Road Test: Aprilia Pegaso 650 Strada
By Tim Dickson
Aprilia's Pegaso is re-born for a new generation of
style-conscious funky stunters, and it's not half bad for the rest of us,
either. The road-ready supermoto just got practical.
If a new bike launch's opulence is a measure of the importance of that machine
to its manufacturer, then the Pegaso 650 Strada must rank as Quite Important to
Aprilia. Either that or, by presenting the new supermoto street tool to the
world's press in one of the fanciest hotels I've been allowed into, Aprilia are
making the point that their money concerns of recent times are well and truly
behind them. Perhaps both.
On the face of it, an update of the Pegaso 650 single-cylinder big trailie-style
stalwart of Aprilia's range doesn't strike the casual observer as a tool worthy
of great attention. But it's got history. Big singles have always been big
business in mainland Europe, and the Pegaso 600 was the firm's first big bike.
In the past 15 years it has sold over 50,000 units in various incarnations.
This version, the Strada, has dropped nearly all vestiges of off-road
pretensions and is re-born in unashamed supermoto guise - and it's an
association Aprilia are proud to make, having taken the World Supermoto S2 title
in 2004.
Motive power actually comes from Yamaha, specifically the Italian-built XT lump.
There isn't quite the punch you might expect from tickover, and it needs 3000rpm
showing to really start to move. Give too much of a handful below that and the
Pegaso responds with a wet-fart-under-a-bath-towel note from the twin exhausts,
and little else. But the motor has been breathed on by Aprilia to sacrifice
bottom end urge for top end go, and there's a fair amount of it. The mid-range
is punchy and it's strong at the top - although all that should be qualified
with the words 'for a single'.
The chassis is more than a match for the 50bhp motor. It's relatively soft but
very well balanced and impressively stable. The suspension and Pirelli Diablo
tyres had barely woken up before ground clearance ran out, and it was backed up
by exceptionally good - bordering on too good - brakes. The single four-pot
Brembo caliper up front (one half of a Mille's front set-up) is enough to stop
the Pegaso on its nose from any speed it can reach - Aprilia claim a 106mph top
end - while the rear does enormous skids.
And if it's that sort of behaviour that appeals then a Pegaso could be right up
your urban backstreet. As a sharply-styled stunter it has a lot going for it,
and as a supermoto race-rep it's harder-edged then the XT660X and quicker than
Honda's softly-softly FMX650. It looks good and is surprisingly well-equipped.
The LCD display had at least two clocks, two trips, a stopwatch and loads of
other stuff I couldn't work out, all operated by a toggle switch on the left
hand switchgear. Why hasn't anybody thought of that before? Another nice touch
is the tank-top cubby hole, opened by a button on the switchgear, and only when
the ignition is switched on. Neat.
Perhaps the biggest obstacle Aprilia has to overcome is convincing people to
consider one in the first place. The near-five-grand price tag places these
machines firmly in CBF600 territory and not far off Hornets and FZ6s and, for
many, those machines are a much more attractive all-round proposition. But
Aprilia are pitching the Pegaso as a fun tool first, and a practical commuter
second - or maybe third. Younger riders shopping for their first step to big
bikedom would do well to find their feet on something as easy to ride yet
entertaining as this, and the style conscious ones may well find themselves
looking at the Aprilia over the worthy but bland CBF and its ilk anyway.
VERDICT
Good looking, well put together and goes well for a single. Supermoto kicks with
real usability, but price may be an issue