By Eric Bryan
Transcription
By Eric Bryan
By Eric Bryan One of the most iconic images of Italy in the 1950s and 1960s is the colorful Vespa scooter. Inspired by the U.S. military Cushman scooters used in Italy during World War II, the Piaggio Company in Tuscany began producing the scooters commercially in 1946. The resulting Vespa scooter went on to become one of Italy’s greatest manufacturing success stories. In 1953, its appearance in the film, Roman Holiday, which also introduced Audrey Hepburn, reportedly generated more than 100,000 sales. By 1956, Piaggio had sold over one million scooters. Celebrities such as Dean Martin, Charlton Heston, Marlon Brando, and John Wayne were fans and its popularity grew so great that a new Italian verb was coined: vespare, meaning to travel by Vespa. to the masses and commissioned an engineer, Renzo Spolti to design a motor-scooter. Spolti’s prototype was the Moto Piaggio 5 (MP5), but the workers at the Biella factory christened it Paperino (Donald Duck), perhaps inspired by the nickname given to the tiny Fiat 500 car, Topolino (Mickey Mouse). The MP5 98cc scooter had a chain drive, was bulky and didn’t have a step-through design which allowed women in dresses or skirts to ride it. Piaggio was so dissatisfied that he halted production of the Paperino. By this time, approximately 100 of them had already come off the assembly line. Those that survive today are highly-sought after by collectors. The Wasp Enrico Piaggio next asked the aeronautical engineer, Corradino D’Ascanio to take over the project. Some specifics were required: the scooter had to be elegant yet durable, reliable and simple to operate with An advertisement for the Vespa 50 aimed at the youth market Donald Duck In 1943, after his aeronautics factories were destroyed by the Allies, Enrico Piaggio decided to offer low-cost transportation The Vespa MP5 prototype displeased the manufacturer. SPRING SPRING 2014 2014 66 ITALIAN ITALIANAMERICA AMERICA The Evolving Vespa A pinup calendar girl on a Vespa in 1951 foretells the scooter’s popularity. a layout that prevented the rider’s clothes from getting dirty. D’Ascanio’s dislike of motorcycles coupled with his experience in aeronautics led him to create a groundbreaking new machine. The engineer found motorcycles uncomfortable to ride. The chain drive is messy, and changing a motorcycle tire was cumbersome. With these ideas in mind, D’Ascanio took an ergonomics-first approach and began plans by first drawing the figure of a rider who sat comfortably upright, then sketched his proposed machine below and around the figure, accommodating the human proportions. D’Ascanio’s innovations included a unibody frame, the placing of the gearshift on the handlebars, a footbrake, direct-drive, and attaching the front wheel to a single strut instead of a fork to allow for quick and easy wheel changes. And women liked its frame’s step-through design. This 98cc model was the Moto Piaggio 6 (MP6). When Enrico Piaggio saw the prototype and heard the buzz of its motor, he exclaimed, “Sembra una vespa!” (“It seems like a wasp!”). The nickname stuck. SPRING 7 ITALIAN 2014 AMERICA Like automobiles, this popular scooter has gone through many transformations in the 68 years since Piaggio premiered his Light Motorized Runabout (Motoleggera Utilitaria), or Vespa 98 at the Rome Golf Club in 1946. This model was almost the same as the MP6, but D’Ascanio had made some refinements such as adding an engine cooling-fan, and repositioning the horn and handbrake. The Vespa 98 made the cover of La Moto magazine, and Piaggio initially sold the scooters through Lancia dealerships. Optional features for the Vespa included a kickstand, whitewalls, and a speedometer. The Italian public was curious but skeptical of the new The Growth of A Legend Some Vespa Production Figures •1947: 10,535 produced •1948: 19,822 Vespa 125s produced •1950: 60,000 produced for Germany •1953: 171,200 produced; Year also marked production of the 500,000th scooter. •1956: Over one million produced to date •1960: Two million produced to date •1970: Four million produced to date •1988: 10 million produced to date •2013: 18 million produced to date A poster of the 1953 movie that helped popularize the Vespa creation, and the first year’s production number was only 2,484 units. In 1947, Piaggio brought out the second generation Vespa 98. This model included improved lighting, a smaller front fender to further simplify front wheel removal, and a new start lever which was easier to operate. The silver finishes of these vehicles reflected the aeronautical heritage of the Piaggio Company. The Vespa 98s could do 37mph, and cost $244 ($293 for the luxury model) in 1946. As sales numbers climbed, Piaggio offered the Vespa 125, a new 125cc scooter, in 1948. With a top speed of 43mph, this model had improved suspension, a rear shock absorber, and easier engine access. A competition 125, the Sei Giorni, appeared in 1951. With its modifications, this scooter could do 60mph, and won nine gold medals at the 26th International Six-Day Event. A further incarnation of the 125 also debuted in 1951: the Vespa Siluro (Torpedo). With a sleek silver body of panels, fins and fairings which ITALIAN AMERICA SPRING 2014 7 enclosed the rider, this was a timetrials model that broke the standing kilometer record with a time of 21.4 seconds and an average speed of 106.3mph. After the Sei Giorni, came the Vespa 150 GS, a mass-produced sporty model with a 145.6cc engine and a top speed of 63mph. It is regarded as the height of beauty in scooter design, and the most famous Vespa. Released in 1955, examples of this classic are prized by motor enthusiasts and collectors the world over. Corradino D’Ascanio A Modern Da Vinci Women liked the Vespa’s step-through style. In 1963, Piaggio created the Vespa The Future... 50, a small-sized 49cc scooter that could do 25mph. It is the last model designed by D’Ascanio. Known for its simplicity and easy handling, this motor-scooter was especially popular with Italian teen-agers. Its small engine allowed it to circumvent the Italian Highway Code which required license plates for vehicles with motors of greater than 1.5 horsepower. Over three million Vespa 50s were built. As sales mushroomed, Piaggio had the scooters made under license in France, Spain, Belgium, Great Britain and Germany. Production expanded into Brazil, Indonesia, and India in the 1960s. From its single motor-scooter introduced in 1946, Piaggio has since created hundreds of different models, including a military Vespa, which carried a 75mm anti-tank gun; scooters with sidecars; scooters with trailers; and other competition models. Production of the Vespa continues to this day. The latest model, the 2014 deluxe Vespa 946 has a 150cc engine, cruises at 58mph and costs about $10,000, but much cheaper models are also available. New projects include the development of hybrid scooters. Thanks to its “wasp,” Piaggio is the world’s top producer of two-wheeled motor vehicles. The Italian Vespa is truly un fenomeno mondiale! Eric Bryan is a freelance writer originally from Burlingame, California. The 2014 deluxe Vespa 946 costs about $10,000. SPRING SPRING 2014 2014 88 The man who created the Vespa was born in 1891 in Popoli, a town in the Abruzzo region. Corradino D’Ascanio was interested in aviation early on, achieving flight at 14 with a homemade hang-glider. He earned an engineering degree at the Politecnico di Torino in 1914, and in the 1920s to 1932, designed prototype helicopters. After WWII, Ferdinando Innocenti approached D’Ascanio to design the Lambretta scooter. Innocenti insisted the frame be constructed of tubing. This conflicted with D’Ascanio’s vision of a stamped spar-frame, so the engineer took his plans, which would lead to the Vespa, to Piaggio. D’Ascanio continued with helicopter projects in the 1940s and 1950s, and in 1964 worked for the Agusta Group designing the Agusta ADA, a helicopter intended as a trainer and crop-sprayer. D’Ascanio’s inventions included a punch-card computer, timed cigarette-holders designed to curb his own smoking, and elaborate games. Despite the overpowering success of the Vespa, D’Ascanio regretted that his aeronautics achievements went underappreciated. He died in Pisa in 1981. Vespa designer D’Ascanio (L), admiring an early model ITALIAN ITALIANAMERICA AMERICA