Editing Aprilia Tuareg 600 Wind

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[[File:1988 Aprilia Tuareg 600 wind.jpg|300px|thumb|1988 Aprilia Tuareg 600 wind]]
[[File:1988 Aprilia Tuareg 600 wind.jpg|300px|thumb|1988 Aprilia Tuareg 600 wind]]
Unfortunately, Italian skill with the paint box was not enough to exact any respect from the neolithic types who handled the Tuareg during its trip from Northern Italy to Northern England, and it arrived at the Manchester base of importers [[Aprilia]] UK with the extensive (and expensive) bodywork bashed to bits. Replacing it was no problem, except that the only spare plastic was in last year's colors.
Unfortunately, Italian skill with the paint box was not enough to exact any respect from the neolithic types who handled the Tuareg during its trip from Northern Italy to Northern England, and it arrived at the Manchester base of importers [[Aprilia]] UK with the extensive (and expensive) bodywork bashed to bits. Replacing it was no problem, except that the only spare plastic was in last year's colours.


So it was that we didn't really get a new bike to test at all: last year's bike, last year's paint and a nagging suspicion that we were being fobbed off with a machine that, although deemed to be no longer up to scratch for the rest of Europe, was an easy option for the UK market compared to the hassle of homologating the new model. Add to this a gremlin attack on the starter solenoid and a broken connection in the wiring loom as a result of the frequent removal of the tank and it would have been easy to write the Tuareg off as another example of Latin flair for design let down by poor quality control.
So it was that we didn't really get a new bike to test at all: last year's bike, last year's paint and a nagging suspicion that we were being fobbed off with a machine that, although deemed to be no longer up to scratch for the rest of Europe, was an easy option for the UK market compared to the hassle of homologating the new model. Add to this a gremlin attack on the starter solenoid and a broken connection in the wiring loom as a result of the frequent removal of the tank and it would have been easy to write the Tuareg off as another example of Latin flair for design let down by poor quality control.
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Then two things happened to make me change my mind: firstly I was unwise enough to attempt a spot of off-road riding, and secondly the roads dried out.
Then two things happened to make me change my mind: firstly I was unwise enough to attempt a spot of off-road riding, and secondly the roads dried out.
I never seriously expected the Tuareg to be any good on the dirt, but I thought it would be fun to have a go. It wasn't. A combination of high seat, short legs and top-heavy weight distribution made for several uncomfortable moments when I couldn't reach the ground quickly enough to avoid disaster.
I never seriously expected the Tuareg to be any good on the dirt, but I thought it would be fun to have a go. It wasn't. A combination of high seat, short legs and top-heavy weight distribution made for several uncomfortable moments when I couldn't reach the ground quickly enough to avoid disaster.
The lack of any dirt ability was not really a significant black l mark on the Aprilia's character, j but its off-road pretensions i dictate a suspension and tire i choice that has no function ; beyond pure pose-value, and
The lack of any dirt ability was not really a significant black l mark on the Aprilia's character, j but its off-road pretensions i dictate a suspension and tyre i choice that has no function ; beyond pure pose-value, and
what it really needs is more road orientated geometry, a smaller, wider front wheel and some proper tires. In short, it needs to be the Pegaso that the UK isn't going to get.
what it really needs is more road orientated geometry, a smaller, wider front wheel and some proper tyres. In short, it needs to be the Pegaso that the UK isn't going to get.


On the road, the narrow twenty-one inch front tire felt vague and too inclined to wash
On the road, the narrow twenty-one inch front tyre felt vague and too inclined to wash
out if it was turned in hard. Shifting body weight forward helped, but the tire didn't seem to give any feeling of what it was up to beyond a distant squirming sensation.
out if it was turned in hard. Shifting body weight forward helped, but the tyre didn't seem to give any feeling of what it was up to beyond a distant squirming sensation.


Given my new-found dislike of the Tuareg's handling characteristics, I was less than enthusiastic when it was the only bike available to recce Cadwell prior to taking the NWS GSX-R750 (p.52) for its track test. My misgivings weren't helped by photographer Kenny P. chortling away to himself about where he could get the best crash shots, and the fact that the marshal at the club circuit hairpin clearly couldn't decide whether to laugh or
Given my new-found dislike of the Tuareg's handling characteristics, I was less than enthusiastic when it was the only bike available to recce Cadwell prior to taking the NWS GSX-R750 (p.52) for its track test. My misgivings weren't helped by photographer Kenny P. chortling away to himself about where he could get the best crash shots, and the fact that the marshal at the club circuit hairpin clearly couldn't decide whether to laugh or
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Sixty laps later I'd changed my mind again, a phenomenon not unconnected with the fact that I had learnt more or less which way the circuit went,
Sixty laps later I'd changed my mind again, a phenomenon not unconnected with the fact that I had learnt more or less which way the circuit went,
For sale, one Aprilia Tuareg, suit pole vaulter or retired mountaineer. Strangulated hernia forces sale.
For sale, one Aprilia Tuareg, suit pole vaulter or retired mountaineer. Strangulated hernia forces sale.
turned the edges of the tires blue, scraped the pegs through Charlies and overtaken a GSX-R through the Gooseneck.
turned the edges of the tyres blue, scraped the pegs through Charlies and overtaken a GSX-R through the Gooseneck.


I had also fried the new-for-'91 twin disc front brake with repeated four-fingered abuse at the hairpin, and the clutch was a little soggy from the heat, but the motor still ticked over quite happily in between sessions and would almost pull the ton on the back straight. It would have continued to do so, too, had the sight of an MZ racer sliding across Mansfield not served as a timely reminder that it is better to pack up before tiredness and bravado lead you to throw it all away rather than immediately afterwards.It seems that my desperate attempts to modify the steering characteristics actually worked, as there were no problems with the front washing out, even entering bends faster than I would have liked due to the rapidly disappearing front brake. The only disadvantages are a marginally reduced inclination to wheelie and a side-stand that already holds the bike too near the vertical.
I had also fried the new-for-'91 twin disc front brake with repeated four-fingered abuse at the hairpin, and the clutch was a little soggy from the heat, but the motor still ticked over quite happily in between sessions and would almost pull the ton on the back straight. It would have continued to do so, too, had the sight of an MZ racer sliding across Mansfield not served as a timely reminder that it is better to pack up before tiredness and bravado lead you to throw it all away rather than immediately afterwards.It seems that my desperate attempts to modify the steering characteristics actually worked, as there were no problems with the front washing out, even entering bends faster than I would have liked due to the rapidly disappearing front brake. The only disadvantages are a marginally reduced inclination to wheelie and a side-stand that already holds the bike too near the vertical.


Despite my love/hate relationship with the Aprilia, I'm not keen to give it back. If I could keep it, I'd change the front wheel, uprate the brakes, fit some sticky tires and enter a few singles races. I'd lose, but it wouldn't half be fun, and that is what this bike is all about
Despite my love/hate relationship with the Aprilia, I'm not keen to give it back. If I could keep it, I'd change the front wheel, uprate the brakes, fit some sticky tyres and enter a few singles races. I'd lose, but it wouldn't half be fun, and that is what this bike is all about


Made from 1988-1998.
Made from 1988-1998.
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| Ignition  /  Starting||Nipponese electronic  /
| Ignition  /  Starting||Nipponese electronic  /
|-
|-
| Max Power ||46 hp @7100 rpm (rear tire 40.07/7000 rpm )
| Max Power ||46 hp @7100 rpm (rear tyre 40.07/7000 rpm )
|-
|-
| Max Torque||4.5 kg-m @ 6000 rpm
| Max Torque||4.5 kg-m @ 6000 rpm
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| Dry-Weight / Wet-Weight||148 kg / 168 kg
| Dry-Weight / Wet-Weight||148 kg / 168 kg
|-
|-
| Fuel Capacity ||18.4 Liters
| Fuel Capacity ||18.4 Litres
|-
|-
| Consumption  average||17.2 km/lit
| Consumption  average||17.2 km/lit

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