1988 Laverda SCF 1000

Gregg G.

New member
Location
Houston, TX
Project opportunity for the true Laverda enthusiast to own one of the most rare Laverda Triples. Completely restored bike that is partially assembled but have all the parts for a beautifully rare 1 of 200 of the last of the air cooled 3 cylinder Laverda manufactured bikes. All body panels(fenders, gas tank, faring, etc…)are painted and restored, 3 spoke gold Oscan wheels, gold frame, new engine and transmission parts, two sets of carbs(Mikuni 32mm and Dell’Orto cards), new chrome silencer exhaust mufflers, tires, chance to own a piece of Laverda history, beautiful red, gold, and black paint scheme bike, lots of new spare parts. part of a private collection, $15,000. Contact Gregg @281-799-3090.
 

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Thank you, it is a great project to own a piece of Laverda history. Plus brand new parts for everything on the bike from engine and transmission to body panels with newly applied paint. Two brand new sets of carburetors too.
 
Yes,
Several interested parties, but mostly people that would like to buy the bike and associated brand new parts for less than I feel they are worth.
 
Thanks for your comments, only time will tell for sure. Decent interest in the other two Laverda bikes I have for sale. Confident I can find a good home for them all.

Gregg
 
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Hi Gregg,

Consider posting your Laverdas on Bring a Trailer, and look at the prices for Laverdas that have sold there:
 
Would fetch the most as a complete bike; sorted and ready. The project status makes the value...well, less. And as people have mentioned bike values are going down and I was told to sell now before things drop too much...
 
Thanks guys for the feedback. I’m familiar with BAT and Iconic too. I realize that a project type bike sale is much more difficult than a complete and running bike. BAT has had a lot of success of late and they aren’t allowing for reserve minimums that protect one’s investment on the down if the auction is not well participated in, plus I do agree the motorcycle market has gone soft of late in terms of bike values in general and for Kaverda’s as a brand maybe even more so.
 
I didn’t realize that BAT changed reserve minimums and noticed that most are selling w no reserve ( which seems ridiculous to me). But advertising on this UK/Europe based site limits your audience due to shipping expense. Try Iconic and look at their sold prices for Laverdas.
 
That's about 5K too much for a project bike. It's always far beyond "just putting it together" to build a "complete" project bike. There are always all sorts of problems. I'd be slightly interested at 10K, but really at 8K.

Prices have crashed on most vintage stuff, and Laverdas are not that desirable in the US, especially as the prime parts supplier in the Americas, Wolfgang, has slowed way down and may be closing, as has Andy Wagner. Bad news for the Laverda community.

A mint, sorted, RGS in WA state took well over a year to sell last year for around $13K. A mint, sorted, SFC might be worth around 16K. There's a very nice 750SF for sale in WA for more than 3 months now, price is now $9K.

It's simple. Most who care about Lavs are aging out of motorcycles, and millennials and gen z don't care about bikes, especially about old bangers.
 
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Reality check needed here for some boxes of bits that might be a complete bike but likely needing many hours of work and unknown amounts of specialist assistance to make a bike that, if it were totally together and in perfect running condition with history, might fetch the asking price for that collection of parts. I'd assess that 50% of the possible sale price of such a pristine running bike with history would be a more reasonable asking price for the collection of "all the parts". If it were that easy to assemble then why has the prospective seller not done so?
 
Reality check needed here for some boxes of bits that might be a complete bike but likely needing many hours of work and unknown amounts of specialist assistance to make a bike that, if it were totally together and in perfect running condition with history, might fetch the asking price for that collection of parts. I'd assess that 50% of the possible sale price of such a pristine running bike with history would be a more reasonable asking price for the collection of "all the parts". If it were that easy to assemble then why has the prospective seller not done so?
What specialist assistance?
Paul
 
What specialist assistance?
Paul
With all due respect to the seller since it's not clear if he is the collector or the sales agent or executor of the collector's estate: "Project opportunity", "new engine and transmission parts", look at picture 8/10 - how much engine dismantling was done and why? It looks like a little more than a cosmetic restoration. That photo shows cases with ends of crankshaft, main gear shaft and no valve cover. So why did the motor need such major attention, is everything else in there and assembled correctly, more than just polishing the outer cases to make it look pretty?

Sorry, analytical engineer mind in action - who knows what might be needed to make this a useful motor. If it does need specialist attention from somebody who knows how to put these motors together properly, and imho those people are now sadly lacking in USA where if you can't do it yourself with local machinists who know nothing about these bikes, then you may have to put the bits that are present into a crate and send it to UK or Germany?

With that engineering background, I acknowledge that the Laverda bikes and motors are not complex and that the oem control systems are not complicated but to somebody who thinks this is just a case of bolting together some boxes of bits, I fear this could be a serious learning opportunity and an endless moneypit. It's good that it's discussed here in an audience of people who know the reality.

We've talked here before about how the specialists are rapidly disappearing. I think it really is a now or never situation if you need something that requires specialist knowledge, otherwise we'll all be on our own as the few remaining decide it's their retirement time.

Happy to discuss this point of view over wine or beer - meet at Baskerville for a good debate?

(fwiw I was at a couple of the Terry B organized Santa Barbara events as referenced in the seller's poster article and have the sweatshirt. I don't specifically remember a red SFC1000 there but do remember and have photos of a yellow SFC1000 because it had Fournales rear shocks that caught my attention, belonging to some Hollywood actor in the Kung Fu movies, name will come to me perhaps later, as at the time and still now I'm much more interested in the SFC twins than triples. At the time Terry B was looking to sell a couple of SFC750s including a cast wheel Electronica for a sensible price but I just didn't have the available funds - pity, might have been a good investment!!!)

Yellow SFC1000 at Santa Barbara Italian bike show.jpg
 
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