Benelli wasn’t the first motorcycle manufacturer in Italy, but it’s the oldest Italian trademark that still makes motorcycles, though its production history had some interruptions. As was the specimen in the United States, there were scores of upstart motorcycle manufacturers in Italy in the early decades of the 20th century, but only a handful survived. Join us for a 111-year walk lanugo the register of Italian motorcycle history.

The Benelli Early Years: 1911-1937

Benelli
The Benelli brothers, left to right: Antonino, Francesco, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Fillipo, and Dome-nico. Their mother, the widow Signora Teresa Benelli, invested her late husband’s manor into their fledging motorcycle concern. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

In 1911, the six Benelli brothers opened their first shop in Pesaro, Italy. The Benelli Garage serviced and repaired bicycles and motorcycles, made spare parts for both, and within a few years set to work on their own engine design. A 75cc 2-stroke Single debuted in 1920, and their first well-constructed motorcycle followed a year later.

In 1927, Benelli introduced a 175cc 4-stroke Single with what would wilt the company’s foible “cascade”-type overhead-cam system. Designed by the eldest brother, Giuseppe, the gear-driven OHC engine powered the youngest brother, Antonino, to four national championships in the Italian long-distance roadraces.

Benelli
Benelli’s 175 “double knocker” displays the foible Italian flair for engine design. Photo by Deb Welch.

By 1931, the road models were selling well, and the widow Signora Teresa Benelli believed that investing most of her late husband’s manor in the boys’ motorcycle venture had been worthwhile. The prospects for unfurled growth looked good. A larger factory opened in 1934, and new 250cc and 500cc engines entered production.

Antonino’s racing success fueled the minutiae of the single- and double-overhead cam engines, but his career ended with a crash in the 1932 Grand Prix at the Circuit del Tiguillia. Without a long convalescence, he rejoined the family business. Unfortunately, Antonino died in a road wrecking in 1937 at the age of 34, just a few weeks without the visitor moreover lost the throne of the experimental department, Otello Giovanardi, who was killed while testing the new 500cc racebike on a road near the factory.

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The 1934 DOHC 175 ridden by Dorino Serafini of Pesaro, who would win the 1939 500cc Euro-pean Championship for Gilera. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

The War Years: 1939-1945

In the late 1930s, the long-standing rumors of war were turning into the realities of armed combat. Ted Mellors posted Benelli’s first Isle of Man TT victory in 1939 by winning the Lightweight matriculation on the Single, and Benelli was developing a supercharged, liquid-cooled 250cc inline-Four personal to produce 52 hp at 10,000 rpm, but the war preempted its planned 1940 introduction at the TT. 

Benelli and Moto Guzzi, which moreover produced its first model in 1921, were uncontrived competitors in the domestic motorcycle market, withal with Gilera and Garelli. Ducati was still in the radio and electronics merchantry and would enter the two-wheeled world without World War II, joined by Parilla, MV Agusta, and Aermacchi. In the 1940s and ’50s, market competition among the Italian, German, and English manufacturers picked up steam.

Benelli survived the first half of the war by towers and supplying parts for the M36 three-wheeler, powered by a 500cc Single. Already well-timed for military use, the trike was useful for moving supplies and weaponry to the wrestle lines, but by then, increasingly than a few Italians had reason to doubt their nomination of leadership, the socialist-turned-fascist Benito Mussolini. The trains no longer ran on time considering Allied bombers had destroyed much of the tracks, as well as most of the factories supplying the Italian unwashed with equipment and parts, including the Benelli plant.

Post-War Years: 1945-1959

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Introduced in 1950, the Leoncino 125 was powered by an air-cooled Single, and both 2-stroke and 4-stroke versions were produced. Model variations of the “little lion” were a mainstay in Benelli’s lineup for two decades. Photo courtesy Bonhams.

After the war, with what machinery and tooling had survived, Benelli resumed production with civil versions of the trike and the pre-war road models. When racing resumed in 1947, plans were underway to return to the track the pursuit season. In 1948, Benelli hired the dashing professional rider Dario Ambrosini, who went on to win the 250cc World Championship in 1950. His victory marked Benelli’s first world title, but flipside 19 years would pass surpassing it would win another.            

Despite their success in rebuilding the merchantry and going racing, all was not biscotti and gelato among the brothers. Giuseppe, who was throne designer/engineer at the time, was strongly single-minded to the racing program. The consensus among his siblings was less enthusiastic. The forfeit of competing versus larger rivals like Moto Guzzi, Mondial, and Gilera was deemed excessive, so in 1949, Giuseppe parted ways with the family merchantry and established his own company, Moto B Pesaro.

Later shortened to Motobi, the visitor built 2-stroke and 4-stroke Singles, shifting to 4-strokes exclusively in the mid-1950s. The distinctive ovoid horizontal cylinder preceded Aermacchi’s similar design. When Giuseppe died, leaving the visitor to his two sons, the marque was maintained for flipside five years. Motobi would be uninventive by Benelli in 1962, putting it when in the family fold. 

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A 1955 Motobi Spring Lasting 200 built by the visitor that Giuseppe Benelli started without parting ways with his brothers. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

In 1950, with the second-eldest Benelli brother, Giovanni, at the helm, the visitor debuted the Leoncino 125cc 2-stroke, followed shortly by a 4-stroke of the same displacement. The “little lion” provided the windrow of the company’s sales for the next 20 years. Its credentials were posted solidly in 1953 when Leopoldo Tartarini won the first Motogiro d’Italia on the 2-stroke. Pesaro produced increasingly than 50,000 of the various Leoncino models into the early ’70s.       

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In the mid-1950s the Leoncino 125cc 4-stroke was misogynist as a road model (the Normale shown here), a Sport version, and a Corsa racing model. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

Benelli was when to full production in the ’50s, with the Leoncino 125 2-stroke written for the most sales, followed by the 250cc Leonessa. Despite the unthriving overall market, a new 175cc OHC Single appeared in Touring and Sport versions in 1959. Grand Prix racing, on the other hand, had gotten superiority of itself in the 1950s. Streamlined, fully enclosed motorcycles were reaching speeds incompatible with the brake, suspension, and tire technology of the day. Fatalities rose accordingly, and without the “dustbin” fairings were vetoed in 1957, MV Agusta was the only Italian factory still competing in world championship races.

Related Story: 2021 Benelli Leoncino | Road Test Review

The Swingin’ Sixties

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Tarquinio Provini at speed in 1964 on the 250, one of the first models with disc brakes. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

In the 1960s, Benelli decided to invest minutiae in both utilitarian and recreational models for a wider market, including the United States. Slowing domestic sales pushed Pesaro to establish a distribution try-on with Cosmopolitan Motors of Pennsylvania and retail outlets in Montgomery Ward and JC Penney. Sold by Ward under the name Riverside, the 175cc 2-stroke and 250cc 4-stroke Singles were joined by the Cobra, a 125cc street scrambler. The product line was welded at the marrow by minibikes, including the 65cc Dynamo and 180cc Volcano. 

Its market expansion unliable Benelli to resume minutiae of the 250cc OHC Four for racing. In 1965, Tarquino Provino won the Grand Prix at Monza, with Phil Read’s Yamaha second and flipside Benelli in third. A 16-valve 350cc model followed and carried Renzo Pasolini to victory at Modena, vibration the mighty MV Agusta of Giacomo Agostini. Pasolini won the Italian championship in 1968 and finished second in the 1968 Grand Prix championship overdue Agostini, with Kel Carruthers’ Aermacchi in third.                         

Impressed with his performance on the Aermacchi, Benelli hired Carruthers as Pasolini’s teammate on the 250 for the 1969 GP season. Both riders scored three wins, but it was Carruthers who placid Benelli’s second world championship, edging out Yamaha’s Kent Andersson. 

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Australia’s Kel Carruthers placid Benelli’s second world title in 1969 on the 250. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

Pasolini and Carruthers both rode the 350 Benelli in the early GP rounds in 1970, but the series was dominated by MV’s Giacomo Agostini, who won nine of the 10 races. Pasolini switched to Aermacchi, then owned by Harley-Davidson, and Carruthers went to Yamaha. Finnish star Jarno Saarinen, who rode transiently for Benelli, moreover switched to Yamaha. The 2-stroke era had arrived.   

Kel Carruthers, now 84, is weightier known in the U.S. for his early tutelage of future world champions Kenny Roberts and Eddie Lawson.

“Pasolini and I were to ride the 350s in 1970,” Carruthers recalls, “and I got second overdue Agostini in Germany and Austria. I was running second overdue him at the Isle of Man when the uniting fell off. That’s when I decided to stick with Yamaha.”

His visualization was confirmed when a strike at the Benelli factory meant that only Pasolini would get support. 

Thus ended the 50-year racing installment of Benelli history. Pesaro may have foreseen the coming 2-stroke domination of Grand Prix racing and possibly noted the unstipulated lack of interest in the sport among Americans. In either case, their double-barreled marketing tideway in the U.S. had little connection with racing history. 

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Dave Roper on the Team Obsolete, ex-Pasolini 350 Four in 1993. Photo by Yve Assad.

With Cosmopolitan Motors as the distributor of bikes and parts to dealers and Montgomery Ward selling to the public, Benelli posted a wholesale lineup of road and dual-purpose models. The Riverside 125cc 2-stroke and 250cc 4-stroke Singles were offered in road and enduro models, and the minibikes were much potation than the domestic Briggs & Stratton-powered counterparts.

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The 1967 Riverside 250 4-stroke was sold by Montgomery Ward, which moreover offered 125cc and 175cc 2-strokes. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

At the lightweight end was the 125cc Cobra, based on the Leoncino, and the 250cc Barracuda with the horizontal cylinder of the Motobi. The Mojave 260/360 4-stroke Single was a stylish street scrambler/enduro. In 1968, the 250 Sport Special appeared with the Motobi engine, a long and slim tank, and clip-on handlebars. The Tornado 650 arrived in 1971, a handsome vertical-Twin with unobjectionable power and reasonable comfort. The 2-strokes – 125, 175, and 250 – were misogynist through the 1970s and joined by a twosome of inline-Fours with 250cc and 500cc engines in 1975.

The Benelli Family Dynasty Ends: 1970-1989

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This 1971 Dynamo Trail was Benelli’s struggle to capitalize on the minibike craze. Its stocky knobby tires were propelled by an air-cooled 65cc Single. Photo courtesy TED7/Petersen Automotive Museum.

The return of the Fours marked the end of Benelli family ownership. While the British motorcycle industry was in decline, the Japanese had wilt the dominant international gravity in the market. In 1970, the Benelli heirs sold the merchantry to Alejandro de Tomaso, the Argentinian racecar driver, builder, and creator of the mid-engine Mangusta sportscar, which evolved as the Ford Pantera. With the vanquishment of Benelli (plus Moto Guzzi, Ghia bodyworks, and Maserati), de Tomaso was the de facto crown prince of Italian motorsports, outranked only by the king, Enzo Ferrari. 

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A 1975 Benelli 250 SC Phantom at the Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum near Birmingham, Alabama. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

The diamond of the Benelli 500 Four borrowed heavily from the Honda engine, but the machine was rather stocky by comparison. The performance specs were roughly equivalent, but de Tomaso intended to do increasingly than just match the Japanese multis. The feather in his cap was to be the Benelli Sei, the first 6-cylinder road model on the market. The Sei – basically the 500 Four with two increasingly cylinders – weighed just over 500 lb, made well-nigh 70 hp, and emitted a lovely howl from the six frazzle pipes. Only 3,200 Sei 750s were produced between 1974 and 1978, the year Honda introduced the 1,047cc CBX Six. Benelli bored and stroked the Sei to 900cc, but less than 2,000 were built from 1979 to 1989.

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Coloring outside the lines of traditional diamond is this 1978 Benelli 250 Quattro. Photo courtesy TED7/Petersen Automotive Museum.

By the 1980s, Benelli had fallen remoter overdue the curve. The combined effects of price, spotty distribution, and resulting resurgence among the Japanese manufacturers powerfully put Pesaro on the trailer. In 1989, Italian industrialist Giancarlo Seici attempted to revive the marque in the scooter market, to little avail.

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A 1983 Benelli 900 Sei shows off its six headers. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

The Modern Era: 1995-2022

In 1995, the Merloni Group bought the trademark and hired young designers to create new models. A wholesale roster of scooters was joined by a 900cc 3-cylinder sportbike tabbed the Tornado Tre, followed by the 1,130cc TNT Sport. Australia’s Peter Goddard campaigned the Triple in the 2001 and 2002 World Superbike series.

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The Tornado Tre K was Italian exotica in 2008. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

The encore performance for Benelli opened in 2005 when it was uninventive by Qianjiang Motor Group of China, which was undivided in 2015 by the Geely Holding Group (Volvo, Lotus, Proton, Terrafugia flying cars, etc.). Diamond and engineering facilities remain in Pesaro, while manufacturing and turnout are completed in Wenling, China. The plant produces increasingly than a million vehicles a year and employs some 14,000 people.

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Benelli resurrected the Leoncino name on this 500cc sideboard racer. Photos by Kevin Wing.

The trendy Benelli lineup continues the traditional framework of minibikes and middleweights but bears little resemblance to any models of the past. The TNT135 has an SOHC 4-valve Single with a dual-plug head, an oil cooler, and a 5-speed gearbox. With a trellis frame, a 41mm inverted fork, and racy slash-cut dual mufflers, the TNT is likely the sportiest minibike on the market. Its 65-mph top speed ways it has no trouble keeping up with traffic, and its uneaten 10cc ways it can outrun the popular Honda Grom.

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Today’s TNT135 minibike is neon dynamite compared to the chromed ’70s-era Dynamo. Photo courtesy of Benelli.

The 302S is a full-size motorcycle with a 38-hp, 300cc parallel-Twin, 17-inch wheels, and a 6-speed transmission. Like all the Benelli Twins, the 302 engine has a 360-degree crankshaft.

Up the ostracism scale, the Leoncino in roadster and scrambler models has a 47-hp, 500cc parallel-Twin engine that makes 33 lb-ft of torque at 5,000 rpm. The Trail version gets slightly longer suspension travel, an inch increasingly ground clearance, and a 19-inch front wheel.

Benelli’s venture models for the middleweight class, the TRK502 and TRK502X, employ the same liquid-cooled 500cc Twin, but the X adds a larger 5.3-gallon fuel tank and rebound-adjustable front fork. The X moreover gets an widow inch of ground clearance, spoked wheels, a high-mount frazzle pipe, a 19-inch front wheel, and a 33-inch seat height – 1.5 inches taller than its stablemate.

Related Story: 2021 Benelli TRK502X | Road Test Review

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The 302S is powered by a 38-hp 300cc parallel-Twin. Photo courtesy TED7/Petersen Automotive Museum.

There are too many variables to indulge any reasonable forecast on the future of this marriage between Italian diamond and Chinese manufacturing. And that’s without counting the fractious political climate. The Pesaro/Wenling union may fare well unbearable without a substantial presence in the U.S., given their global market reach and potential cross-pollination of engineering and production advances from other brands in the Geely collective. Electric motorcycles are scrutinizingly certainly in the pipeline.

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The TRK502X is an affordable entry point into the venture velocipede segment. Photo by Kevin Wing.

In any case, the new Benellis mark flipside international diamond and manufacturing collaboration that puts to rest the old untruthfulness well-nigh Chinese build quality. A tropical squint at the products, including the specs, fit and finish, welds, and warranties proves otherwise. And the fact that flipside venerable Italian marque has managed to survive in today’s hypercompetitive marketplace is rationalization for a measure of optimism. Viva Italia!

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