Tag Archives: discount

Save 10% on Extreme Bike Tours Himalaya trek

Extreme Bike Tours will be on a new Himalayan Expedition from 11-25 July 2020 and is offering a 10% discount only to Motorbike Writer readers! 

This “once in a lifetime” ride that will take you in some of the most remote and dramatic areas of the Spiti Valley (pictured above) and Ladakh, in north India.

It starts in the foothills of the Himalayan range and goes all the way to Leh.

Riders will travel on some of the highest roads in the world such as the Chang La and the Khardung Lah at 5300m, visit ancient monasteries and immerse yourself in the Indo-Tibetan culture.

The price for this all-inclusive motorcycle tour through the Himalaya is $US4350 (about $A6490 on today’s exchange rate) but Motorbike Writer Followers can enjoy a 10% discount saving $US435.

The offer is valid only until 15 March 2020.

The tour includes:Save 10% on Extreme Bike Tours Himalaya trek

  • Bike, fuel & oil
  • Accommodation (tented camps & hotels)
  • All meals, snacks, drinking water & soft drinks
  • Local & English guide
  • Support vehicle
  • Mechanic
  • Spare parts
  • Domestic flights from Delhi to Chandigarh / Leh to Delhi

Choose between a Royal Enfield Bullet 500cc or Himalayan 410cc for this motorcycle adventure of 16 days on top of the world (12 days of riding). 

Although the tour has been designed to help the acclimatisation process by starting at lower altitudes and gradually ascending to higher altitude up to 5600m, it’s a physically challenging adventure and it requires some riding experience and skills.

Definitely not for the faint hearted. Are you up for the challenge?

For more info, write to [email protected] and don’t forget to claim your Motorbike Writer special discount.

We travelled with Extreme Bike Tours in Sri Lanka and can thoroughly recommend them as safe, professional and friendly operators.

2021 tour dates

Extreme Bike Tours has released its 2021 tour dates with three firsts in India, Myanmar and Mongolia.

Rajasthan “On a shoestring” is an easy budget-friendly tour which is all about the destinations.

The Road to Mandalay” in Myanmar is already fully booked but they are now looking into running a second tour.

The Mongolia Gobi Desert itinerary and logistics are now in place.

  • Rajasthan – On a Shoestring, 10-23 January
  • Hidden Sri Lanka – Ride in Luxury, 13-25 February
  • Myanmar – The Road to Mandalay (fully booked), 7-20 March
  • Bhutan – Gross National Happiness, 10-24 April
  • Himalaya – Through the Clouds, 10-25 July
  • Hidden Sri Lanka – Ride in Luxury, 10-22 July
  • Mongolia – On the Trail of Chinggis Khan, 31 July – 10 August
  • Tibet – Mt. Everest Base Camp & The Forbidden City, 6-21 September
  • Luxurious Rajasthan, 6-19 November

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Readers offered 15% roadside assist discount

Recover My Ride is offering Motorbike Writer readers a 15% discount on 24/7 roadside assistance service for their motorcycle, car or other vehicle.

That’s a $25 saving on the normally $150/year service which provides you with total peace of mind!

All you have to do to redeem this generous offer is click here or click on the “Recover My Ride” advertisement on our home page.

It is open to all riders and drivers around Australia and will aid you in situations where your motorcycle or other vehicle is immobilised.

Reasons can include a flat battery, flat tyre, running out of petrol or any mechanical problems, but not a crash as that should be covered by your insurance.

It will pick up your bike or other vehicle on any sealed or designated safe road.

Your membership also includes, at no extra cost, free cover for your motorcycle trailer, caravan, box trailer and boat trailer.

Recover My Ride Roadside Assist Features:

  • Australia Wide.
  • Ambulance member benefit assistance.
  • Emergency Roadside Assist 24/7 365 Days.
  • Flat batteries jump starts.
  • Flat batteries replacement service.
  • Flat tyre change or transported to the nearest repairer.
  • Free out of fuel emergency.
  • Member benefit personal illness.
  • Member benefit personal injuries.
  • Member benefit car hire.
  • Member breakdown accommodation.
  • Unlimited callouts Australia wide.
  • Unlimited towing to the nearest repairer.
  • Unlimited breakdowns to nearest repairer.
  • Unlimited km to the nearest repairer.

Readers offered 15% roadside assist discountMotorbike Writer is happy to partner with Recover My Ride which we believe provides you with the best and most comprehensive roadside assistance in the country.

It’s also very affordable with no hidden costs.

Some other services may seem the same, but they can have hidden costs that can make a long-haul recovery very expensive.

Once an account has been set up, customers can add and pay for extra motorcycles, cars and others vehicles on the same account at any time.

Please read the terms and conditions first.Readers offered 15% roadside assist discount

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

TeamMoto offers free licence training

In a bold move to get more riders on motorcycles, TeamMoto has offered free motorcycle licence training if you buy a motorcycle from them this month (May 2019).

It’s a clever sales tactic as sales continue their two-years-plus slide.

While all dealers are feeling the pinch, the most public example is TeamMoto whose parent company MotorCycle Holdings went public in 2016 at about $2.50 a share.

They reached a peak of $5.22 at the end of 2017 and the company is now down to a record low of around $1.25.

MotorCycle Holdings TeamMoto offers free motorcycle licence
MotorCycle Holdings share price

Free licence deal

Other dealers who also do licensed motorcycle training have previously bundled in the cost of getting a licence with the purchase of a bike.

Some have offered refunds on training if you then buy from them. This TeamMoto deal also includes that option.

But we haven’t seen it advertised this way before that you buy the bike and they throw in a free training course.

While it seems a clever idea and a welcome enticement to start riding, buyers should be aware that it’s just another discount on the whole package price.

TeamMoto is a big dealership group with a lot of buying power and has been heavily discounting bikes for some time.

In a recent article Norton importer and multi-franchise dealer James Mutton said this sort of big-business discounting devalues motorbikes and hurts the industry.

James Mutton Brisbane Motorcycles discounting teammoto
James Mutton

“The MotorCycle Holdings business model revolves around sales volume, finance and discounts,” James told us in February.

“Customers are now able to buy a new bike at a really good price but it has no value on resale.

“So there is now a stack of cheap second-hand bikes on the market. Used bike sales are doing well, but at the expense of new bike sales.

“Customers now expect discounts on all new bikes which is a bubble that will eventually burst.”

The discounting is not just on cheap bikes, but also prestige brands.

James says the depreciation in the value of new prestige bikes is eroding the loyalty of riders to these brands and causing long-term damage to brand image.

Legal offer

Despite claims of this deal being morally and financially dubious, some might see the free licence offer as a conflict of interest when the seller is also the trainer.

This was brought up and dismissed in the review of Q-Ride training a few years ago.

However, it is not illegal.

Transport and Main Roads (TMR) says it does not regulate the price of Q-Ride courses. 

“Q-Ride Registered Service Providers (RSP) may also be motorcycle dealers or affiliated with motorcycle dealers,” a spokesperson told us.

“We are aware dealers may sell motorcycles and offer packages where a licence course is included in the price.

“All Q-Ride RSPs must deliver the standardised training curriculum as per the Q-Ride scheme requirements.

“There is no proven link between the price or commercial packaging of a Q-Ride course and the quality of training provided.”

TeamMoto deal

MotorCycle Holdings TeamMoto offers free motorcycle licence
Part of the TeamMoto promotion

The TeamMoto deal is only valid for this month when a learner buys a new or used motorcycle from TeamMoto stores.

If you already have your licence, you can transfer the free training offer to “get your mates riding too”, their advertising says.

“Sometimes just having friends to ride with can double the experience of riding a motorcycle,” it says.

The free certified licence training for this promotion is only available Tuesday to Friday at “Motorcycle Riding Schools” at 59 Moss St, Slacks Creek, and subject to availability.

It is limited to Q-Ride sanctioned courses for pre-learners and RE licence and valid for up to 90 days.

Weekend courses are also available but are not redeemable as part of this offer.

If you complete one of these courses during the promotional period, you can get a refund for the course if you purchase a new or used bike from TeamMoto within 60 days.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Big business discounting is ‘hurting motorcycling’

Big business pushing sales through discounting is hurting the motorcycle industry in Australia, says a motorcycle importer and multi-dealership owner.

James Mutton is the dealer principal of two multiple-franchise dealerships (Brisbane Motorcycles in Windsor and Caboolture), the Australian importer of Norton Motorcycles and a former British Superbike racer.

Most notably, he is the son of veteran industry identity Brett who put the cat among the pigeons with his 2017 broadside at big businesses for forcing “mum and dad dealerships out of business”.

Brett Mutton Brisbane Motorcycles mum and dad dealer conglomerate
Brett Mutton of Brisbane Motorcycles

Two-year slump

Two years later, much of what Brett said is happening and the industry continues to spiral downward.

James took over the business when brain cancer forced Brett into retirement.

He has similar outspoken views to his father about the motorcycle industry, so we thought it worthwhile sounding him out.

James says the industry is in a two-year slump because of a “multitude of factors that all hit at the same time”.

They include:

  • Tighter finance requirements that prevented many riders from securing finance to buy a motorcycle;
  • Young people did not want to take up the lifestyle. “It’s not an image they want to be a part of,” James says. “The whole VLAD consorting laws and anti-bikies PR couldn’t have helped, even though that’s not what 99% of riders are about.”; and 
  • With a decrease in sales, dealerships could not attract the right staff, which affected customers’ dealership experiences.

Discounting war

James Mutton Brisbane Motorcycles discounting
James in his Windsor dealership

James says the result of the drop in new bike sales volume was that big dealership groups, such as MotorCycle Holdings (a publicly listed company that owns TeamMoto and many other dealerships), began aggressively discounting to increase sales turnover.

While that may sound like a boon for riders, James says it is devaluing their bikes and hurting the industry.

“The MotorCycle Holdings business model revolves around sales volume, finance and discounts,” James says.

“Customers are now able to buy a new bike at a really good price but it has no value on resale.

“So there is now a stack of cheap second-hand bikes on the market. Used bike sales are doing well, but at the expense of new bike sales.

“Customers now expect discounts on all new bikes which is a bubble that will eventually burst.”

James says even some of the prestige brands that never used to discount, such as Harley-Davidson, BMW and Ducati, are now discounting.

“Through no fault of their own they are forced by the rest of the industry into running aggressive sales campaigns,” he says.

For example, BMW is currently running a campaign through TeamMoto offering five free years of servicing.

James says the depreciation in the value of new prestige bikes is eroding the loyalty of riders to these brands and is causing long-term damage to the brand image.

He claims customers are now rebelling against the big dealership conglomerates.

“This is a passion-based industry and not big business,” he says.

He could be right. When MotorCycle Holdings went public in 2016, their share price started at $2.53 and reached a peak of $5.22 at the end of 2017. It is now down to just $1.46.

MotorCycle Holdings Ltd share price history Discounting
MotorCycle Holdings Ltd share price history

Solutions

Just as there were many reasons for the slump, James says there are many facets to solving the problem.

“We need a 10-year plan; that’s the amount of damage that’s been done to the industry,” he says.

James suggests that manufacturers, distributors and motorcycle industry organisations collectively fund motorcycle promotion.

“Everyone is scrapping over the last dollar and won’t put their hands in their pockets to pay to promote riding,” he says.

“More needs to be done at a higher level to make more people want to ride.

“The manufacturers are fighting over their share of a diminishing pie rather than trying to grow the pie.

“No one is actively marketing motorcycling in general to make the pie bigger.

“The whole industry is losing with everyone focussing on losing the least amount. We need to build value back into motorcycles.”

Dealers

James Mutton Brisbane Motorcycles discounting Norton
James with his two demo Norton Commandos

James says the problem is too big for just dealers to solve.

“Dealers don’t control the market,” he says.

“All we can do is make the experience good for the customer so they tell other people.

“People want to be remembered when they come back to a dealership.”

James says a key ingredient for dealer success is to offer demo rides.

His dealership even has two expensive Nortons on demo.

“There are some things about bikes you can’t appreciate until you’ve ridden it and feel it,” he says.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Ride-away deal on Suzuki GSX-S1000

Suzuki Australia is offering free on-road costs on their GSX-S1000 streetfighter saving riders $1200 from March 2019.

The bike was updated for last year’s model with more power, torque and control, plus some cosmetic updates.

It cost $16,690 ride away, but it is now being offered at $15,490 ride away in two new colours: Metallic Triton Blue and Metallic Matte Black (Z-model).

GSX-S1000 updates

The GSX-S1000 is powered by a GSX-R1000 engine “tuned for the streets with a fatter and meatier bottom-to-mid”.

Peak power has increased from the previous model’s 107kW (145ps) to 110kW (150ps) and maximum torque has increased from 106Nm to 108Nm.

The improved performance is thanks to newly added crankcase ventilation holes which reduce pumping losses and comply with Euro 4 emissions regulations.Suzuki GSX-S1000

A back-torque-limiting clutch has been added to contribute to smoother downshifts and corner entry.

Brembo monobloc calipers are the same specification as on the GSX-R1000R with four opposed 32mm piston callipers and 310mm floating-mount discs and ABS.

The front brake hose has been updated for claimed improvements in initial stopping performance and feeling.

It has 43mm KYB inverted forks with fully adjustable compression, rebound damping and spring preload. The single KYB rear shock features adjustable rebound damping and spring preload.Suzuki GSX-S1000

The lightweight LCD instrument cluster includes speedometer, tachometer, odometer, dual tripmeters, gear position, coolant temperature, driving range, average fuel consumption, instantaneous fuel consumption, traction control, and a clock.

The white backlight provides night-time visibility and features six different rpm display settings.

It comes with Suzuki’s two-year unlimited-kilometre warranty.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com