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STYLE ICON: It's one of the most
recognisable shapes on the planet, ranking
up there with Marilyn Monroe and the Coke
bottle.
Pictures: DAVE ABRAHAMS
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October
4, 2004
By Dave Abrahams
LML has been building clones of Piaggio's iconic
Vespa in India with the agreement of the Italian
company - for many years and until 1999 was part
of a worldwide production network that supplied
complete Vespa 150s, Prima Vera 125s and parts for
the PX200 to Piaggio.
However, LML has had its own distribution network
since 2000 but, by agreement with Piaggio, does
not use the Vespa name. Instead, the 150 is sold
as the Star (Stella in the US) and the Primavera
is called Sensation.
Indian quality control might sometimes be a little
erratic but the robustness of the original design
and that of the LML cannot be questioned
.
The latest model to reach SA is the grandly named
Star Deluxe, using a monococque body that's almost
exactly the same as the Vespa PX200, including
electric start and Italian Grimeca front brakes.
It's powered, however, by an LML derivative of the
150 motor, one of Piaggio's most successful units
and renowned for durability.
What you get is the same body as the original,
with a slightly smaller but just as robust engine,
suspension components built to handle India's
roads and all the style of the iconic shape.
And it costs R18 995, just less than half the R38
750 demanded for a Vespa PX200 although the PX
does come with a free helmet.
The motor is a fan-cooled, three-port, disc-valve,
two-stroke single, almost square at 57.8 x 57
bore/stroke, that revs to a little over 5000rpm
and kicks out 5
.8kW. The makers
quote maximum torque of 13Nm at only 3000rpm -
this is not a millennium motor, Cyril!
Lubrication is by separate tank and pump the
generic term autolube actually refers to the
Yamaha system. LML calls its version of the same
thing "automatic oil-mixing" and it runs at 30:1
so one top-up of Super 2T should last for 3.5
fills of the eight-litre fuel tank.
There's a little sight glass below the nose of the
saddle, by the fuel tap and choke the last
always needed for a cold start, as generations of
students have discovered.
The Star drives through the classic Vespa
transmission of wet clutch, four handlebar-shift
gears and a short drive shaft, all one unit with
the engine. Although it has spring-loaded detents
between gears, it's not a positive-stop mechanism
so it's possible to go right through the gear you
want to either the next cog or a false neutral.
Not a major problem during and upshift but
disconcerting when you're changing down. It's just
something you have to learn to do properly when
riding such a bike.
Even then, first can be a awkward the other
three go in easily, although you may have to look
down for the first few dozen gearshifts to make
sure the shifter is in the right place before you
release the clutch.
The Star pulls well through its gears; it's hard
to quantify without a rev counter but it's easy to
tell when the motor begins to fall off the power
curve at which point hook another gear.
Smooth running
The motor runs commendably smoothly with very
little primary vibration from the heavy-duty
crankshaft and distinct but acceptable secondary
vibes at high revs; the 149cc stroker was more
sophisticated than I'd expected.
LML advertises a top speed of 85km/h which
proved a little pessimistic. Just before dawn on a
cool, still morning I briefly hit 94km/h although
a slight uphill soon reduced that to 75!
Crouching behind the high-mounted headlight didn't
make the bike any faster, only unstable. Just sit
up and let the scooter find its own pace; on an
icon such as this it's not about how fast you go -
it's about how you look!
The Star uses around 3.4 litres/100km cruising at
around 80km/h, which is commendable considering
the basic design of the motor goes back to 1948!
Characteristic suspension
The front suspension uses Piaggio's trademark
single-sided trailing link, geometry tuned for
just the right amount of anti-dive (some Vespas
actually rose in front if you hit the
brakes really hard!).
Hard braking will induce a little dive, though not
enough to upset the steering. The front brake is
from Grimeca in Italy, one of two major components
LML has not been able to source on the Indian
sub-continent (the other is the clear indicator
lens they are made in India but don't meet EU
standards).
The single-piston floating calliper unit is well
up to the job at inner-city speeds, though I'm
told they can fade rather alarmingly on the track.
The track? Yes, Cyril, scooter racing is well
organised in the UK and France.
The engine is also the rear suspension, pivoting
on the engine cases and a single and unremarkable
motorcycle shock-absorber. It's a brilliant
Piaggio solution to the problem of fitting a rear
suspension without an exposed and more complex
drive train.
User-friendly
It's been said that the aircraft engineer who
designed the original Vespa hated motorcycles with
a passion and set out to prove that two-wheelers
needn't be noisy, dirty, uncomfortable or hard to
ride!
The rear brake pedal still pokes through the
floorboard as it has done for half a century and
still operates a basic, single leading-shoe drum
brake, because it works.
The ride, as with any bike having a wheelbase of
only 1235mm, is choppy. The 10" wheels dance over
bumps, particularly at the back thanks to the
scooter's strong rearward weight bias and the
steering is very sensitive.
Nevertheless, once you get used to the bike's
essentially twitchy nature, you'll find it easy to
ride and accurate through gaps in the traffic.
The suspension is stiff and the straight, flat
double seat is hard; anything longer than a couple
of hours on an LML could turn out to be something
of an endurance contest but then it's not
supposed to be a tourer.
Practical features
Each LML comes with a spare wheel carried under
the left side of the body or at least a spare
rim and tyre. The alloy hubs and steel rims are
separate so the rider can replace either tyre
without disturbing brakes or drive train.
The rims are also split so anybody who has owned a
bicycle can repair a punctured tube with just the
tools in the toolkit and without the help of a
workshop useful for a home market where most
vehicle repairs are carried out in the shade of a
palm tree.
The catches for these sponsons, as well as the
caps for the oil and fuel tanks, are under the
lockable seat. There's no under-seat storage but
there is a 12-litre, lockable storage box inside
the leg shield that also contains the
comprehensive tool kit.
The ignition key operates both locks makers of
more expensive motorcycles please note. The big
chrome carrier behind the seat is standard it has
to be because, it's welded to the plate that holds
the seat latch.
And that's really what the Star (and its
progenitor the Vespa 150) is all about. This is
practical, economical, durable, user-friendly
transport. It's pure fun and it's also one of
the most recognisable shapes on the planet,
ranking up there with Marilyn Monroe and a Coke
bottle.
It's not often you get to ride around on a style
icon for R18 995, especially considering the price
of the Vespa PX200.