The MV Agusta 750S came out in 1970, it was a superbike the world had been asking for for years, but there was just one catch – it cost almost three times as much as a Honda CB750.
The crown jewel of the MV Agusta 750S was its engine, an advanced inline four-cylinder all-alloy engine with double overhead camshafts, electric starter and unit construction including a 5-speed gearbox. It was one of the most technically sophisticated motorcycles in production at the time of its unveiling.
Quick Facts – The MV Agusta 750S
- Only 583 examples of the MV Agusta 750S would be built between 1970 and 1975, this was not due to a lack of public interest or desire for the model, but rather its exceptionally high price.
- MV Agusta had been developing transverse inline-four motorcycle engines since 1950, having poached two of Gilera’s best engineers and faithfully reproduced their race-winning inline-four.
- The new transverse 500cc inline-four has proven to be just as effective as MV Agusta’s other bikes, helping the Italian company win 270 Grand Prix motorcycle races, 38 World Riders’ Championships and 37 World Riders’ Championships. builders.
- With its 743cc DOHC inline-four producing 72bhp at 9,200rpm, the 750S had a top speed of 200kph, making it one of the most capable and fastest production superbikes. research of his time.
The four Italian transversals
The real story of the MV Agusta 750S dates back to the 1920s, when two young Italians named Carlo Gianini and Piero Remor developed a 500cc SOHC inline four-cylinder motorcycle engine capable of developing 28 bhp – an astonishing figure for the time.
It wasn’t the first inline-four fitted to a motorcycle, but it was the first to be transversely or laterally bolted. Earlier inline-four motorcycles had them mounted longitudinally, resulting in a long wheelbase and insufficient cooling of the rear cylinders.
Gianini and Remor had proven the concept, but they suffered from a severe lack of funding to continue development. Fortunately, aero-engine builder CNA stepped in and took over the project – developing the engine into a liquid-cooled, supercharged DOHC inline-four, now capable of over 80hp.
Named the “Rondine”, it is said to be the motorcycle engine that propelled 1st and 2nd place finishes in the 1935 Tripoli Grand Prix in Italy.
The Arrival Of Gilera And La Rondine
Shortly after the success of the Rondine-powered motorcycles at the Tripoli Grand Prix, the design was purchased by Guiseppe Gilera of the Gilera motorcycle company.
Gilera engineers developed a modified version of the Rondine engine and continued to compete with it until the outbreak of World War II in Europe in 1939.
After the war a new transverse inline-four was developed from scratch, it was one of the most advanced motorcycle engines in the world at the time and it propelled Gilera riders to a multitude of race and championship victories.
MV Agusta: extraordinary headhunters
In 1949, MV Agusta successfully hired the Gilera team’s chief engine designer and chief mechanic – Piero Remor and Arturo Magni respectively. It was the same Piero Remor who had co-developed the first transverse inline-four in the early 1920s.
It was a major coup for MV Agusta, the pair set out to design a 500cc transverse four that was so similar to their original Gilera design that people were wondering if any parts could be swapped between them.
This new engine has proven itself in competition time and time again, along with the other MV Agusta’s it has helped the company to 270 Motorcycle Grand Prix victories, 38 Drivers’ World Championship victories and 37 World Championship victories. builders.
MV Agusta 750S
For years, Grand Prix motorcycle racing fans have been clamoring for a road-legal production version of the MV Agusta race bikes.
The company had held that back, no one is quite sure why, but the most likely reason seemed to be that they didn’t want privateer racers competing alongside the factory race bikes and possibly beating them.
The company finally acquiesced in 1965, releasing the MV Agusta 600 – a cruiser-style motorcycle fitted with a 600cc version of their famous transverse quad. The bike wasn’t particularly attractive, it certainly wasn’t sporty, and it cost a small fortune.
Sales of the 600 were dismal and in 1970 the company finally gave the motorcycling public what they had always wanted – the MV Agusta 750S.
Now, with its engine bored out to 743cc, the DOHC transverse four-cylinder produced 72bhp at 9,200rpm and had a top speed of 200kph or 120mph. It cost three times the price of the Honda CB750, a Japanese motorcycle that was no doubt inspired by the powerful Italian fours.
Sales were relatively slow, with just over 100 built per year for five years, 583 were built in total. Today, they are among the most collected superbikes of the era.
The MV Agusta 750S you see here is a 1974 model, the penultimate year of production. It’s finished in the company’s classic red/blue/white livery.
Perhaps most interestingly, it was recently restored to concours condition by none other than Giovanni Magni – the son of Arturo Magni, who was Race Director for MV Agusta throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.
It is to be auctioned live online, with bidding starting in four days at the time of writing. If you want to see more, learn more or register to bid you can see the list here.
Images courtesy of Car & Classic
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