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Aprilia Pegaso 650ie

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Make Model |
Aprilia Pegaso 650ie |
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Year |
2001-02 |
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Engine |
Liquid cooled, four stroke, single cylinder,
DOHC, 5 valves per cylinder |
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Capacity |
652 |
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Bore x Stroke |
100 x 83mm |
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Compression Ratio |
9.0:1 |
|
Induction |
Electronic. controlled
by injection control unit |
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Ignition /
Starting |
Digital / electric |
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Max Power |
50 hp 36.4 kW @ 7000 rpm |
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Max Torque |
59 Nm @ 6500 rpm |
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Transmission /
Drive |
5 Speed / chain |
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Front Suspension |
45mm Marzocchi
telescopic fork. 175mm wheel travel. |
|
Rear Suspension |
Varying section high
strength steel swing-arm. Aprilia Progressive System APS rising rate
linkage |
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Front Brakes |
Single 300mm disc 2 piston caliper |
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Rear Brakes |
Single 220mm disc 1 piston caliper |
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Front Tyre |
100/90-19 |
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Rear Tyre |
130/80-17 |
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Dry-Weight |
175 kg |
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Fuel Capacity |
21 Litres |
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Consumption average |
20.6 km/lit |
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Standing
¼ Mile |
13.9 sec |
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Top Speed |
166 km/h |
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Reviews |
MCNews.COM |

A motorcycle that provides a
good mix of acceptable performance on both bush
trails and tarmac makes for a versatile adventure machine. Motorcycles that
offer these benefits can be split in two camps.
Bikes such as the DR650
Suzuki, F650 BMW, XR650L Honda and KLR 650 Kawasaki
have large single cylinder engines and are the 'relative'
lightweights. While multi-cylinder machines such
as Triumph's Tiger, Cagiva's Navigator, BMW's
R1150GS and Suzuki's V-Strom are members of the heavyweight class.
Aprilia offers machines in
both those categories; the ETV 1000 Caponord uses
a 998cc V-Twin engine and is the bigger machine. While at the lighter end
of the scales is the Pegaso 650 model, which I sampled during a
recent trip to New South Wales.
The Pegaso's 652cc powerplant
is liquid-cooled and features double overhead
camshafts operating on five radial valves. Aprilia claim 47hp from the big
single. In the real world this translates to around 35hp at the rear
wheel. All machines in this class are fairly equal
in performance at around that mark,
35hp at the wheel, no matter what the makers claim.
The test
machine had a nice set of Staintune mufflers fitted but still seemed top get
a bit breathless at higher revs.
One feature that the Aprilia
does have over the competition is a large 21-litre
fuel capacity which provides for a genuine 300km tank
range if riding conservatively. A sophisticated twin-injector EFI and
engine management system ensures the right amount of fuel and air is
provided to the engine.
Five gears
are available and the box makes for reasonable shifting. It is maybe a
little agricultural in operation but works well enough and missed shifts are
a rare occurrence. Around 120kph is about the maximum cruising speed that
remains manageable, above that the vibrations and fuel economy take a dive
for the worse.

The engine does have a
balancer shaft, but, like all big singles, it does
vibrate more than would be preferable. Luckily the rider is isolated from
most of this with no annoying oscillations coming through the bars or
pegs. Unfortunately the same can't be said of the
seat. This is one area of rider comfort that could
be improved, but again, most of the opposition suffers
the same foible. But the Pegaso is at the worse
end of that scale.
45mm Marzocchi forks handle
the bumps and do a fairly good job of keeping the
front end planted in the gravel but unfortunately
are non-adjustable. A Sachs shock controls the
rear and is adjustable for both preload and rebound. The
suspension is a good compromise between road and trail, without being
singularly exceptional in one of those areas.
Aprilia claim a dry weight of 161kg. High speed stability on rough trails
is very good.
Over 200mm
of ground clearance is available. However, the foot-pegs
are situated quite low, which means that spirited riding on tight
roads can see the pegs touch down quite early. But
the positive trade-off is excellent legroom for
the taller rider. A reasonable 817mm seat height is
just manageable to those who are a bit shorter than average.
Braking performance is quite
strong with a 300mm single disc up front squeezed
by a twin-piston Brembo caliper. A little more feel and
hydraulic assistance would be welcome. The
rear disc is extremely strong, and requires a
careful toe in slippery conditions.
Very clear
instruments display speed and revs in the conventional round-face style.
Also fitted is a temperature gauge, not a temp' light but a proper gauge
ranging from 40-120°. It is surprising that more adventure machines do not
have such a clear temperature gauge, it does help to reassure the rider that
things are mechanically okay when in the bush.
Alternatively it can give a rider enough notice that something is wrong in
order for them to save the engine, or instead complete a journey in small
hops while keeping an eye on the temperature. Good thinking.
Warning
lights are also provided for fuel, which illuminates when there are around
4.5 Litres remaining in the tank, an EFI fault light, oil pressure light and
high beam. Many machines in this class do not even offer an oil pressure
light, which always makes me nervous as the rider gets no warning that
mechanical problems are developing. A turn signal and neutral light are
also provided, all up it would be safe to say that the Aprilia offers the
best instrumentation in this class.
The small
screen is surprisingly effective, of course it does not stop all the wind
blast but it does protect the rider from some buffeting and rain spray.
Aprilia list the basic Pegaso
at $12,496 + on road costs, or $13,420 with side
panniers and tankbag. Comparable with BMW's heavier F650 but much more
expensive than the KLR 650 Kawasaki or Suzuki's much lighter DR650
and Honda's XR650L. But the Aprilia is worth
a look if considering a single-cylinder
adventure machine.
Source MCNews.au

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