then just stop and wait a couple seconds for it to actually change. You don't even have to press the button twice to confirm your choice, as before, and this makes mode I'd been using for added controllability, to Touring for extra performance. But then up in the hills there'd be stretches of damp that had me switch- ing back to Rain mode almost instantly. Before they dried out again and I could reverse the process, then move to Sport as the terrain opened up and I could start to use the engine's meaty torque to best advan- tage. The ease of access and degree of intervention the MV's Eldor electronic package gives is just right, and very welcome. The altered character of this redesigned engine has dictated fitting an all-new gear- box, with revised ratios aimed also at reducing fuel consump- tion by 20 percent, thus giving a claimed 250-mile range from the 5.8-gallon fuel tank. In pursuit of that, sixth gear is now an overdrive, with a more constant gap between each ratio further down the 'box. Yet the Turismo Veloce's engine is so flexible you can now pull wide open in top gear from just 2,000 rpm without the slightest hiccup or any trans- mission snatch, all the way to the 11,000 rpm redline, where you can feel the performance subtly peak, then hold to the 12,000 rpm soft-action limiter. Even in Sport mode, there's a mile wide, ultra-flat torque curve, which allows you to hold a gear for mile after mile along a twisty stretch of road. As on the sportier-tuned Stradale, 4,000 rpm to 9,000 rpm is the Veloce's happy zone where you feel it likes to operate, so to keep it there you make full use of the wide- open powershifter and clutch- less auto-blipper downshifter both included as standard on the new MV Agusta, same as on the Stradale. The Ducati Multistrada that sits squarely in the MV Turismo Veloce's gunsights doesn't let you shift down without the clutch, and after riding the MV for any length of time along a twisty road you'll soon become convinced what a huge asset it is on a bike like this, which makes long distance riding that much less tiring; as well as more musical. Mind you, in meeting Euro 4 noise requirements the "IT FEELS EXTREMELY LONG- LEGGED AND RELAXED IN LIVING UP TO ITS NAME—VELOCE, WHICH MEANS FAST IN ITALIAN." riding the Veloce over different kinds of road surface both safe and reassuring. So, the tarmac was wet as we set off on our ride after overnight rain in Cap Ferrat, but then dried out allow- ing me to switch from the Rain (Top) For stopping power, the Veloce gets twin 320mm floating Brembo front discs. (Bottom) Although part of the 800 family, the engine was completely redesigned for the Veloce.

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