Moto Guzzi V8
By, Murray Barnard
Few motorcycles
have captured the public imagination as the Moto Guzzi 500cc V8 race bike. This machine was an incredible work of genius by
Guiliano Carcano. Although never developed
completely, racing only from 1955 to 1957 the Moto Guzzi V8 is still a technical marvel
which has still to be equaled.
Development was
stalled when Moto Guzzi pulled out of GP racing in 1957along with most of the other
motorcycle manufacturers, German, Italian and British. In it's day the V8 was able to
achieve remarkable speeds for the technology of its time, reaching 187 mph at the MIRA
test track in France. Whist still under development it was clocked at an incredible 178mph
at the Belgian GP in 1957. Producing 75 bhp at a then remarkable 12,500rpm the machine
only weighed 135kg.
Pictures fail to
convey the incredibly compact design of the V8. The Moto Guzzi 250 and 350 GP singles at
that time were the slimmest, lightest machines on the track yet the V8s fairing for
all it's added complexity, was only 30mm wider than the factory 350 single. The small bore
and stroke of 44mm X 42mm enabled Carcano to keep the transverse mounted engine quite
narrow.
The carburettors
were specially designed for this engine by Dell'Orto. In early engines, the two banks of 4
Dell'Orto carburettors
The V8s
development was plagued with trouble at first. The V8 was first ridden at the 1954 Belgian
Grand Prix by Aussie rider Kev Kavanagh but it soon suffered a crankshaft failure. The
bike didnt appear again until 1956 when Kev again rode the machine, this time at the
Coppa dOro race. He soon retired with bearing trouble. Bill Lomas and Kev Kavanagh
rode V8s at the Dutch Grand Prix in 1956 and after making the fastest lap they both
retired. And so the sad story went on. Little things such as water hoses let the machine
down.
Tests of the V8
continued with a revised machine at Monza, then Montlhery, Oulton Park and Snetterton! In
1958 the V8 won its first race at Syracuse in Sicily, although this was a non-championship
race. Finally at Imola Dickie Dale won a GP recording the fastest lap. Dickie went on to ride the V8 at the Golden
Jubilee TT at the Isle of man coming a poorly placed fourth
Beaten by a MV and two Gilera fours there was no reason to go on with such a
complex machine. Guzzi retired from racing at the end of the year and the fascinating V8
motorcycle disappeared from the race circuit, never to be equaled, although Honda has
tried with the oval piston NR500 which was even less of a success and a 4 cylinder at
that. |





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