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Racing Piaggio Ape Three-Wheelers

€ 13.99 · 5 (100) · In Magazzino

Go to the Red Letter Days, a rent-and-race program at Hertfordshire, England’s Rye House, to find out what Italian racers learn from Piaggio’s three-wheeled Ape.
“The Ape is the standard pickup truck in Italy. It’s where the racing drivers start off. Valentino Rossi learned on one,” says Steve Dennis, a Piaggio Commercial UK publicist. “Scandinavians have snow and ice. Italians have unstable Apes.”
The Ape Racing Championship was born in 2012. Conceived as a publicity stunt, the series featured Piaggio’s humble three-wheeled runabout, plucked from its work-truck roots and dropped into spec racing events. The madness kicked off, appropriately, with a Le Mans-style running start.
As British racing regulations are pursuant only to two- and four-wheeled vehicles, there are no seatbelts and only minimal policing of on-track shenanigans.
Piaggio pulled factory support in 2014, and the Ape Racing Championship officially disbanded soon after. (Though, Dennis notes, not before winning a PR industry award for most creative marketing program.) Unofficially, the series lives on through Red Letter Days, a rent-and-race program at Rye House, the 0.62-mile karting circuit in Hertfordshire, an hour north of London. There, for a reasonable sum, you can do wheel-to-wheel combat in a track-prepped Ape. What’s it feel like? Dennis compares the sensation to racing “a sail dinghy crossed with a sidecar motorbike.”
“It’s pretty safe,” says Dennis. “We’ve only had three rollovers so far.”
Red Letter Days’ banner package is an enduro. It consists of three stints, each lasting 40 minutes, with pit stops for rider changes. (Getting back up to speed often requires some pushing.) According to Dennis, there’s no need for refueling; the Ape’s unmodified tank, which holds about 3 liters, is more than enough—even for the “fastest guys” who turn 1m02s laps while averaging 38 mph.
These Apes aren’t stock. They’re not exactly dialed-in either. Basic modifications include a tuned exhaust pipe, an oversize Dell’Orto carburetor, and a performance engine kit from Malossi, which increases displacement from 50cc to 112cc. The four-speed transmission has a “heavy-duty clutch” that “cost about $10” and lower gearing, while the rear suspension is removed entirely. Crucially, the front roll bar is fitted with casters, so riders can carry speed while tipping the body through corners.
British racing regulations are aimed at two- and four-wheeled vehicles, so the Apes at Rye House get a pass. That means minimal policing of on-track shenanigans. Also, no seatbelts. “It’s pretty safe,” Dennis says. “We’ve only had three rollovers so far.”
Few machines do more with less than this two-stroke, scooter-based rig. They get the job done on rural farms and around town, trucking flowers and delivering groceries and hauling tradesmen. But charisma is truly the Piaggio’s métier. To that end, these racing Apes might just be the finest examples of the breed.

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