The MV Agusta 500cc Three (1965–1973) or MV Agusta Tre was a road racing motorcycle produced by the
Italian manufacturer
MV Agusta
MV Agusta (, full name: MV AGUSTA Motor S.p.A., original name: Meccanica Verghera Agusta or MV) is a motorcycle manufacturer founded by Count Domenico Agusta on 19 January 1945 as one of the branches of the Agusta aircraft company near Milan in ...
to compete in the 500 cc
Grand Prix motorcycle racing World Championship. The motorcycle was introduced in 1966 to compete against the ever competitive
Honda
is a Japanese public multinational conglomerate manufacturer of automobiles, motorcycles, and power equipment, headquartered in Minato, Tokyo, Japan.
Honda has been the world's largest motorcycle manufacturer since 1959, reaching a producti ...
racing machines and was a bored out version of MV Agusta's highly successful 350 cc
three cylinder.
Giacomo Agostini won consecutive world championships in the 500 cc class with this motorbike from 1966 to 1972.
In addition, MV Agusta won the Constructors' World Championships from 1967 to 1972.
The MV Agusta Tre is considered the most successful racing motorcycle in history.
Development and Technology
The three-cylinder 500 machine was first raced at the 1966
Dutch TT
The Dutch Tourist Trophy, also known as the ''TT Assen'', is an annual Dutch motorsport event established in 1925 for road racing motorcycles held on the TT Circuit Assen, also known as the ‘Cathedral of Speed'. The event attained world champi ...
. The machine was based on the MV Agusta 350 3C that had been used in the previous season (1965). Count Agusta had wanted a 350 cc three-cylinder because he was impressed by the three-cylinder two-stroke
DKW RM 350.
Arturo Magni and designer Mario Rossi tried to dissuade him, but the count insisted.
[Statement from manufacturer Arturo Magni to journalist Carlo Perelli, summer 1993, published in Moto 73 No. 13 of 1993] He even suggested adding an extra cylinder to the
MV Agusta 250 Bicilindrica. When the three-cylinder engine seemed ready, Count Agusta was displeased because there were only two valves per cylinder. Within a week the technicians converted the engine to
four valves per cylinder and that immediately yielded an extra 6 horsepower. In 1966 a version with the engine enlarged to 420 cc was produced for the 500 cc class. The engine stood out due to the large oil pan and the oil cooler in the streamlined fairing to prevent the engine from overheating. The 420 cc machine was replaced in 1967 by a fully-fledged 500 cc machine. The three-cylinder was replaced in 1973 by a new four-cylinder.
The air-cooled three-cylinder machines were the first MV Agusta engines with four-valve heads. The intake
valves had a diameter of 21 mm, the exhaust valves 16.3 mm, the valve angle is 60 degrees. The valves are operated by bucket
tappets from
two overhead camshafts, which are driven by a spur gear set on the right side of the engine. The
connecting rod
A connecting rod, also called a 'con rod', is the part of a piston engine which connects the piston to the crankshaft. Together with the crank, the connecting rod converts the reciprocating motion of the piston into the rotation of the cranksha ...
s were offset by 120 degrees on the
crankshaft. The machine had six roller
main bearing
Main may refer to:
Geography
*Main River (disambiguation)
**Most commonly the Main (river) in Germany
* Main, Iran, a village in Fars Province
*" Spanish Main", the Caribbean coasts of mainland Spanish territories in the 16th and 17th centuries ...
s, two of which were located at the end of the crankshaft. Having only an L-shaped
oil scraper ring on the piston was unusual for a four-stroke engine. Three 27 mm
Dell'Orto carburetor
A carburetor (also spelled carburettor) is a device used by an internal combustion engine to control and mix air and fuel entering the engine. The primary method of adding fuel to the intake air is through the venturi tube in the main meter ...
s supplied the engine with fuel mixture which was ignited with 10 mm
Magneti Marelli spark plugs that received their power from an 8 volt battery ignition.
Both the 500cc and the 350cc Factory race bikes specifications,
bore
Bore or Bores often refer to:
*Boredom
* Drill
Relating to holes
* Boring (manufacturing), a machining process that enlarges a hole
** Bore (engine), the diameter of a cylinder in a piston engine or a steam locomotive
** Bore (wind instruments), ...
and
stroke were veiled in secrecy. When information was leaked, MV Agusta was known to leak disinformation. Over the passing of years, MV race engineers provided information on the 500 cc Three cylinder.
Race history
Giacomo Agostini rode the 500 Three to seven consecutive 500cc World Championships from 1966 to 1972.
The first use of a Tre (but with 350 cc displacement) at the first round of the
1965 World Championship at the
Nürburgring
The is a 150,000 person capacity motorsports complex located in the town of Nürburg, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It features a Grand Prix race track built in 1984, and a long "North loop" track, built in the 1920s, around the village a ...
. The young Giacomo Agostini won confidently in front of the old master
Mike Hailwood. In the second race of the
1966 season, Agostini rode a 420 Tre in the 500 class, the full 500 cc machine being introduced for the
67 season. After Honda withdrew from racing at the end of 1967, there was no comparable racing team that could have denied MV Agusta the title in the 500cc class; This remained so until 1972. The first races of the 1973 season were driven by Agostini still on his tre, then it was replaced by the more powerful MV Agusta 500 four-cylinder. The 1973 Tre was modified to use front
disc brakes from Scarab, but in terms of performance it was inferior to the
two-stroke Yamaha.
Sister model
The MV Agusta 350 Tre, developed before the 500s, was no less successful. Giacomo Agostini was 350 cc champion continuously from 1968 to 1973 with this model. In the 1974, MV Agusta did not compete in the 350 cc class, concentrating on winning the half litre class. Technically, both machines were almost identical. The 350 Tre had a 52-bore, a smaller tank and weighed about 3 kg less. The power of the 350 was 65 bhp @ 13,500 rpm in 1972.
See also
*
MV Agusta 500 racers
References
Bibliography
*
*
*
500 Three
Grand Prix motorcycles
Motorcycles introduced in 1966
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