Yeah. In the case of Triumph the Trident and Tiger 660 are made in Thailand (I would think the daytona 660 as well, but I'm not sure.)I suspect this is the case for every company, I think apart from the italians(?) everyone else has presence in asia.
I believe they're part owned by Baja, or something.KTM is considered an upmarket bike in the land of the most populous nation, never mind they use Bybre brakes and not Brembos.
Import restrictions are onerous and it makes sense to establish a plant there if KTM plan on taking on the local market.
Is the local plant a tie-up with a local mfr, a la BMW/TVS?
... but ByBre ARE Brembos... the name is short for "By Brembo", as in "made by brembo"never mind they use Bybre brakes and not Brembos
True dat, ByBre are Brembos, with the distinction that they are "small bike" brakes.... but ByBre ARE Brembos... the name is short for "By Brembo", as in "made by brembo"
Made in China... Brembo has had a chinese plant for a LONG time. They're just as good as normal OEM Brembo stuff... which ain't that great anyway. Harley branded brakes are Brembo too... and not that great either (Harley's fault, not Brembo's)
OH... and I was joking when I said KTM will drop their price in India, they'll just pocket the difference
Brembo owns -True dat, ByBre are Brembos, with the distinction that they are "small bike" brakes.
(Sorry, don't mean to derail OP's post)
According to the latest figures, the average salary in New Zealand per month is 5,487.73 NZD or 65,852.80 NZD per year. As of 2024, the gross minimum salary in New Zealand is 31.66 NZD per hour
Yeah everything is relative, if they sell 1000000 bikes a year and have an off year or 2 with sales down 10%, not exactly a cause for concern."With the growth in sales figures over the last ten years, the number of employees at the motorbike subsidiary KTM AG has more than doubled,"
I'm curious how many bike manufacturers can claim this though. I'm sure everyone is cutting back but I'd be willing to wager KTM was one of, or the biggest employment grower of the bunch and I think that matters.
KTM is also going road racing with a Moto GP team. That kind of sounds like a vanity project money inferno with very little reputation or promotional return.
The key words being "wouldn't have". I think we're in a different stage of vehicle development now, and on-track advances may not bring enough to on road products to justify the expense, particularly for KTM.It's also a good way to learn how to build better bikes for everyone in a big hurry. And to sort out top designers and engineers in a big hurry. Modern performance-oriented ABS and traction control, "controlled chassis flex" and chassis geometry, etc wouldn't have been taken to their current levels without the motivations from roadracing.
They pretty much rule Moto3, covering the grids through their various tank badges. The only other player is Honda.Plus, KTM doesn't really have a recent history of factory-led high level road racing (although I think they've had a 250cc team or equivalent) so they're embarking on a steep and expensive learning curve against manufacturers who have history and experience to burn.
Maybe that supports Brian's contention that racing is useful for development as KTM's 390's and smaller have been improving steadily in performance and reliability.They pretty much rule Moto3, covering the grids through their various tank badges. The only other player is Honda.
It's all about profit.Yeah everything is relative, if they sell 1000000 bikes a year and have an off year or 2 with sales down 10%, not exactly a cause for concern.
I’m doing all I can to boost Ktm sales anyway