Radical Guzzi The Fugitive
By Ross Sharp - 26 Apr 16
There have been various incarnations of the Radical Guzzi design and jaws dropped at the Ristretto when that thundered out of the Meisterbetrieb based workshop. That had a 1400 California engine and required forward facing exhausts to allow enough silencing length. The bike you see here, The Fugitive, follows the theory that there ain't no replacement for displacement and packs some serious punch. The customer, Allan, resided in the good old US of A and contacted Stefan to discuss a no holes barred project. He wanted the soul of an air cooled Guzzi wrapped in a chassis package that could keep up with more modern sports bikes.
Stefan started with a stripped down 4 valve engine, setting the stock barrels and pistons aside, replacing them with 1400cc versions. The rest of the internals were refreshed to cope with the planned power hike. The cylinder heads have been ported and polished to make the most of a return to carburettors. A brace of Keihin FCR41 flat slides to be precise, sucking through short velocity stacks. Allan had best make sure his trousers are securely fastened, this thing looks like it could suck them right off.
The cams have been superseded by a pair with a more aggressive profile and after setting up on the dyno the figures are quite impressive. Oomph is up from 120 to 160 NM and Welly now 140PS rather than the 110PS of the original. Stefan is pleased with his efforts, saying "the engine has become one of the most impressive, agile and elastic power plants we have ever ridden in a Guzzi. We estimate that it is the strongest air cooled Guzzi engine available on the market." I won't argue with that.
A radially mounted Beringer Brake system should keep Allan from undoing all of Stefan's hard work and if nothing else those solid discs look the business. Motogadget switchgear keeps the cockpit clean and simple along with a customised all-in-one speedo/tacho.
In addition to the rows of CNC machines in the Radical Guzzi workshop there's also more traditional equipment and Stefan enjoys practicing old school techniques. The aluminium fuel tank is hand beaten, rolled and welded. "Realizing the project meant spending many hours in the gargage and on the miling machine - creating new parts and adjusting old ones. Our goal was to develop a modern bike that fears no comparism to a factory built like the BMW r nineT. After having finished the Fugitive we dare say: We have come pretty damned close to that claim!" says Stefan.
With that amount of shove and tipping the scales at just under 200kgs with a full tank of fuel The Fugitive should be one wild ride. If any customers from the U.K. end up ordering one of Stefan's bikes, please can you drop by the Bike Shed and let us have a go.
But don't just take his word for it, The Fugative's owner Allan is over the moon with his big barrelled beauty, saying "Everybody who has ever ridden a Guzzi should ride this!" Well, you know where we are Allan.
We'll be reporting on more bikes from Radical Guzzi and will hopefully see him run at this year's Glemseck drag race but for now Facebook | Web