Showing posts with label scooter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scooter. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Love and Hate with “The Audi of Vespas” (Aprilia Scarabeo 250cc)


Love: The riding position – upright, alert, touring, with a saddle like a throne.

Love: The retro-futuristic style, looks teutonic like a BMW.

Hate: Everything is plastic. Plastic will crack and time is running out.

Love: Every little part is stamped “Made in Italy” - Grimeca, Pirelli, Marzocchi, Paoli, Piaggio, I love you.

Love: The cargo capacity is amazing. It carries everything you need and everything you don't.

Love and Hate: Passengers are on the back and don't need to touch you when you ride this thing. On the Vespa, they better hold on to your love handles. On the Aprilia, no love handles are required. Guests can forego the Vespa date night spooning that I hypothetically enjoy. The footpegs are nicer on the Aprilia.

Hate: Why can't I find a large windshield for this thing any place other than Eastern European Ebay? What happens when I actually need parts?

Love: AF1 Racing sold me a new left mirror for like $15. Apparently the other Scarabeo 250cc owner in the USA didn't break his yet.

Love: Cruising around the neighborhood using only 1/8 of the throttle and going as fast as I'd like.

Love: Riding to Rough Trade records and carrying 12” vinyls back in the topcase.

Hate: The headset is made of cheap plastic and rattles like a baby toy, which makes me think I am riding a toy, and makes me long for regular motorcycle handlebars.

Hate: The tiny windshield directs all the windforce right at my face. It is infinitely annoying and tiresome. I finally took it off completely.

Love: The Aprilia is definitively 100% an Italian scooter. At a recent scooter rally, a group of hardcore Lambretta riders quietly and slowly acknowledged the Aprilia is amazing.

Hate: Why is the temperature gauge always all the way turned up? It's not fahrenheit, it's not celsius, it's not even kelvin. It makes no sense. The fan comes on intermittently. I miss the simplicity of the aircooled Vespa engine. It makes me long for a Vespa 946.

Love: The low center of gravity. The floorboards are flat and low. My legs never complain about the shape of the Aprilia.

Hate: Where is the carburetor? Where is the battery? For all I've seen, the middle of this scooter has a molten lava core, same as planet earth. Yes, you need to take off a plastic panel and most of a footrest to just check the oil, which involves such a small sump and dipstick that you won't be sure what to do with any information you gather from it.

Love: Own an Aprilia, and you're in the top 1% of unusual vehicles in America.

Welcome to the mountaintop!

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Colorado to NYC on a Scooter.


I am not afflicted with wanderlust and I don't really consider this an adventure; but, like all good adventures, I signed myself up for a bit more than I expected. I suppose almost everyone would not choose to do a trip like I planned, which is all the more reason to write about it here and give the trip a full recount.

Over this summer, I had a lot of time but not a lot of money. So, I took my white Vespa on three really fun trips. First, I rode up from NYC to Rochester, then back through Geneseo and Alfred. The following weekend I rode from NYC to Montauk and camped overnight. Then, I rode from NYC to Washington, DC for a weekend trip. Those trips were really fun and went well – and by a small stretch of the imagination were relaxing, so I decided to do a bigger trip. I wanted to ride my little Vespa out to Colorado for my brother's wedding. But, I decided I would need at least a few days to make it out there. Because I have a summer job, I was pressed for time. So, I decided to commit a little bit of my savings to buying another scooter. I watch Craigslist all the time for deals, and figured about $3000 would do it. So, I sent my brother a check and told him to be ready.

I was really torn on what scooter to get. I really wanted a new 2015 Vespa Sprint S 150cc, but the out the door price is around $5700. It was too much for me to pay. So, I found an interesting Aprilia on Craigslist. I hesitated to buy it at first, but then I got excited about it and told Timmy to cash the check and purchase the scooter. He did.


I went to Colorado, went to the wedding (which was wonderful), and didn't bother preparing the scooter until after the festivities died down. Then, I went to test pack the scooter. I bought this particular scooter because it had a topcase and two hard sidecases, or panniers. I figured I would be able to hold all my “knick knacks” for camping. In Timmy's yard, I test packed the scooter. Unfortunately, I noticed the tires were completely dry rotted! This was a major problem! So I called the scooter shop, Sportique. Sportique hooked me up with a rear tire, but couldn't find a front tire. They told me the tires were a really rare type, which I was confused on. I figured the tires were ordinary 16” motorcycle tires. My Vespa has an 11” front tire, which is the funkiest size I could possibly imagine. Sportique did an oil change and a tune up on the scooter, and after many, many phone calls I found a shop in Fort Collins that could supply a front tire.

Because I had been focused on the wedding, I really only had one day to prepare the scooter and get it going for the trip. I knew I could get a trip permit from the DMV. I had called the Colorado DMV twice to confirm this. While the scooter was at Sportique, my sister Meg and I to the DMV. I was really nervous that I might not be able to get the trip permit, but I did with no problem. The permit was only $6 and it was good for two weeks, expiring on September 11, 2015. Then we went to the AAA offices and got a stack of maps. We took a break and went to all you can eat indian food, which was delicious, and then we went on a shopping spree at REI. At REI, I bought a Thermarest mattress, a titanium camp stove, a compass, and a mini-tool for a bicycle.

When we came back to Timmy and Elyse's house, we met a dude named Joel who was from Montreal and also has an Aprilia Scarabeo. So, I invited him over to have some leftover beer from the wedding kegs and talk about science.

Day 0: Longmont to Fort Collins and back.
The next day I rode to Fort Collins. The scooter was very stable and rode nicely. I got caught in a major downpour. The rain was warm and came down with a force that rivaled the water pressure of most apartment showers. The mountains in the distance were beautiful, like a painting. The scooter shop in Fort Collins was called Moto Italia and it was on Horsetooth Road. They had Moto Guzzis, Piaggios, Vespas, and Aprilias. They had my scooter in their shop before I even blinked. I walked to Panera Bread for lunch, then came back and the scooter was done. I even bought a nice motorcycle tool roll from them.
I rode back to Longmont and had a nice dinner with my family there. We looked at the map and I decided I would take Route 36 across Kansas.


Day 1: Longmont, Colorado to Norton, Kansas
I could barely sleep because I was so excited. The next day I woke up very early. I had everything packed already and was off right at 6 AM. I rode all day. I wanted to stop and take a picture in Last Chance, Colorado but totally missed it. I rode past many sunny sunflower fields. I was just so focused on covering distance on that first day. My mind was really clear and I was just focusing on aiming the scooter down the road. One really cool thing I saw was High Plains Raceway, in Eastern Colorado. I stopped in Atwood, Kansas. It was a really cool town, very foreign and interesting to me. I met Kenny, a local farmer, who talked to me for a while about grain sorghum. Then I stopped to chat at a motorcycle shop in Oberlin, Kansas. They liked my scooter a lot. It was hot out, with totally clear skies, and I got a bit sunburned. The first state park I saw, mid afternoon, was called Prairie Dog State Park. I decided to get a campsite there. I set up my tent and went to get some food at their supermarket, backtracking a bit on the way out of town. I realized I had no idea what to eat, so I bought some yogurt even though yogurt is not really even close to making it into a list of my top 10 foods. The campground was so calm and pleasant, and uncrowded. I got to go swimming in the lake, which appeared to be man-made and sort of reminded me of the quarry in the film “Breaking Away.” I slept really well. On the first day I established what became the only rule of this trip: my waterbottle and my camera have to go in different panniers.


Day 2: Norton Kansas to Wallace State Park near Cameron, Missouri
I slept so well in the tent on the first day. One of the biggest surprises, though, was how wet everything got. The tent had a lot of condensation. My sneakers were all wet in the morning. My helmet was wet. Route 36 through Kansas can only be described as desolate. Other people might be worried about traffic, but I was worried about no traffic! If I broke down, there weren't many opportunities for people to stop to help me. I almost ran out of gas a few times. The Aprilia's gas gauge was doing its own thing.
I wanted coffee. I love drinking coffee. As it turns out, there were no Stumptown Cafes in Kansas. I stopped mid-morning in Scandia, Kansas. I saw some old ladies drinking coffee in front of their antique shop and decided to stop and talk to them. They gave me some of their coffee and I sat and chatted. When I was almost to St. Joseph, Missouri, my scooter suddenly lost power and I rode it to the shoulder. Almost immediately, two people on Kawasaki Ninjas pulled over to help me. I was out of gas! I had been trying to keep track of my gas consumption and refill every 100 miles, but in a trance I had lost count. I gave them $20 and they rode off. Another rider on a Harley also stopped to help me. They came back a while later with a gas can and gas for me.
I rode into St Joseph. This was the first blighted town I stopped in. It reminded me of the poor towns of upstate New York - Albany or Utica. I tried to find Jackson's Motorcycle Repair, which came recommended by the Harley rider. I wanted them to give my scooter a quick tune up. Because I had come down in elevation, I was guessing the scooter was running lean. Unfortunately, by the time I found Jackson's it was closed. It's too bad, because it looked like a nice shop. They sold Kymcos, which are very similar scooters to my Aprilia. I didn't know what to do, so I went to McDonald's. I tried to use the wifi there, using Meg's old iPhone, but I couldn't get it to work. I went to the counter and asked them if there was anywhere I could camp. They were, like, stumped! But then, the manager said Wallace State Park, so I rode there.
At Wallace, I got the last campsite, or at least that's what they told me – maybe to make me feel special. I suspect they would have let me camp in the field near the bathrooms if the campground were really full because they seemed very friendly. In line to pay for the site, a dad and little son started talking to me. At a break in conversation the little boy looked up and just said, “My dad talks a lot.” I told him something to the effect of “I've noticed, and I don't mind.” The campground was crowded with families – little kids were riding razor scooters in the loops. I set up my tent and walked around. One camper had a BMW R motorcycle. He came over and asked me what type of bike I had. When I told him, he just nodded and said “They make a lot of race bikes.” I told him I was worried about the scooter not running right. He said that if it were his, he would just ride and ride and not worry. A few days later, I followed his advice. I couldn't sleep well because there was lots of noise.



Day 3: Cameron, Missouri to Clinton Lake, Illinois
I woke up to the sort of weather conditions known as “pea soup fog.” At first, I didn't mind it, but when I saw some of the highway, I realized Missouri people don't believe in foglights or daytime running lights. I stopped at a diner to wait it out and read books. I made fun of the diner because they had “roll-up sandwiches” instead of wraps. The diner had a fifty cent vending machine and I bought one. Some of the stickers said “YOLO” or “Princess” and I decided before I opened it that I would put the sticker on the scooter. My sticker said “LEGIT” so I thought to myself, wow, that worked out great. I also went to an auto parts store and bought a really long screwdriver, with the intention of adjusting the carb, and I also bought a quart of oil. I didn't use either item on the trip, but it felt like I was being prepared by buying these.
I rode and rode through the slightly rolling hills and thought about the Native Americans. I wish I had researched this trip more and found out where there are good places to learn about Native Americans. On my next trip I am going to make this a priority.
Then, I crossed another border! It was the grand Mississippi River. I pulled over and followed a sign for the dryly named “John Hay Public Use Area.” My lunch there was water from my water bottle and trail mix. It was super hot, so I went swimming. I felt that this was a very American thing to do! Later, I found out I was across the river from Mark Twain's childhood home.


I was refreshed after this swim, and really feeling confident about the ride. I kept going into Illinois. I rode and rode. I got to Springfield and had dinner at a pizza place. Then I got off of 36 and headed northeast. I rode down some great country roads. I was aiming for Clinton Lake. It was really dark by the time I got there. The groundskeeper was not friendly. He gave me a campsite really far away. It took me a few tries to even find the site. It was dark! When I did find it, no one else was around – or so I thought! I wheeled my scooter into the campsite and woke up a sleeping camper in a tent. I yelled hello to him, but he was also unfriendly. I set up my tent in the dark. The woods were really loud and I had a tough time sleeping.

Day 4: Clinton Lake, Illinois to Kickapoo State Park, Illinois
When I woke up I was treated to a nice surprise! It was the most beautiful campsite of the trip! I hadn't noticed in the dark! I made coffee with my titanium stove and it tasted delicious! I went swimming in the lake and it was like bathwater! I didn't want to get out of the water!
I rode into Champaign, Illinois. First, I stopped at an outdoor goods store. They told me where to camp next. Then, I went to a cafe. It was weird, because it felt like a return to civilization. I was nervous about my scooter, so I parked it behind a dumpster behind a bar. I walked to their record store, Exile on Mainstreet. I was delighted to see Braid records in the local music section, because they are one of my favorite bands. I wasn't going to buy anything, but then I started talking with the people who worked there and I bought a Sarah Records release of a group called St Christopher and I bought another record by the band Slint. I compromised, because both were 10” records and not 12”s! I made it clear I was a record nerd with those picks, so they started talking to me about this label called Numero Group. A month or two later, I started listening to the releases from this label, specifically their Eccentric Soul series, and it's now my current favorite.
I rode across town to the campus area. Campus was really big! I parked the scooter in front of some frat and sorority houses, then wandered around campus. I ate at their Qdoba burrito place in the dining hall. Then I went back to the scooter, but I couldn't remember which street I parked it on! I overshot it by a few blocks.
I called my sister and had her look up where the house is on the cover of the emo album American Football. I stopped and took my picture in front of it.
I found Kickapoo State Park. It was a while off the main road outside of Urbana. I set up my tent in a large meadow area. It was very lovely. There were deer wandering around, which reminded me of my old apartment in Alfred. It overlooked a quarry type of area with a large dock. However, swimming was prohibited. I had really wanted to go swimming every day, and was frustrated when I couldn't achieve that goal.
I tried to work on the scooter in the meadow. I checked the oil. Then, I looked at the exhaust. Two bolts were gone! I got very upset. This was bad!
Across the way in the meadow I saw what looked to be bikes with big Ortlieb bags. I wandered over and sure enough it was Ortlieb bags! It was a couple from England crossing the US by bicycle. They graciously offered me some of their couscous and I sat and had dinner with them. Their names were Sophie and Tom and their website is detourtomoosejaw.com. It made me feel so much better to eat with them. They told me how their bikes had given them trouble and they had Paul at Rock Lobster bicycles in Santa Cruz help them. I thought my Aprilia was doomed, but they encouraged me that I would get the scooter sorted out fine. I gave them my email contact information and told them they could come stay at my house in Queens whenever they want.


Day 5: Urbana, Illinois to Dayton, Ohio
I woke up really early. I backtracked from Kickapoo State Park to Urbana. When you ride headed west, you often ride into thunderstorms, and that is exactly what happened to me. It rained hard. There was lightning in the distance. I struggled to wipe the raindrops off of my helmet. I saw a flipped car on the highway. I brought the scooter to the shop in Urbana, and I was there before they opened the doors. It was a Honda dealership. They said they couldn't fix it. The service manager was scared. I was really, really upset that they could not help me. It didn't help that they had a really nice BMW F650CS and a brand new Stella scooter in their shop for right around the same price as I had spent on my Aprilia. At that point, I would have swapped for either bike! The BMW even had a stereo on it.
I decided to get on it and ride. It started raining more. Indiana was terrible. I think around Indianapolis I even did the classic pull over under an overpass and wait out the rain move. I ate a red hot atomic fireball and got splashed by big rigs. My desolate, picturesque Route 36 had passed and now I was on Route 70. I wanted to go north to Toledo to visit my relatives and my grandma, but I knew the scooter's exhaust was eventually going to fall off, so I decided it was best to go straight home.
The rain subsided by the time I got to the Ohio border, but also so did my fuel levels. The gas gauge was not playing on the team with me. I ran out of gas and I didn't know where I was. There were no signs. I didn't see any mile markers. No one stopped to help.
On the other side of a cornfield and a fence I saw a garage with lots and lots of junky cars. So, I walked back to an overpass and climbed up on to the bridge. I kept my leather gloves on to negotiate the barb wire fence. Unfortunately, the dudes at this garage had no gas for me. I walked back to my scooter and started pushing. I made it to another overpass and climbed that one. There was a really nice brick house. I startled this woman in her yard. She was like “Wait right there! I'm going to get my husband.” People in the country are so easily scared. Her husband came out and gave me gas and told me to tell everyone people in southern Ohio are really nice. His name was Chuck. Right as I was handing him his gas can back over the fence, two AAA cars showed up to give me gas. I had been on the side of the road for 2 hours. One of the AAA people, a youngish hippyish guy started filling up my scooter for me, to top it off, and said “You said you wanted Diesel, right?” I couldn't even speak before he said, “Just kidding – that's just a bit of roadside humor for you.”




I rode a bit more and then stopped at a Chipotle. I had a big burrito. Whenever I go places on my scooter, I more often than not carry my helmet with me, as an invitation for people to talk to me about my scooter. In the restaurant's line, I started chatting with a guy who had one of those Can Am Spyder three wheelers. He was bragging about how it cost $22,000. I checked it out and complimented him on it, but he didn't bother to peek at my Aprilia, and then flew out of the parking lot full throttle. After that stop at Chipotle, it was dusk, so I decided to stay at the Comfort Inn and Suites. I got to go swimming in their pool. In the hotel bed, I slept like a rock.

Day 6: Dayton, Ohio to Somerset, Pennsylvania
It wasn't my earliest start, but it was still early. I got on the road. I rode all day. I stopped at Tim Horton's for breakfast somewhere in Columbus. Then, I saw a large display for the Motorcycle Hall of Fame. “This directly pertains to my interests,” I thought, and I pulled over to stop.
Maybe I liked it a lot because I was on a motorcycle trip, but I think anyone could enjoy this museum. I liked that I was one of only a handful of people there. They had lots of cool stuff. They had old Indian motorcycles, a lot of flat track racers, a lot of tourers. My favorite was a KTM race bike from the Paris-Dakar. They also had a whole room dedicated to the lobbying that the AMA has done on behalf of motorcycle riders. For example, they campaigned against a beef tax / under 500cc tariff.
The museum gave me a lot to think about, and I rode off in the afternoon.
I passed another state border – West Virginia! The Hop Along song “I saw my twin” played in my head a lot, because it has West Virginia as part of its lyrics. I wanted to stop in Wheeling, because it looked really really neat, but I also wanted to keep going.
Pennsylvania got very mountainous. I almost went camping at a park called Cedar Creek State Park. They actually let you camp there for free! But, you have to sign in with the guard, who locks the gates. So, you can't get out until 7 AM. I didn't like the sound of being locked in, so I opted out. They did have a runway for radio controlled airplanes though (http://www.monvalleyrc.com/). Also, the creek was pretty shady, muddy and mosquitoey, so I didn't want to go swimming there.
I kept riding until I got to Somerset, Pennsylvania. I stayed at an even cheaper hotel with a pool and got to go swimming again. I went out to dinner at some weird Italian restaurant and had a beer there, my first since Colorado, and it tasted terrible. Then I watched American Pickers because our town was on it.

Day 7: Somerset, Pennsylvania to New York City
I got on the road right away. My goal was to get to visit Scooters Originali in Allentown, Pennsylvania. I rode and rode. The scooter didn't feel that great. I had the address of Scooters Originali, but somehow I still had trouble finding it. When I got there, it was a nice office space and I chatted with Gene and Andrea. I had met Gene at the scooter rally in Niagara Falls about 10 years ago. I had even been to their old scooter shop, where he had let me sit on some really nice Lambrettas. I totally interrupted their day, and they were super nice about it.
After I left Scooters Originali, I had major problems. The scooter lost power on the highway. I got it restarted. Then it lost power again. It was out of gas. Luckily, I coasted on the shoulder of the road downhill for a mile and pulled right into a gas station. I left and the scooter lost power again. It felt really weak. I tried getting off of the main highway, but at one point I had no choice. I stopped for some food mid-afternoon at a diner in Clinton, New Jersey! I was so close to the finish! I was close enough where I could probably beg my friends to come pick me up, close enough to have AAA tow me to my house. I looked ahead on the map and found I was going to go right through Newark, so I texted my friend Liz who lives there. She told me to meet her at The Monk Room. I got stuck in traffic for a long time. I made it to the Monk Room and had a beer with her and her friend Jean. We had pizza. Then we went to another bar and saw our old friend Angela. It was a really nice almost ending to my trip.
I was so tired and my scooter was too. It was so humid. The scooter was overheating. I rode back on to the highway and some weird industrial bridges. I was confused about what direction I was going, but I looked up and saw two beams of light guiding me home - the twin towers memorial. It turns out that night was the first night they were testing them out. I rode through some of Jersey City. Then I found the Holland Tunnel. The scooter was really hurting at this point and I rode it oh, so gently. Finally, I got to Manhattan! Even if the scooter had died at this point I could call my trip complete! It was so strange to see CitiBikes and midtown. I rode over the Queensboro Bridge back to Astoria! I pulled up on the sidewalk in front of my house and was both relieved I had made it, but also disappointed my trip was over.


Post Ride:

Immediately after the trip, I took the scooter to the shop down the street to get a tune up. They tapped the sheared bolts and changed the oil. It wasn't cheap, but the mechanic said they spent a whole day working on just my scooter – and I believe him. They had the scooter back to me the next day. I rode it up to Kurt's in Wanaque, NJ and we rode to Bear Mountain, the go to spot for twisties loving sport bike riders of the greater NYC area.

Of course, if I were to do the trip again I would do things differently. Part of my thinking on this trip was to just get any scooter and ride it. I was going to use it and lose it, kind of treating the bike as an appliance. I realized that isn't 100% possible. The rider needs to understand the bike in some way, not in a zen and the art of motorcycle type of deep meaning way, but a bike and its rider need to have some sort of understanding between them. I didn't, which is why I ran into some trouble and why the tires and carb were huge problems for me.

I'm as confused as ever about what motorbike I want to ride. I really, really think the Moto Guzzi V7 is my style. I still see my name written on all the vintage Vespas and Lambrettas at Scooters Originali. I desperately want to try the 2015 Vespa Sprint S 150 with ABS. And I think I'd probably be very happy aboard a Piaggio MP3. I also think the Vespa 946 is amazing. I'm not a speed freak and 150ccs is just fine.

In the meantime, it's Autumn 2015 and I've been riding the Aprilia still. I still like my Vespa S150, but the Aprilia is by all measurable means a better bike. I like this scooter a lot! It's a weird bike - it's smooth, it's stylish. I'm not sure I'm totally in love with it, but I'm close. I ride two up on it a lot and don't even notice a passenger back there, while on a Vespa this still feels like a date night or a stunt.

In any case, I want something more durable. This led me to checking out the BMW dealer on 57th on the West Side of Manhattan. I walked in and said I wanted to do a bit of touring. I was eyeing their 650cc, and they said “Nah man for touring you have to get the 800. - you really need to have 800ccs for touring.” So I pulled out my phone and showed them pictures of me touring on the 250cc Aprilia and they just started cackling. I tried on motorcycle gear there and chatted with them for a long time. As I left, they said “You'll be back!”









Packing List:

Glovebox:
registration & insurance, snow peak titanium spork, knog blinder bicycle headlight

Left Pannier:
Water bottle, maps, boots, some dirty clothes, tool roll

Right Pannier:
Camera, snacks, camp stove, titanium mugs, toothbrush, toothpaste, backup titanium spork, SOTO coffee maker, iPod and headphones (did not use on trip), iPhone (broken, did not use)

Top Case:
clothes, vinyl records purchased in Champaign, Illinois

Bag on backseat:
REI Passage 2 Tent, REI Lumen sleeping bag, Thermarest Pad, blankettowel, hat, Chaco sandals (strapped to outside)



Riding gear (not recommended, and will be upgraded):
Corazzo armored hoody, Icon Mainframe helmet, Rev'it gloves, Adidas ZX700 sneakers

Welcome to Ohio!





Saturday, January 03, 2015

The New Vespa

 
The New Vespa
2009 Vespa S150:

In 2014, for my birthday, I bought myself a new Vespa. I was still riding my old Vespa P150, or rather, struggling to fix it. I looked at the calendar and realized it had been 10 years of a Vespa P series, so I decided I'll just buy another.

What a difference 30 years makes. Sometimes when riding it, I think this new Vespa is my favorite vehicle I've ever owned. But, sometimes I just don't love it and I spend a lot of time thinking about going vintage again.

I've ridden it for less than a year, so I have mixed feelings on it. Check back in 2025 for a 10 year update on this Vespa.

Pros:
No Rust!
Super reliable engine. Piaggio has been making scooters for like 70 years and knows what they're doing.
Electronics all work!
Seat is way more comfy than a vintage P series.
Front disc brake
Acceleration is fantastic – just twist and go!
Electric start is so easy
Little trunk under the seat is actually useful for hoody/padded jacket storage and stuff
Tons of curb appeal – I get lots of compliments and looks from people on the street.

Cons:
High center of gravity
Odd sized front tire (11”) with no spare
Speedo does not light up
No trip odometer
Lots of plastic parts
Little glovebox tray is completely useless
No removable side panels like the P series. Dents and scratches are here to stay.
Luggage hooks are plastic. It would have been really cool if they just kept the exact same metal hook from the PX.
Paint quality could be a bit better. Why not powdercoat from the factory?
Not vintage

Alternatives to Consider:
New Vespa GT series: bigger and faster
Stella
2005 Vespa PX150 – one year only P series reissue
Vintage Lambretta
Vespa 946 – really expensive

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Vespa flashback, summer of 2005

After I graduated college in 2005, I took a road trip from my parent's house about an hour west of Albany, all the way across Massachusetts, to Rhode Island on my poor-running 125cc Vespa. Here I am mid-trip stopping for lunch in one of those college towns sort of in the Berkshires. I wish I could remember where it was. It might have been Northampton or Amherst. I wasn't really paying attention to where I was. I remember I had directions written on masking tape on my speedometer. I didn't keep track of how many miles, but there's no way it could have been less than 500. I went to a scooter rally in Rhode Island and rode a 50+ mile ride that Saturday. So, the entire trip was most likely more than that. I had a great sandwich for lunch at some organic food co-op type place. I put my camera on timer on a picnic table and took this shot. The shirt says "Geneseo" something or other, one of my many free Geneseo shirts I picked up as a student there. Those Pumas I'm wearing wore out and got thrown out after I used them while washing dishes in a restaurant about 2 years ago. The Vespa and helmet currently sit unused in my garage.

Wednesday, June 02, 2010

Vespas must go.

1975 Vespa Rally 200 for sale:

This is how it looks now. It's disassembled and ready to be restored, like it needs to be.

This is the same model and color of Sting's Vespa in Quadrophenia.


The engine is in decent shape. It started and idled fantastic when I bought it, but VIOLENTLY leapt out of third gear. So, I dropped the engine and installed a new cruciform. I put it back together and it still jumped out of gear. I lost interest.

It has the original 6V FEMSA electronic ignition. This is the European specifications model, with no premix, higher compression head, bigger headlamp.

A previous owner rode this scooter from Seattle to Sturgis and back. While in Sturgis he had the scooter signed by many motorcycle luminaries like Arlen Ness and Mike Corbin. The article was reportedly in V Twin magazine, but I don't have a copy.

Includes some Rat fink stickers.
Includes new pieces like a brand new correct Euro taillamp.
Cowls are straight!

Clear Oregon Title. I bought this at a yard sale 3 years ago and have not done anything with it except buy new parts and disassemble it. It is in pieces in my garage in NE Portland. This bike needs and deserves a full restoration. I was quoted $1500 on a full paint job.

I have all the rare Rally 200 bits, like the cowls, and the glovebox.

Price is $1600 OR BEST OFFER.

Please no hatemail on my price. They are not popping these out in Pontedera anymore.

Will consider total/partial trade for a Stella, Ruckus, other Vespa, or Lambretta, BMW or VW car. I'm a gearhead and I like those sort of things.


The worst part is some bad rust on the floor. I wish I could weld and repair this, but I can't so I'm letting it go.




I'd prefer not to ship this Vespa, but if you pay me for boxing and shipping, I could ship it anywhere. I have shipped scooters in the past.

Here's a picture of both of my Vespas. I might sell the white P Series too. Email me if interested.


This is what the Vespa looked like the day I bought it.

This will be a great Vespa for the right person. I am sad I can't give it the attention it deserves.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Vespa Revival.

It's been a year since I last rode anywhere on my Vespa. For some reason only I understood at the time and I have no idea of now, it was last January and February 2009 when I got into riding the Vespa constantly. I rode it carefully around patches of ice to work and back. Then there was an unfortunate incident involving a very negligent owner of a BMW X3 and a disenchanted breakfast date, and my interest in the Vespa completely faded. I no longer self-identified as a "scooterist," but rather as "just some dude." I looked at it every once in a while, pushing it out of the way in my garage while riding my Lemond and driving the Fun Bus. Gradually, I forgot about the Vespa for a while, using it only to keep my Westfalia mattress off the garage floor. However, recently I've remembered the scooter aficionado I used to be, and I decided I wanted to start riding my Vespa again.

So today, on a break from work, I got started. I knew the Vespa wouldn't start, and I wanted to go through it to make it roadworthy. The first step was draining all the gas from the gas tank. I removed the seat and took out the gas tank, found my spare gas can and checked to see if the flow looked good. It did, and I put the old stale gas in the Volkswagen, which is by far a less picky eater. After that I took the carburetor off and disassembled it. I don't know why anyone ever refers to cleaning out a Dell'orto as "rebuilding it." It has fewer than 20 parts. I took each piece off, sprayed some mystical "carb cleaner" spray can at it for a few seconds, and then put it back together. I went with a 110 main jet, and realized for the first time ever that my idle jet says "60" on it. I don't think I even knew that one existed (it's under the pathetic little filter on top of the float). Then I put that together and put it all back. I put the rear mixture screw at its customary starting position of 1.5 turns out from all the way screwed in, and I put the idle adjuster at its position of all the way in until just before the throttle slide kinda starts to slide open.

Autozone down the street had two NGK B7ES spark plugs, which they sold me for a meager $4.98. Then I got fresh gas and a bit of two stroke oil and the cockroach of a scooter fired up on the third kick. It even idled in a hearty way only a two stroke single cylinder can do, casting a pulsing glow on the rainy driveway. I rode it in a small victory lap down the street and back in to the garage.

I have a love/hate relationship with the Vespa. It's built from pieces of other Vespas to the point where the most original features are scratches, dents, and rust. It's been a steady accessory through girlfriends that have come and gone, through apartments and places that are now only memories. It hasn't really been a trusty companion, as it's broken down all sorts of times, but never as much as you would expect. I have gotten sick of it a whole lot of times, but then put it away. Then I realize the problem was likely something very small, and it will only take a few ounces of effort to fix.

The major problem with my particular Vespa is that the fork is still bent. Luckily, I have line on an original replacement fork. Parts have been disconcertingly hard to come by, for some reason. I don't know why. The Italians stamped out tons of Vespas back in the day. It's not like it's a Citroen SM or something. It's supposed to be a common deal. Local scooter torch bearers P Town Scooters told me I would have to order a new fork from SIP in Germany, which would set me back somewhere in the multiple hundreds of dollars range, they guessed. So I called around a week or two ago, inspired by my Volkswagen's increased gluttony for fuel, among other things, and got a line on one from a reputable longstanding scooter shop, many states away. I realized I missed talking shop with scooter people, rattling off that I was looking for a 16mm fork, but I would consider a newer 20mm style one. Hopefully that fork will get here soon and I can get the scooter buttoned up a little bit more.

The great thing about owning old vehicles for a long time is that every year they are more rare. More people are giving up on their old vehicles and going with some sort of more sane alternative. My Vespa was around 25 years old when I got it, and now it's around 30. Every year it's getting older, and a little bit more classic.




Sunday, October 25, 2009

FOR SALE: My Vespas

Regretfully, because my life is too too busy, I'm putting my Vespas up for sale. I want to sell them or trade for another scooter. Here are the details:


Silver and Orange Rally 200:
year 1975.
Includes 6V FEMSA electronic ignition.
European specifications: no premix, higher compression head, bigger headlamp.
A previous owner rode this scooter from Seattle to Sturgis and back. While in Sturgis he had the scooter signed by many motorcycle luminaries like Arlen Ness and Mike Corbin.
Includes some Rat fink stickers.
Includes new pieces like a brand new correct Euro taillamp.
Cowls are straight!
Clear Oregon Title. I bought this at a yard sale 3 years ago and have not done anything with it except buy new parts and disassemble it. It is in pieces in my garage in NE Portland. This bike needs and deserves a full restoration. I was quoted $1500 on a full paint job.
Price is $1800 or trade for a Stella, Ruckus, other Vespa, or Lambretta.



1979 Vespa P150.
Upgraded to Electronic Ignition stator.
Stella 150cc Top End.
Runs but will need a tune up.
Clear oregon Title in my name.
BAD: Has bent fork and will need replacing.
$1800 or best offer or trade.

THINGS I WILL TRADE FOR:
Volkswagen Vanagon or Bus
BMW 3 series or 2002.
Stella
Honda Ruckus
Lambretta
Vespa
Citroen

Sunday, March 22, 2009

The Story of My Honda Elite 50.


Like many people who are so deep in something that they forget just where it started, I have to remind myself exactly how I first started riding scooters. After working in the summer of 2002 at my dad's warehouse, I became the first kid in my college town to have a scooter. I bought a 50cc Honda Elite from Christman's Honda in Palantine Bridge, New York. It cost me $460 out the door, and I also bought a white 3/4 helmet.

I rode it home pretty scared of it, being my first time on the road. I didn't tell my mom I was buying a scooter, but my dad brought me there to pick it up. It was so light to ride - much lighter and smaller than the Vespa that replaced it. It accelerated quickly and was really nice to ride, especially through the rural areas where I lived.

It was a 1987 model, which was kind of a one-year-only type of deal for Elites. It had electric start, a broken odometer, and a plastic top case trunk. I think I had one new tire on the back, but I think both were that old-fashioned type of tread, not the nice style ones that we have now that offer a really smooth ride. Like all Hondas, the suspension was really soft, but since I had nothing to compare it to, it was great. It always started and never broke down. I didn't do any maintenance on it ever.

I brought it with me to Geneseo in the fall and locked it to a tree outside with a big cable lock. The first night I was there some drunk girls were sitting on it, and in the morning it was all knocked over. Its cover was strewn about 10 feet away. I was really upset about it, and got up early to take it to Dunkin Donuts. I added a few stickers to the trunk - Lookout Records, and one that said "R2 is my Co-Pilot."

The campus people gave me tons of trouble for having it on campus and not paying for a parking permit, so in a few weeks I had to move it to a bike storage that Mahoney told me about over by his apartments. Luckily, no one ever bothered it there, except for one day I came back and it had its trunk filled with leaves. I was really upset about this until a few months later when my roommate Greg eventually confessed to it.

In the summer of 2003, I stayed in Geneseo, living off campus. I kept it in a weird closet under the steps to the above apartment at our cheapest-in-town duplex. I found out about mail-order performance parts and got a Proma brand expansion chamber and some Malossi variator weights from a site called VT Cycles in Hawaii. I brought the bike to a Moto Guzzi shop in Avon for them to fix it. They called me halfway through the operation and said "Hey we found this weird part - do you want this back in?" I said "No! That's the restrictor! Leave that out!" Riding it back from that shop, I was scared because it was going so fast! It now did 45 MPH in the flats!

Different people had different nicknames for the scooter, my favorites being "T-REX" and "The Red Menace." I rode all over on that thing, including numerous 50+ mile sojourns from Geneseo to Rochester and back. The first one of such trips was a wednesday night when I met up with the Negative Image Scooter Club and rode with them. That was also the first time I ever passed a car on a scooter, even though I was at the back of their pack. We rode in a pack to Mendon Ponds State Park, where it started to rain and we broke up. I overshot and missed a few turns on the way home and I think I ended up in Hemlock at one point.

After that I rode to Conesus Lake a bunch of times. I rode in the cold but did put it in storage in my uncle's basement for the winters. I rode with people on the back even though it was never designed for that. Pretty much all my friends rode on the back of it at some point or other. Geneseo never really had any place to go, so mostly I just went to Dunkin Donuts or Wegmans, or just rode around in the countryside outside of town. I never rode the scooter to go to class or anything. Geneseo was just too small for that.

The scooter had its only break toward superstardom when it was featured in my friend Dhaval's short film "Catharsis." The film also featured my band, The Castawaves. The film really combined those two major forces in my life. I had brought back a drum kit in the fall of 2002 and started the band. I had the idea to make a music video for a Castawaves song involving me riding around on the Honda randomly giving out flowers to girls, but we never filmed it.

I can't remember exactly when I sold it, but I think it might have been just right when I came back from England; probably January 2004. I sold it to a friend of a friend in Rochester, who never registered it, and who had it stolen and impounded. Dan took me to get it out of impound, but by the time I heard of this the cost to get it out was $330 and it reportedly had a lot of damage to the front end, so we had to walk away.

I took the money from the sale of the scooter and put it toward my white Vespa. The Honda was one of the best purchases I ever made.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Cold Weather Challenge

Today's scooter ride home qualifies for the 2strokebuzz.com Cold Weather Challenge.

Name: Michael Morrissey
Temperature: 28°F
Distance: 10.3 miles
Location: Portland Oregon
Date: January 26, 2009
Time: 6:30 PM to 7:40 PM
Scooter: 1979 Vespa P150

Your CWC story: I was getting kind of bored with my breadloaf bus, so today I rode the rickety yet trusty old Vespa to work. I wasn’t even thinking it would be cold, but this evening was really chilly. I work in deep SE portland, and live in NE Portland. I went about 4 and a half miles out of my way on the ride home to run in and get some hippy food at New Seasons at 33rd and Alberta. There was ice and some snow outside still. I saw a red motorcycle at one point also riding, which made me happy. The food was worth the extra distance traveled on the old putt putt.

Route: Deep SE, up 82nd to Fremont, New Seasons at Alberta and 33rd. Back out Killingsworth to my house in NE.

Friday, January 02, 2009

Giorgio Bettinelli

This is the Wikipedia entry for Giorgio Bettinelli, as translated from Italian via Altavista Babelfish:

Giorgio Bettinelli
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giorgio_Bettinelli

You go to: Navigation, tries
Nothing sources!
This voice or section of biographies not filler sources or references.
You can improve this voice adding citations from reliable sources, second the lines guides on the use of the sources.

George Bettinelli (Cream, 15 May 1955 - China, 16 september 2008) has been a journalist, writer and Italian traveller. Graduated in letters near the university of Rome, it is famous for its long four completed travels to edge of a Vespa. In fact during its permanence in Indonesia, like payment of a series of debits, he comes to it given a Vespa of which he falls in love himself immediately.

Its first travel leaves from Mentana, dov'era resident, in province of Rome, 1992 with Saigon destination, where it will arrive nine months after - March 1993 - having covered 24,000 kilometers. According to part from Anchorage in order to arrive to the Earth of the hard Fire and from 1994 to 1995 along a distance of 36.000 kilometers. The third party joins Melbourne to Capetown, for a total of 52.000 km covered between 1995 and 1996. The last quarter and, called Worldwide Odyssey, is a real turn of the world, hard more than three years, from the October of 1997 to the May of 2001: the departure place is the Earth of the Fire and that one of arrival is the Tasmania. It covers 144,000 km passing for Alaska, the Siberia, entering in Africa through the strait of Gibilterra, and costeggiandola all till Gibuti passing an other time for Capetown, in order then to costeggiare all southern Asia from the Yemen to Indonesia, till the arrival in the last continent, Australia, and to the final destination, the Tasmania. During this last travel George Bettinelli it has been also kidnapped from a group of guerrillas in the Congo, in order then to be released after little time, derubato of all but with the life it saves. By now the expert pilot-traveller has decided not to stop itself, and therefore has carried out an other travel in the only great country from up to now not covered he: the China (where then it has been moved and married), to which the escape of its last book is continuation China in Vespa.

George Bettinelli is died in China, 16 september 2008, to the age of 53 years for an unexpected malore. There he lived from four years, on the rivers of the Mekong, with its Yapei wife. He was preparing an other book, this time on Tibet.

Bibliography [modification]

* In Vespa. From Rome to Saigon (Feltrinelli 1997), that it narrates the first travel
* In Vespa beyond the horizon (- Rusconi- 2002), 400 photos intensely lived during the 110,000 km of its first three travels
* Brum Brum. 254,000 kilometers in Vespa (Feltrinelli 2002): the others travels till the rapimento in the Congo
* Rhapsody In Black. In Vespa from Angola to the Yemen (Feltrinelli 2005)
* China in Vespa

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Honda Trail 90



On June 3, 2008 Dan and I went to southeast Portland and he bought this baby, a 1965 Honda Trail 90. You meet the nicest people on a Honda.

Of course, my head wraps itself around the Beach Boys' song "Little Honda" at the sight of this "little motorbike." Here is a great video of the original song:



Being an indie rocker, I much prefer Yo La Tengo performing the song:

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Ruckus all over USA.

I came across this story today of some guy riding all over the United States on his Honda Ruckus. I would have met him at Spring Scoot, but he and I both only attended on one day, opposite days. It reminds me of everything I love about riding scooters. There are lots of great pictures in this account of his trip.

LINK

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

The Mountain Goats on 2StrokeBuzz


2StrokeBuzz.com, the blog I have been reading longer than any other blog, recently referenced a Mountain Goats song in a post about a scooter rally, trumping anything I've written recently.

Check it out: http://2strokebuzz.com/index.php/?p=3700

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

V90: We could do this the easy way or we could do it my way.

I do everything the hard way. I am sanding my project Vespa by hand with 220 grit sandpaper. I am almost done. I am spraypainting it later. Here is what I have so far.

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Vespa 90! progress!?

I have been working on building my 1964 Vespa 90 out of pieces, but the headset is chipped and I didn't know until now. I need to either find a new one to replace this one, or find someone to fix mine.



Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Rattlecan my heart.


I have begun painting my Smallframe Vespa. For those keeping score at home, this will be my third rattlecan paint job, though my first on a Vespa. It looks good so far: the small bit i've done.

Saturday, December 09, 2006

Summer Flashback

Matt gave me a bunch of pictures recently and this was one of them. It is me during the 2006 Rally In Portland chilling in Sellwood.

The black Vespa in the front belongs to Kalaisha. The three bikes right by those are Cassie, Tracy ("Skirt") and my roommates' - all from Cute Bunnies and Kitties Scooter Club.

Across the street there I am chilling with coffee in hand. Behind me is my roommates' Lambretta, my white Vespa, and I'm talking with some scooter friends from Eugene and some goofball with sandals on a Derbi Predator who just happened to be riding by.

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

If You've got them, light them up


I really want one of these new Gilera Fuocos.

I have an audio treat for old fans of WGSU - especially Greg Gonzalez.

http://audio.cdbaby.com/s/summerbreak-10.mp3

Monday, October 30, 2006

Happy Vespa

Today I got this carburator in the mail. It is what's known as a Vortex carburator. It is a Spaco/Dell'orto style carb modified by a scooterist in California to be more adjustable and to give a bit better performance. I worked on my scooter and put it mostly back together and took it for a spin around the block. It started up and sounded very angry. I believe it was upset because during the two years I have owned it I have always run a 102 main jet, not knowing any better. Now, I know better and have a 116 main jet. That is a big change. It means the Vespa gets a lot more fuel. This carb is designed for a lot more air, thus the scooter's engine is burning a lot more and going faster. I am very pleased with this. A large portion of this pleasure comes from me putting it all back together single-handedly (with some counseling from my housemates, a phone tutorial from Al of Hot Rod Scooters, and more counseling and parts lending from The McCabes). However, after a few blocks the Vespa died and had to be pushed home. It made weird clouds of smoke out of the carburator top that if I were superstitious I would believe would have something to do with halloween. I am sure something small is wrong with it. In any event, the ride around the block was smoother and quicker than ever before.

Also, today I watched The Fast and The Furious: Tokyo Drift and it was pretty awesome.

Monday, October 23, 2006

Old Project

I am putting some new parts on my old white Vespa. They are performance parts, and they are both hand-me-down parts from these scooters:


Portland's own THUNDERTURD



NYC's UrbanBarn Scooter

It seems like these parts are going to a fitting recipient.