sapperk9 wrote:Given that the Hong Leong Group webpage says:
"MZ Motorrad- und Zweiradwerk GmbH ("MZ") was acquired by HLI in September 1996. The acquisition of this motorcycle company in Germany is aimed to position HLI as a leading player in the design and engineering of motorcycles and to become a global manufacturer of quality motorcycles by the year 2006 through superior engineering."
"MZ motorrad Sdn Bhd was then set up in year 2002 to assemble and distribute MZ bikes in Malaysia."
Corporate bullshit. Stock phrase. What are they doing - what have they done? Probably nothing. In-fighting, corporate politics? Maybe they "bit off more than they could chew". Grandiose ideas.
What was it - Proton? Husqvarna / MV Agusta / Ducati ? ...that didn't work out well?
At least Husqvarna seems to be working in Australia. You're better off than us.
The MZ factory seems to be doing as well as they can; we get good reports of back-up service. But they don't have money; the money is in Malaysia, the owners - and they're playing corporate politics or something. They're the ones who have to make the plan, and do the marketing. And then they'll want to build them in Malaysia anyway. They seem to have done something with the 125's, but that's all.
sapperk9 wrote:So, for no other reason than nothing better to do, this afternoon I had a look at UK retailing of the MZ, through the BSA Regal website, given that in Oz we still looking at MZ through either Europe or Malaysia.
Without decrying BSA Regal as they have ever given me wonderful, prompt, professional, and precise service, when one looks at the dealers in the UK, only three have a web presence, and that includes BSA Regal. Most of those listed do not even have an email address, and of those with an email address, I recon the bulk are what I call gammy addresses, through hotmail or yahoo, not an owned and managed dealer domain. Sort of rewriting Shakespeare, "I www, therefore I am."
This cannot inspire confidence.
I don't know how MZ expect to obtain a quality presence in the western world and "technology" when my local grocer is more aware of the nature of today's western consumer and the market. I can order hardware from my local store via the web, let alone browse an expensive vehicle purchase.
Internet presence...web sites. That puts me in rant mode. I've been seeing how bad, how shoddy, most of the UK bike websites are. (Websites for buying accesories and so on.)
[I need that puking emoticon here that advrider has.] Same here - worse, but then I don't often try to get anything here, I learned my lesson about that long ago. They don't have websites or the websites give their phone number, or their email addresses in the latest magazine don't work, and they ignore faxes. All that so I can tell them what I want and wait for them to order it, and pay a 100% markup instead of doing it myself and paying the shipping myself.
I have 2 UK ones at the moment that have not replied to email. One asked me on Tuesday what model I wanted the jet kit and sprocket for (although I'd given them the part numbers) and then hasn't replied since.
JT Sprockets... after searching for hours - like half the night - for some place that could get me a rear sprocket (the dealers I found only did mx and offroad bikes, or sportbikes), I sent email from the JT website, to the UK base and the USA distributor. That was Monday night, I think, and neither of them has replied. Nor has ESJOT in Czech Republic, who [apparently] make sprockets for KTM, and list MZ in their catalog.
Dynojet also, no reponse.
So it's all reinforced for me what I already pretty much knew - use US vendors and try to avoid the ones with half-assed websites.
btw, thank you for pointing me to corsemeccanica.