Contrary to popular opinion, I have not done any preventative fixes, strengthening, or replacing of weak parts on my Zongshen ZS200GY-2. Neither have I done any extra maintenance, et cetera. I have only performed the ordinary maintenance which is normally required for the Yamaha TW200 engine in my Zong."If you're an ADV enthusiast, you probably read this headline and said to yourself, “A new model adventure bike? For less than $3,000? It’ll be an underpowered, fragile piece of crap. Probably built in China.” Well... you may well be right."
That says it all, to me. I know there's a guy on here with billions of miles on his Zongshen, but the company just hasn't won me over. He is the unique exception, to the rule that China bikes a junk. I'm sure he's done plenty of preventative fixes, strengthening and replacing of weak parts, extra maintenance, etc. If this bike were reliable (Japanese), I could imagine a KLR 250 motor (power-wise) in a 400 pound ADV bike... I imagine about 95% of the US motorcycling population couldn't. I do think that China bikes are getting closer in terms of reliability, with the globalization of parts and manufacturing industry over recent years, but they still aren't on par with a good Japanese or European vehicle. I want to like it (cool concept), but I can't. Maybe this will be another exception (Chinese automotive companies/products moving in the right direction), and I will wholly be proven wrong. I won't keep my fingers crossed. For the time being, I'd rather put that 3 grand towards a Honda Grom (125).
I have now ridden my Zong over 67,000 miles, and I am pleased to report it has never run better.What's he got now on his bike? 60,000 thousand or something like that?
Spud, who did you pay the deposit to? I skimmed the thread over on ChinaRider but never saw where they were announced as coming to the U.S.?Contrary to popular opinion, I have not done any preventative fixes, strengthening, or replacing of weak parts on my Zongshen ZS200GY-2. Neither have I done any extra maintenance, et cetera. I have only performed the ordinary maintenance which is normally required for the Yamaha TW200 engine in my Zong.
I have now ridden my Zong over 67,000 miles, and I am pleased to report it has never run better.
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In case anyone is wondering, I paid my deposit on an orange Zongshen RX3. Based upon my experience with my Zongshen ZS200GY-2, I am very pleased to add another Zongshen motorcycle to my stable of bikes. At this moment I own the following motorcycles.
1998 Kawasaki KDX220
2004 Honda CRF250X
2005 Honda XR650L
2006 Zongshen ZS200GY-2
If anyone is interested in learning more about the Zongshen RX3, I invite him to peruse my thread on the RX3 at ChinaRiders.net.
New Zongshen RX3 (ZS250GY-3) Dual Sport - ChinaRiders Forums
Spud![]()
Zongshen America closed shop several years ago. Therefore, CSC Motorcycles in Azusa, California is importing the Zongshen RX3 to the United States and Canada. You can find the contact information for CSC Motorcycles at their website, which is linked below.Spud, who did you pay the deposit to? I skimmed the thread over on ChinaRider but never saw where they were announced as coming to the U.S.?
Tom
Yes, the curb weight of 385 pounds includes the panniers, engine guards, et cetera, and all fluids.I hope the listed weight includes the rack and panniers otherwise seems porky. Nice volumetric efficiency at almost 100hp/ litre of displacement but that means peaky power and high r.p.m.s are not conducive to longevity. Nice concept, hope marketing gurus don't point out that at that price level they are leaving money on the table, and bring the sales price up to mildly undercut competition. If we see too cheap a price we think too cheap a quality,
I believe Zongshen has taken the Chinese motorcycle industry to a higher level with the new RX3 motorcycle.The world has changed. Chinese stuff isn't all junk anymore. In fact look closely at anything you've
purchased, odds are it was produced in China. In fact several years ago BMW moved production
of their smaller (800cc or less) motorcycles to China........for whatever reason China whupped the US a long time
ago in manufacturing. Just the way it is.
Thank you.It's nice to have you hanging out over here on this forum Spud. The mileage on that bike of yours is pretty impressive.
Thank you, Fred.OK, I'm convinced. Thanks Spud