Du Can wrote:Unfortunately, he seems discouraged with MZ and their lack of advertising/dealer support. MZ makes a great product, but since they don't advertise over here it shall remain obscure in the states. I don't think he will be getting any more MZs in unless they are pre-paid special orders. Bummer!
I can understand his issue with that. Given the dollar/euro rate, MZ is going to be expensive and niche, and they don't even have the storied past that, say, Moto Guzzi or even some of the smaller italian marks have. Combine that with a slightly oddball line (a bunch of 125s, the baggies, and the 1000 series) and it makes for a problematic situation. I've no idea what the setup is for Motorrad NA, but it wouldn't surprise me if they're something of a shoestring operation, particularly given MZ needs to concentrate on Europe, the UK, and possibly even the Far East more than in the US.
I love my Tour, and I plan to keep it for a long, long time. So far it's kept up beautifully in the group rides I've taken, and I don't feel like it's just waiting to bite me in the butt like some of the guys on supersports. I want to stick a windscreen and some touring bags on it and do longer rides, and who knows what else. But I'll keep worrying about MZ until they have a more competitive lineup (whatever that looks like). One thing I do wish would happen is that they'd leverage their success in the 125cc engine to put out a 250 or 350cc bike. There's a dearth of good 'small' bikes in the market right now, particularly ones with decent tech. I think the Ninjas have at least halfway decent tech, but really, anything 500cc and under that's not a supermoto seems to run on ancient designs.
But this would certainly work better for Europe and the Far East. For the US, I think they're in trouble until the euro/dollar balance swings back the other way. The only companies introducing under 500cc bikes into the US right now (other than scooters) are Chinese, Korean, and Taiwanese manufacturers who really can compete on price.