Small Package Big Punch: Laverda Formula 500

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Trevor Dunne gives the Formula 500 a run after completing its restoration.
Trevor Dunne gives the Formula 500 a run after completing its restoration.
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A 1979 Laverda Formula 500.
A 1979 Laverda Formula 500.
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Series 2 Formula 500s can be identified by their two-piece gas tank and seat assembly; Series 1 machines were a single piece.
Series 2 Formula 500s can be identified by their two-piece gas tank and seat assembly; Series 1 machines were a single piece.
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Series 2 Formula 500s can be identified by their two-piece gas tank and seat assembly; Series 1 machines were a single piece.
Series 2 Formula 500s can be identified by their two-piece gas tank and seat assembly; Series 1 machines were a single piece.
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Twin 10.2-inch Brembo front disc brakes were straight from the street-based Zeta/Alpino.
Twin 10.2-inch Brembo front disc brakes were straight from the street-based Zeta/Alpino.
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The Formula 500 is actually smaller than it looks. A compact powertrain and 56-inch wheelbase make the Laverda a quick-handling machine.
The Formula 500 is actually smaller than it looks. A compact powertrain and 56-inch wheelbase make the Laverda a quick-handling machine.
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Rearsets were unique to the Formula 500. Owner John England found an original, new-old-stock exhaust and seat pan.
Rearsets were unique to the Formula 500. Owner John England found an original, new-old-stock exhaust and seat pan.
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Rearsets were unique to the Formula 500.
Rearsets were unique to the Formula 500.

1979 Laverda Formula 500
Claimed power: 52hp @ 9,500rpm
Top speed: 125mph
Engine: 497cc air-cooled DOHC 8-valve parallel twin, 72mm x 61mm bore and stroke, 10.5:1 compression ratio
Weight (dry): 337lb (153kg)

With our rose-tinted retro-spectacle view of times past, it’s often difficult to remember which motorcycle manufacturers were first to do what. But Laverda, the little company from Breganze in the foothills of the Italian Alps, had more firsts than most.

Laverda was first to introduce a 650cc (and 750cc) overhead camshaft parallel twin, in 1968, beating Yamaha’s 650 by two years. It was first to produce a liter-class double overhead cam multi-cylinder bike (the 3-cylinder 3C) just ahead of Kawasaki’s Z1 in 1972; and it launched the first double overhead cam 4-valve twin with a 6-speed transmission.

That motorcycle was the 1977 500cc Zeta (Alpina in the U.K.). Largely forgotten today, its lasting legacy lies in the factory high performance race special it spawned, the Laverda Formula 500.

Filling the gap

  • Published on Feb 13, 2014
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