Key performance

91 ch
Power
🔧
1064 cc
Displacement
⚖️
243 kg
Weight
🏎️
215 km/h
Top speed
💺
800 mm
Seat height
22.0 L
Fuel capacity
💰
11 200 €
New price
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Technical specifications

Changements 2003 2005
Power
91.0 ch @ 7800 tr/min (65.7 kW) 91.0 ch @ 7800 tr/min (66.9 kW)
Torque
94.1 Nm @ 6000 tr/min 92.2 Nm @ 6000 tr/min
Engine type
V2, four-stroke Bicylindre en V transversal à 90°, 4 temps
Wheelbase
1490.00 mm

Engine

Displacement
1064 cc
Power
91.0 ch @ 7800 tr/min (66.9 kW)
Torque
92.2 Nm @ 6000 tr/min
Engine type
Bicylindre en V transversal à 90°, 4 temps
Cooling
par air
Compression ratio
9.5 : 1
Bore × stroke
92 x 80 mm
Valves/cylinder
2
Fuel system
Injection

Chassis

Frame
poutre et double berceau interrompu en acier
Gearbox
boîte à 6 rapports
Final drive
Cardan
Front suspension
Fourche téléhydraulique inversée Ø 40 mm, déb : 120 mm
Rear suspension
Mono-amortisseur, déb : 128 mm

Brakes

Front brakes
Freinage 2 disques Ø 320 mm, étrier 4 pistons
Rear brakes
Freinage 1 disque Ø 282 mm, étrier 2 pistons
Front tyre
120/70-17
Front tyre pressure
2.20 bar
Rear tyre
180/55-17
Rear tyre pressure
2.40 bar

Dimensions

Seat height
800.00 mm
Fuel capacity
22.00 L
Weight
243.00 kg
Dry weight
221.00 kg
New price
11 200 €

Overview

Who still remembers character-laden roadsters, the kind that rattle your wrists and remind you with every twist of the throttle that you're alive? In 2005, while Japan was rolling out inline-fours as smooth as turbines, Moto Guzzi persisted with its V11 Sport Naked and its big 1064 cc transverse V-twin. A motorcycle born from the stubborn conviction of a handful of engineers in Mandello del Lario, convinced that an engine can be a work of art as much as a mechanical organ.

Moto Guzzi V11 Sport Naked

The 90° twin inherited from the California was reworked to reach 91 horsepower at 7800 rpm, with 92 Nm of torque available from 6000 rpm. On paper, nothing spectacular against a Ducati Monster S4R or a Triumph Speed Triple from the same era. But numbers don't tell the whole story. This V-twin lives, pulses, rocks the bike from side to side when you blip the throttle at a standstill. It pulls strongly from low revs, feels smooth and creamy through the midrange, then runs slightly out of breath around the 4000 rpm zone before finding a second wind higher up. The six-speed gearbox, linked to a shaft drive, demands finesse. Each gear has to be earned, requiring watchmaker precision on the lever to avoid ugly crunching. The shaft drive, for its part, offers the peace of mind of minimal maintenance and no chain to lubricate — a luxury for long-distance riders.

On the road, the V11 Sport Naked tips the scales at 243 kg wet and makes no attempt to hide it. The 40 mm inverted fork and rear monoshock do a decent job on clean tarmac, but the steel frame — a mix of spine and interrupted double cradle — shows its limits on rough surfaces. Parasitic vibrations creep in, rigidity is lacking, and the bike turns nervous as you approach its 215 km/h top speed. There's no point rushing it. The V11 is not a sportbike in disguise; it's a temperamental roadster that rewards the patient rider. Anyone willing to ride at its pace, sweeping through curves on the twin's generous torque, will be rewarded with sensations no sanitized Japanese machine can deliver. The 800 mm seat height accommodates most builds comfortably, and the 22-liter tank allows for reasonable range between stops.

Moto Guzzi V11 Sport Naked

Braking is one of this Italian's genuine strong points. Two 320 mm discs gripped by four-piston calipers up front, a 282 mm disc with a two-piston caliper at the rear. Finely crafted Brembo hardware — powerful, progressive, confidence-inspiring from the first squeeze. In this department, the Guzzi has nothing to envy from its European competitors, and even outclasses some pricier rivals.

Then there's the question of price. At €11,200 in 2005, the V11 Sport Naked sat above many Japanese roadsters that looked better equipped on paper. But you don't buy a Moto Guzzi to tick boxes on a spec sheet. You buy it for the madness of that transverse engine, for that racy silhouette that echoes the V7 Sport of the 1970s, for the smell of hot oil and the hoarse rumble from the exhaust. It's an enthusiast's motorcycle, built for riders who prefer character over raw performance, mechanical soul over omnipotent electronics. Not a bike for beginners given its weight and temperament, but a heartfelt choice for the experienced rider who wants to feel something different.

Practical info

  • La moto est accessible aux permis : A

Indicators & positioning

Weight-to-power ratio
0.37 ch/kg
🔄
Torque / weight
0.38 Nm/kg
🔧
Volumetric power
84.4 ch/L
In category Naked bike · 532-2128cc displacement (3685 motorcycles compared)
Power 90 ch Top 64%
50 ch median 100 ch 175 ch
Weight 243 kg Lighter than 14%
183 kg median 212 kg 256 kg
P/W ratio 0.37 ch/kg Top 69%
0.24 median 0.46 0.83 ch/kg

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