Gilera Saturno 500 Competizione

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Photo By Kyoichi Nakamura
In Competizione guise, the Gilera Saturno became the dominant force in postwar Italian road racing.

1946 Gilera Saturno 500 Competizione
Claimed power
: 35hp @ 5,700rpm (rear wheel)
Top speed: 107mph (Goodwood 2010)
Engine: 499cc air-cooled OHV pushrod single, 84mm x 90mm bore and stroke, 12:1 compression ratio (running methanol/9:1 stock)
Weight: 299lb (136kg) with oil, no fuel 

Most fans of the golden age of 1950s GP racing instinctively think of a 500cc Gilera road racer as being the legendary twin cam 4-cylinder. But in the immediate aftermath of World War II, and for almost two decades thereafter, Europe’s race tracks were inhabited by another successful 500cc Gilera racer, the Saturno single.

It was the most plentiful 500cc Italian post-war GP racer built, a bike that achieved consistent success for years against its more exotic rivals, especially on tight courses where its lighter weight, leaner build and easier power delivery were assets its riders could make the most of.

Between 1940 and 1959, Gilera made 6,026 Saturnos. It is in every way the BSA Gold Star of Italy, with an equally illustrious competition history. The Gilera 500cc pushrod single took Italian team members to gold medals in the International Six Days Trial, was a fearsome dirt sled in early Italian motocross events, powered a succession of championship-winning sidecars, served as a rugged military mount, and could be used with impunity as a mile-eating road bike, yet it also won many road races up to and including the 500 GP level. Indeed, the Saturno even won the race it debuted in, the 1940 Targa Florio, carrying works rider Massimo Masserini. That was before Mussolini took Italy into the war, stymieing development for the next six years.

After the war

  • Published on Feb 8, 2013
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