New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
I've been to Munroe Motors many times. I took my 2012 Stelvio there for it's 800 mile service. They are one of the smallest shops I've been in. They don't have a lot of floor space and the showroom is filled with Ducatis and Triumphs. That's what sells. They have been friendly and treated me OK. MG is a niche brand. They stock what moves. Their mechanic is a trained MG mechanic.Norge... have you been to Elk Grove Powersports. They have a number of MG's on the floor. It's a lot bigger space than Munroe. I had them replace the suspension link on my NTX. They are a good shop.
You'd think, with the demographic the bikes are drawing, Munroe would be selling a bunch of V7s.Hmmm.
Ya mean a bunch of young/old hippies have joined Wildguzzi? First it was BMW riders, now them? Jeezus
What do we hear on this forum ad nauseum? Don't go to a dealer for that initial service, be cheap, do it yourself, help for a beer. Same with just about everything else. The dealer was right, most Guzzi riders are cheap and don't really support their dealers if this place is representative of the typical Guzzi owner.
Norge, I'll be the first to admit I'm "cheap", but I think the reason the above advice is given so often is that Guzzis can be worked on by most home mechanics. I don't call an electrician to change a light bulb because I can do it myself. While that's a bit of hyperbole, Guzzis are much more amenable to "mechanic" jamokes like me than most other brands. Also, the easy accessibility of Guzzi engines is an invite to jump right in. It's also my unsubstantiated opinion that most Guzzi owners are more involved in their bikes than many other brands and only too eager to "see what's wrong with it" instead of calling the dealer with minor problems or annoyances. Is this tough on dealers?, no doubt about it but I don't think that makes Guzzi owners "bad customers". Going back to the "cheap part", with labor costs around the $100/hr rate, I'd just as soon spend some money on the required tools, learn how to do it, have the tools (tools, TOols, TOOLS!!!!!) for future use and have the money in my pocket. Power to the People!
Wait until you start in on a Norge. After getting the plastics off your done for the day. Its the same with any plastics bike so I can definitely see where wrenching in something like a V7 is simple.When I had the old Honda 750F SOHC I did the valves and all that too, it was as simple as you get.I just try to put myself in the dealers shoes once in a while. There they are, especially with Moto Guzzi, spending money to maintain their techs, the mandated software, some parts inventory and then they sit on bikes that don't really sell well compared to everything else. To top it off, they then don't get much revenue from service so how can any of us expect more than a bare handful of dealers spread regionally that are worth much?How many of us would throw money at representing a brand that doesn't sell a lot? Marketing and ads don't sell, good and great bikes sell and MG keeps pumping out the SOS every year. The V7 is only a good seller compared to the Edsel.One reason some dealers don't really say much about Guzzi is because there isn't much to say. People come as do the groupie thing but buy little, talk a lot. Then they complain about no parts but they forget what it costs to inventory parts that few people buy.Then someone comes in and wants to see the newest Moto Guzzi and what is there but the same V7, California or something that maybe 1 in 10 million people want.If there was money in selling Moto Guzzi then there would be a lot more dealers selling them. There is no way to compare the single digit in number dealers who get the online business from all over or the one per 10 state dealers who sell a majority if the MG bikes.I agree and support the idea if self reliance. With that comes not having a good dealer network, can't have both. Either sales and service support more dealers or they don't and it takes paying customers, not talk forums, the once in a decade parts needs or the riders who buy online because a few bucks and maybe a longer wait from the dealer isn't fast or cheap enough.You have limited floor space and that floor space costs a lot of money. Every bike out front needs to sell and earnnits floor space. Sorry but Guzzi costs floor space. Instead of one Guzzi sitting there for months, they can get a dozen Triumphs, a few Ducatis and even good used bikes sold in the same time. What would you do?Sorry for the rants but this comes upbince in a while.Now imagine you are a dealer and some poor slob comes in wanting to trade a 2012 Norge with flat tappets in on a new bike. It has maybe 10k miles on it and all MG will do is supply some parts if he pays his techs to tear it apart to check it and then just how is he going to sell it? Money loser or the customer walks and bad mouths MG and the dealer for not giving a decent trade.MG hurts its own brand. Like I said, everyone else but MG has figured it out. MG is like bad parents, you see the potential in the kids, know they could amount to great people but the parents do only enough to survive and know that some of the neighbors will take up the slack.
Sometimes I read your posts and wonder why you ride Moto Guzzi and hang out on a Marque-specific forum, like Wildguzzi. :Beating_A_Dead_Hors e_by_liviu
Yeah yeah , go ahead and flame away guys , I am putting on my fire proof suit Dusty
And flameproof underwear?
<SIGH> . Well dangit , I kinda see NP's point , if the mothership doesn't care about its dealers and customers , then the brand will not survive . Look how much heat the new Triumph Bonnies are generating , how much of that is due to the fact that Triumph supports their dealers and makes sure the customer can get parts . Yeah yeah , go ahead and flame away guys , I am putting on my fire proof suit Dusty
I think I know the Munroe Motors salesman that is being referred to in the first post -- big guy, clean cut, sandy blonde/brown hair. He seems to hate Guzzi's but, I think it's a personal thing, not a Munroe Motors thing. I was in there several months ago and he was brazenly mocking my interest in them. It was poor salesmanship, but on the other hand, this guy knows that Ducati and Triumph is the big majority of their business, Guzzi just the fringe.
Is it a common assumption that motorcycle dealers in the US are drug or piss fucked??? Jesus! I'll have to be a bit more careful! No wonder that mob of numpties in Utah couldn't change a tyre on my Cali! Pete
Not really Pete , most dealerships here are populated by sober competent folks . Well , I say that having no real first hand experience except with the now defunct Euro brand dealer in Tulsa . Most dealers wouldn't touch my old beaters if I DID take them in for something Dusty
RE: the defunct Tulsa dealer.My favorite is walking in, asking for a pan gasket for my '96 Sport 1100 carb.They spend 10 minutes on the parts fiche, go to the back to retrieve the part, then return with a gasket for a broad sump.I tell them it's the wrong gasket and they argue with me. Then I point out that they used the Sport 1100i parts fiche, and they argue some more.Finally, they get me the standard big block sump gasket I need, and tell me no returns if it's wrong!!!What a mess! And they'd been in business for 40-years. I still can't believe they needed a parts fiche to get me a sump gasket!I'm glad they're gone.My experiences with the new dealer, Brookside/Kinetic Playground, have been much more positive than any I ever had at Atlas.