Key performance
Technical specifications
- Wheelbase
- 1449.00 mm → 1445.00 mm
- Height
- 1113.00 mm → 1110.00 mm
- New price
- 8 549 € → 8 599 €
Engine
- Displacement
- 744 cc
- Power
- 52.0 ch @ 6200 tr/min (38.0 kW)
- Torque
- 60.0 Nm @ 4900 tr/min
- Engine type
- V2, four-stroke
- Cooling
- Air
- Compression ratio
- 10.2 : 1
- Bore × stroke
- 80.0 x 74.0 mm (3.1 x 2.9 inches)
- Valves/cylinder
- 2
- Fuel system
- Injection. Weber-Marelli electronic fuel injection.
- Valve timing
- Pushrods
- Lubrication
- Forced circulation with lobe pump - circuit capacity: 1.78 Kg
- Starter
- Electric
Chassis
- Frame
- Double cradle tubular frame in ALS steel with detachable rear subframe
- Gearbox
- 5-speed
- Final drive
- Shaft drive (cardan) (final drive)
- Front suspension
- Telescopic hydraulic fork with 40 mm stanchions
- Rear suspension
- Die cast light alloy swing arm with 2 spring preload adjustable shock absorbers
- Front wheel travel
- 130 mm (5.1 inches)
- Rear wheel travel
- 93 mm (3.7 inches)
Brakes
- Front brakes
- Single disc. ABS. Brembo caliper with 4 differentiated pistons
- Rear brakes
- Single disc. ABS. Floating disc. Two-piston calipers.
- Front tyre
- 100/90-18
- Rear tyre
- 130/80-17
Dimensions
- Seat height
- 770.00 mm
- Wheelbase
- 1445.00 mm
- Ground clearance
- 150.00 mm
- Length
- 2185.00 mm
- Width
- 800.00 mm
- Height
- 1110.00 mm
- Fuel capacity
- 21.00 L
- Weight
- 209.00 kg
- Dry weight
- 189.00 kg
- New price
- 8 599 €
Overview
What drives a nearly century-old Italian manufacturer to revisit, time and again, a recipe that's several decades old? The answer may lie in that transverse V-twin displacing 744 cc, whose cylinder heads proudly jut out from the frame like two clenched fists ready to slice through the air. The 2019 Moto Guzzi V7 III Stone isn't trying to reinvent the motorcycle. It would rather polish a legacy, quietly beef it up, and dress it in matte black to win over riders who want character without complications.

Beneath what looks like a simple facelift, Mandello del Lario has actually gotten its hands dirty. The 90° V-twin keeps its displacement but inherits cylinder heads derived from the V9, and that changes the game. Power climbs to 52 hp at 6,200 rpm, torque reaches 60 Nm, and above all the engine breathes better thanks to completely redesigned pistons, valves, and exhaust. The reinforced crankcase, reworked crankshaft, modified clutch, and oil-jet piston cooling all point to serious underlying work on reliability. Ten percent more power isn't a revolution, but on a mill that stakes everything on sensory pleasure rather than raw performance, every horsepower counts double. This twin doesn't ask to be flogged. It prefers you to listen to it thumping between your legs, to savor its calibrated vibrations. Against a Kawasaki Z650RS or a Yamaha XSR700, the V7 III Stone suffers an obvious power deficit. But it offers something its Japanese rivals struggle to replicate: an immediate mechanical personality, tangible from the first turn of the key.
On the chassis side, the tubular ALS steel double-cradle frame has been stiffened at the front. The geometry sharpens with a tighter steering head angle and reduced trail, making the steering livelier without betraying the machine's natural stability. The 209 kg wet weight remains reasonable, and the 770 mm seat height puts this Italian within reach of most body types. The 40 mm telescopic fork and rear shock absorbers adjustable for preload get the job done without any particular brilliance. Braking duties fall to Brembo, with a single front disc gripped by a four-piston caliper and standard ABS, delivering honest bite for the intended use. This isn't a machine built to attack corners, and that's not the point.
What truly sets the V7 III Stone apart from the competition in this segment is its shaft drive. Unique at this displacement, it frees the owner from chain maintenance and delivers a smoothness of operation that perfectly suits the beast's temperament. The five-speed gearbox may lack a sixth gear for highway comfort, but the 21-liter tank compensates with generous range. Add electronic fuel injection, a two-level switchable traction control system, and the optional MG-MP multimedia platform capable of connecting the bike to a smartphone to display a wealth of parameters, and you get a surprisingly connected classic. The Night Pack version pushes the aesthetic dial even further with striking dark finishes.
At €8,599 in 2019, the Moto Guzzi V7 III Stone's price sits in the upper-middle range of the neo-retro segment. But what you're paying for here is a hard-to-quantify surplus of soul. This is a motorcycle made for Sunday rides, jaunts along country roads, and sidewalk café stops with fellow enthusiasts who'd rather talk engines than lap times. The used market is now flush with 2017, 2018, and 2020 V7 III Stone models at softer prices, and the Moto Guzzi V7 III Stone accessories catalog lets you customize the machine to your liking. For anyone looking for a convincing test ride, all it takes is placing your hands on that wide handlebar, feeling the V-twin shudder to life at startup, and understanding that some motorcycles simply can't be judged by their spec sheet.
Standard equipment
- Assistance au freinage : ABS
Practical info
- Véhicule accessible au permis A2 ou bridable à 47.5ch / 35 Kw
- La moto est accessible aux permis : A, A2
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