Jump to content

Triumph bikes in Thailand


DILLIGAD

Recommended Posts

A thai biker friend was telling me that a few of his Triumph owning friends have heard a strong rumour that the price of the retro range is to greatly reduced (to 400,000 odd!)

Clearly they are far from happy as they paid 750k+ for T100/Bonnie/Thruxton/Scrambler.

Anyone heard anything??????

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 397
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Yes Ive heard that as well. if true that Triumph have obtained BOI approval from the Thai goverment it would greatly reduce the prices but up till now that's all it is, an unsubstantiated rumour.

Keeping my fingers crossed, I really like the new Tiger XC!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

that sounds nice!

Always prefer a Bonnie or Thruxton instead of a Scrambler.

had plans of buying Royal Enfield Bullet but they could not open the dealer and cant sell them here again as before so could not:(

It might be a good option for my classic bike needs as it has a lot of grunt as well unlike Enfield.

As jonny, i expect the same for street triple. go on Triumph!

Moto expo at the end of November at Impact Arena makes me excited!

Note: Checked now and it is confirmed!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow, that's quite some news.

Would hate to be one of the guys who just bought one for almost 800k...

Agreed, but I never understod why those guys paid so much in the first place unless you are swimming in money.

Gold can be bought at too high prices and then it's better to just walk away.

I heard that the dealer for Thailand kept those high prices because he wanted Triumph bikes to be a luxery item for the selected few.

Perhaps Triumph UK have pulled the plug on this guy as Ducati did, and just see how well Ducati Thailand are doing now.

Are the Tiger 800 made here?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The BritBike FB page includes a comment from BritBike saying that the price of the Thruxton will be 'no more than 500,000' and that the official price will be announced at Motor Expo end of this month. Here's hoping same applies to Street Triple R ...

Britbike Triumph ไม่เกิน 5 แสนครับ ส่วนราคาอย่างเป็นทางการจะออกปลายเดือนนี้ครับ ในงาน Motor Expo ครับ

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow, that's quite some news.

Would hate to be one of the guys who just bought one for almost 800k...

Agreed, but I never understod why those guys paid so much in the first place unless you are swimming in money.

Gold can be bought at too high prices and then it's better to just walk away.

I heard that the dealer for Thailand kept those high prices because he wanted Triumph bikes to be a luxery item for the selected few.

Perhaps Triumph UK have pulled the plug on this guy as Ducati did, and just see how well Ducati Thailand are doing now.

Are the Tiger 800 made here?

Well said.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I heard that the dealer for Thailand kept those high prices because he wanted Triumph bikes to be a luxery item for the selected few.

Perhaps Triumph UK have pulled the plug on this guy as Ducati did, and just see how well Ducati Thailand are doing now.

This has nothing to do with artificially inflated prices and everything to do with taxation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I heard that the dealer for Thailand kept those high prices because he wanted Triumph bikes to be a luxery item for the selected few.

Perhaps Triumph UK have pulled the plug on this guy as Ducati did, and just see how well Ducati Thailand are doing now.

This has nothing to do with artificially inflated prices and everything to do with taxation.

It's to do with both. Unless Yamaha are selling the MT-09 at a loss.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I heard that the dealer for Thailand kept those high prices because he wanted Triumph bikes to be a luxery item for the selected few.

Perhaps Triumph UK have pulled the plug on this guy as Ducati did, and just see how well Ducati Thailand are doing now.

This has nothing to do with artificially inflated prices and everything to do with taxation.

no, KTM is pulling the same stunt

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I heard that the dealer for Thailand kept those high prices because he wanted Triumph bikes to be a luxery item for the selected few.

Perhaps Triumph UK have pulled the plug on this guy as Ducati did, and just see how well Ducati Thailand are doing now.

This has nothing to do with artificially inflated prices and everything to do with taxation.

no, KTM is pulling the same stunt
Are KTMs manufactured here? If so, i did not know that...
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I heard that the dealer for Thailand kept those high prices because he wanted Triumph bikes to be a luxery item for the selected few.

Perhaps Triumph UK have pulled the plug on this guy as Ducati did, and just see how well Ducati Thailand are doing now.

This has nothing to do with artificially inflated prices and everything to do with taxation.

no, KTM is pulling the same stunt
Are KTMs manufactured here? If so, i did not know that...

I believe thatthe KTM's sold in Thailand are made in India, import tax is reduced as there is a trade agreement between the two countries

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some time back, I was interested in the Bonnie 100, until I saw the price ! Triumph UK advised me that they have two factories near BKK, equipped to the same standard as UK and that their bikes made there are equal to the UK product. However, the official prices in Thailand were the same as imported machines !!

So, this seems to have been the Thai way of saying Thankyou to Triumph for building factories here / training a skilled workforce / employing a large number of Thais / etc., by slapping on taxes equal to an import - disgraceful.

Much hoping that the rumored price deduction is for real

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some time back, I was interested in the Bonnie 100, until I saw the price ! Triumph UK advised me that they have two factories near BKK, equipped to the same standard as UK and that their bikes made there are equal to the UK product. However, the official prices in Thailand were the same as imported machines !!

So, this seems to have been the Thai way of saying Thankyou to Triumph for building factories here / training a skilled workforce / employing a large number of Thais / etc., by slapping on taxes equal to an import - disgraceful.

Much hoping that the rumored price deduction is for real

You misunderstand.

Triumph have factories here due to low cost. Part of that low cost is BOI export zone privileges. That is a lot of tax breaks provided everything produced is for export. If they had wanted to enter the domestic market as a domestic manufacturer, the whole set up would have been very different, without the tax breaks.

So you see, you do misunderstand, the thank you from the Thais was in the way of tax breaks for setting up an export industry.

So any bikes currently sold here are correctly subject to the various import duties.

p.s. I think the Triumph factories here are just for parts and the assembly is done elsewhere. Not 100% on this.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I heard that the dealer for Thailand kept those high prices because he wanted Triumph bikes to be a luxery item for the selected few.

Perhaps Triumph UK have pulled the plug on this guy as Ducati did, and just see how well Ducati Thailand are doing now.

This has nothing to do with artificially inflated prices and everything to do with taxation.

no, KTM is pulling the same stunt
Are KTMs manufactured here? If so, i did not know that...

I cannot be sure but I thought KTM were actually manufacturing here. Why anyone would spend 800K on a Triumph amazes me, again the same and more spent on Harleys, they are shit compared to any mainstream Japanese bike. You may as well spend 50K on a Platinum or similar Chinese piece of scrap and keep the rest in the bank to replace all the bits that fall off over the first few months. Give me Honda, Kawasaki or Yamaha any day. If it wasn't for the Japanese the British bikes and the old Harleys would still essentially be a design from 1950 like an old BSA or a Pile of Plates, side valve pushrod pieces of junk that wouldn't get you to and from the local market without breaking down 5 times on the journey. Harley, Triumph and Norton needed a sidecar to carry all the necessary spares to repair them on a 50 mile trip.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I cannot be sure but I thought KTM were actually manufacturing here. Why anyone would spend 800K on a Triumph amazes me, again the same and more spent on Harleys, they are shit compared to any mainstream Japanese bike. You may as well spend 50K on a Platinum or similar Chinese piece of scrap and keep the rest in the bank to replace all the bits that fall off over the first few months. Give me Honda, Kawasaki or Yamaha any day. If it wasn't for the Japanese the British bikes and the old Harleys would still essentially be a design from 1950 like an old BSA or a Pile of Plates, side valve pushrod pieces of junk that wouldn't get you to and from the local market without breaking down 5 times on the journey. Harley, Triumph and Norton needed a sidecar to carry all the necessary spares to repair them on a 50 mile trip.

Stop talking out of your ar$e!

Bikes are individual to everyone, what is good for one may not be good for another person. Comparing Jap bikes with Triumphs, Harley's or Dukes is like comparing apples and pears. I'v had bikes all my life from being a nipper and owned all sorts, a 10 years ago I was riding a Suzuki K3 Thou in UK and loved it when they first came out - Totally mental bike and a Rocket ship, great whip around the dales on a Sunday blast. But fast forward a few years and I got a VFR 800 as always fancied one (reputedly one of the best all round bikes ever made - pre V-Tec Fi model) yep was good and all that, could do a bit of everything but I ended up losing my Mo-Jo and got board and thought about giving bikes up, then one day went for a blat on a Triumph T100 Bonneville, came back from the run with a Smile from ear to ear. Bought one brand new October 2013 in UK paid £7200, absolutely love it and my mojo is back big time.

See is not a speed thing or what ever, is all about what you want out of a bike, so have your opinion mate, everyone is entitled to that but don't talk $hite about a bike you obviously know FA about.

You guys prob know far better than me the Bonnies are assembled here in LOS (all parts shipped over) Got to say I still impressed with mine and the quality bar the handle bar controls are just basic Jap fair. So as they are assembled in Thai factory is that why the possible reduction in price?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I believe , no KTM,s are made in Thailand. The KTM Duke 125 , 200 and 390 are made AND assembeled in India and recieve some tax break through the import aggrements. I dont know how much . All other KTM,s are made ( using components from Brembo , White Power etc ) in Austria , and are taxed heavily upon import into Thailand. I wait , with great hope , to see what happens once this "Asean aggrement" starts to come more on-line next year. I think a few companies will start to have their prices looked at , and questioned , by potential buyers then ! .

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I cannot be sure but I thought KTM were actually manufacturing here. Why anyone would spend 800K on a Triumph amazes me, again the same and more spent on Harleys, they are shit compared to any mainstream Japanese bike. You may as well spend 50K on a Platinum or similar Chinese piece of scrap and keep the rest in the bank to replace all the bits that fall off over the first few months. Give me Honda, Kawasaki or Yamaha any day. If it wasn't for the Japanese the British bikes and the old Harleys would still essentially be a design from 1950 like an old BSA or a Pile of Plates, side valve pushrod pieces of junk that wouldn't get you to and from the local market without breaking down 5 times on the journey. Harley, Triumph and Norton needed a sidecar to carry all the necessary spares to repair them on a 50 mile trip.

Stop talking out of your ar$e!

Bikes are individual to everyone, what is good for one may not be good for another person. Comparing Jap bikes with Triumphs, Harley's or Dukes is like comparing apples and pears. I'v had bikes all my life from being a nipper and owned all sorts, a 10 years ago I was riding a Suzuki K3 Thou in UK and loved it when they first came out - Totally mental bike and a Rocket ship, great whip around the dales on a Sunday blast. But fast forward a few years and I got a VFR 800 as always fancied one (reputedly one of the best all round bikes ever made - pre V-Tec Fi model) yep was good and all that, could do a bit of everything but I ended up losing my Mo-Jo and got board and thought about giving bikes up, then one day went for a blat on a Triumph T100 Bonneville, came back from the run with a Smile from ear to ear. Bought one brand new October 2013 in UK paid £7200, absolutely love it and my mojo is back big time.

See is not a speed thing or what ever, is all about what you want out of a bike, so have your opinion mate, everyone is entitled to that but don't talk $hite about a bike you obviously know FA about.

You guys prob know far better than me the Bonnies are assembled here in LOS (all parts shipped over) Got to say I still impressed with mine and the quality bar the handle bar controls are just basic Jap fair. So as they are assembled in Thai factory is that why the possible reduction in price?

Well. 30 years ago we were riding Suzuki 280 GSX, Honda CB500 shaft drives blah blah blah...30 years ago not ten! When I was 5 I was on a BSA 500, when I was ten we had a sidecar. You are obviously too young to see the kind of junk that was turned out by Norton, (Commando) BSA, JAL Pile of Plates, back in those days, so don't try and argue about something you never experienced, Back in the early 70's British Bikes and Harleys were shit! It took the Japs to wake them up.

Unfortunately my arse has no vocal chords unlike yours so I am unable to converse in your anal language. Indeed comparing Harleys and Triumphs with Honda, BMW, Kawasaki and Yamaha is indeed like apples and pears, it is like comparing 1950's crap with modern technology. Do you for one minute think you would have fuel injection, O2 sensors and the level of technology we have now if we waited for British bike manufacturers? We would still have the same old shit they sold us in the '60's, Harley Davidson still sells overpriced JUNK to idiots that think they are buying a real bike. The only reason we have decent bikes today are because of the Japs, same as the cars, you would still be driving round in some piece of shit from British Leyland and BLMC if it wasn't for Japs, the cars/bikes in the US are even worse, emission complying junk.

A British vehicle could never get you from A to B without a major service on the road, they were just complete shit! Harley rested on their name and delivered shit, Ducati are a bunch of faggot specialists, their shit bikes will die after 30Km in Thailand. Like most Itie shit, built for looks never for endurance. Stick with the Jap bikes, they are number one for performance.

BSA were still trying to flog their bikes in 1970+ along with Norton that were based on the same SHIT designs that were being produced in 1950, CRAP BIKES, CRAP Technology, CRAP outdated design. Harley was the same only more bits fell off their crap bikes. That was why they nearly went bust... they shipped shit!

And when I started on Bikes a Bonneville was a throwback to the 18th century, people were buying riding and dying on the new Kawasaki Z1R, that machine took a few of my mates out, but compared with a Bonneville, it left the Bonny standing. a thumper, not a fast bike. (no speed is not everything - take the Yamaha RD 200 a small bike with a bit of get up and go, the Norton Commando 750 was like a slug compared to this! The Yamaha 50 FSIE in the 1980's would leave any of your "Big Bikes" Standing from a standing start, and they had pedals!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow, that's quite some news.

Would hate to be one of the guys who just bought one for almost 800k...

Agreed, but I never understod why those guys paid so much in the first place unless you are swimming in money.

Gold can be bought at too high prices and then it's better to just walk away.

I heard that the dealer for Thailand kept those high prices because he wanted Triumph bikes to be a luxery item for the selected few.

Perhaps Triumph UK have pulled the plug on this guy as Ducati did, and just see how well Ducati Thailand are doing now.

Are the Tiger 800 made here?

Well said.

+1

I looked at the Scrambler but ended up buying a hypermotard because it was a good bike and so much cheaper. In fact it's an expensive machine but the sales price in Thailand is the same as the UK.

Ducati sales are a success story over here and Triumph should get on board and compete.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Everyone's knocking the British bikes, but I've fallen in love with my old AJS 350 16M, while at home gave it a facelift, new bars, levers, headlight, a big clean. It may be right-foot gear and may not go fast, or reliable, but it is fun. It looks nothing like an AJS, with aprillia upside-down front forks & disk brakes.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Everyone's knocking the British bikes, but I've fallen in love with my old AJS 350 16M, while at home gave it a facelift, new bars, levers, headlight, a big clean. It may be right-foot gear and may not go fast, or reliable, but it is fun. It looks nothing like an AJS, with aprillia upside-down front forks & disk brakes.

Well, so much teasing and no pictures?!?xhuh.png.pagespeed.ic.6VcCaNwNXg.png 1zgarz5.gif.pagespeed.ce.GJfs_tQOQ-.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.





×
×
  • Create New...