New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
I know I've said it before, but I can't recommend any higher the CSC 250c from https://www.cscmotorcycles.comI have over 2000 miles on my 250TT and it has been perfect. Came delivered to my door with gas in the tank, ready to ride!Very good quality, and lots of fun. I don't have any experience with the Rx3 and Rx4, but the little 231cc air cooled motor is a clone of an old Honda, it appears to be near bullet proof.
You always hear about these bikes being junk... but being that most that buy them, do NOTHING to them, and just throw them away when done.. I wonder how they last with some care given to them? Someone that's willing to keep up on the services, and repair when needed.
It doesn't seem that many if any have actual expereince with the GT650...If a casual potential bike buyer looked at issues with Guzzi's on this site, they might not want one...You only hear the bad stuff....
... my first riding days, a 1964 Yamaha 80, YG1t.
I think it's a mistake to categorize a bike by where it is manufactured. Peter Y.
The big change is computers, software to operate them and CNC manufacturing techniques'.Has changed everything and pretty much leveled the playing field.:-)
I think it's way more than that.Like, what's the educational and skills pool of the workers and engineers that the manufacturer can draw from?What level of quality, over many years, have the customers of the manufacturers of cars in a particular market come to expect?What's the relationship between the management and the workers? "We pretend to work, they pretend to pay us?" or something different?I think it's much more about people, and not so much about CNC machines. Someone's still got to operate, feed, and maintain the manufacturing machines and assemble, finish, and distribute the vehicles .... Lannis
Well, a lot of that is true-but when Hyosung started selling in the US there was a tour/documentary article on the plant-and most of the Hyosung line was not as automated as Suzuki for the SV. It was noted in the article how much more labor was used in many steps.That was some time back, No idea what's happened in the lst 10 years.
Yep, things change and what was true 10 or 20 years ago may not be true anymore.But kirby1923, (as we Guzzi owners know) there is MUCH MUCH more to producing a vehicle than machining crankshafts and engine cases. The machined parts can all be PERFECT, and yet the final product can have huge design flaws (camshaft or cam follower hardening), poorly designed welds that crack, bearings put together with no grease, paint improperly applied, heat treating not done right, assembly jigs not set up straight .... I spent my working life in manufacturing high precision machined weldments, and the CNC machining is a very small part of what makes a complete vehicle run, and if the workers don't know (easily fixed) or don't care (NOT so easily fixed) how to produce the final product, it's going to act like a piece of junk regardless of how the transmission gears sparkle ....Lannis
Ha!ALL due respect but the state of the art manufacturing techniques are far more sophisticated than what you're describing w/every procedure planed and checked so companies like KIA can offer 100K warranty on their cheapest autos. (allot of robotic assembly )Parts and procedures computer monitored and controlled! sooner or later all manufactures will have reasonably priced access to same.We are talking cars and motos not nuclear or high pressure steam pluming.:-)(mike)
Lannis, Nuclear power plants were built by tradesmen like me..A lot of hand built stuff done right on site. Every piece of conduit and wiring hand fitted to the situation, miles and miles of it. Same for a lot of the pipe and duct work .Endless quality inspections including measuring the depth of holes we drilled in concrete for anchors to support electrical and mechanical sytems..But they couldn't and didn't measure every hole or check the torque on every fastener..So the "attitude" of the worker played a role..Everything was overbuilt and costs beyond reason, mostly because it was funded by gov't money....