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Posted

Ask yourself if you would buy a Chinese designed and built car? because other than being made in Thailand thats what it is, its a chinese bike, personally i wouldnt touch one with a 10 foot pole as ive seen several around CM falling to bits, poorly made crap but yes they do look retro/cafe good.

A dealer told me about its origins (Chinese company).

Posted

Ask yourself if you would buy a Chinese designed and built car? because other than being made in Thailand thats what it is, its a chinese bike, personally i wouldnt touch one with a 10 foot pole as ive seen several around CM falling to bits, poorly made crap but yes they do look retro/cafe good.

A dealer told me about its origins (Chinese company).

you've seen several Stallion 400's falling to bits.. Really? I smell DELETED

  • Like 2
Posted

The centaur 150 is sold in Europe under the brand name MASH, so it can't be all that bad if they are allowed on the road there too.

  • Like 1
  • 2 months later...
  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

I agree absolutely on the tires. I put a new set of IRC's on my Nouvo Elegance a few years back and they were as queasy as all get out. Got the Michelin Pilots, then Pirellis. (get either one and live longer). IRC's are dangerous. Have Metzlers on the SR400 which is what I had on my BMW's in the U.S. and they feel rock solid.

  • Like 1
Posted

<quote>


My friends with the CB 500's say they pay 4,000-6,000 baht to change tires.

<\quote>

Which tires are those? Sounds a bit cheap.

Posted

<quote>

My friends with the CB 500's say they pay 4,000-6,000 baht to change tires.

<\quote>

Which tires are those? Sounds a bit cheap.

Sorry, that is each tire not both.

  • Like 1
  • 1 month later...
Posted

We are a bit behind the times in Khon Kaen, or maybe I have been away too long, but they have opened a nice dealership on the Mittaparp Road here. Selling all models of Stallion, including the 400.

 

It is a good sized bike for me and it felt "right", started it up and is sounded nice too, even better that the smaller 200s. The 200 is just too small for us.

 

I really like what Stallion are doing, putting fun back into biking at an affordable price, emulating what we did 50 years ago. The Cafe Racer innovations actually came from their owners being skint, my only worry is that the Thais will copy us further, by killing themselves. 

 

In this instance the SR400 is just way too expensive... for what it is.

 

What I don't like is the chrome, it kinda spoils the bike and as with my Lifan I would change the wheel bearings for Jap ones, straight away.

 

The dealership guy is starting a club for these bikes, just like at Vespa, with trips and meets and that has to be good for their promotion. I don't know whether these guys with the 200s are modifying their bikes but they sound really great, like nothing else  around. One local has made his look "old" and the exhaust "crackle" he achieved, well you would swear it was an old British bike.

 

Would I buy a 400, forty years ago, yes?

  • Like 2
Posted

Had chance to have a look through this thread and some people are comparing the CT400 to the SR400, so I was trying to find some specs on both bikes. The reason for this is because I seem to remember that the SR400 was a "small bike", which even riding solo I found unbearably cramped. As I mentioned above, the CT400 fits me (and MrsB) quite well so to me a better comparison should be between the SR400 and the little CT200, since they are around the same size.

 

I think the small no frills (read no thrills) SR400 is ridiculous at 265k, the same money as the hugely impressive 650cc Kawa Vulcan and especially when compared to the proper sized (and equipped) CT400 at just 109k. Salivating over an SR400, jeeze! ....how does that work? An over active salivary gland?

 

Posted
4 hours ago, thaiguzzi said:

Those 400's are a nice looking engine. Looks to me like they are a dry sump motor too. Oil in the frame a la Honda big singles?

 

The old Honda XBR 500, on which the CT400 is based, was a dry sump engine with an oil tank under the RHS side panel.

Posted

CT400 is 115,000 baht.

 

Those 200s you talk about don't exist, they are 150 cc.

And now just released at the motorshow is a 250 cc model.

Posted
1 hour ago, bramds said:

CT400 is 115,000 baht.

 

Those 200s you talk about don't exist, they are 150 cc.

And now just released at the motorshow is a 250 cc model.

Yeh, my mistake. Been having second thoughts about the 400 since it fits me and MrsB so well, with a nice riding position, better than anything else around. It looks and sounds nice too and that's important, but......

 

It is a shame about the chrome which hasn't been prepared properly, so I'm wondering if it can be redone, wheels rims and silencer...and what sort of money?

 

Hopefully the price will come down to list in a few months when Sterling recovers a little.

 

Posted

Got my CT400 last Friday and basically very happy with it. Simple, easy to drive and power is just what you would expect from the engine. Seems like a great bike for what I got it for.

 

Only odd thing I noticed so far is a “sticky” throttle. When driving and changing gears, the engine keeps the rpm up while you turn of the gas to switch gears. It will last maybe a second or less, but it is noticeable when changing gears or when just turning off the gas to use engine brake. The first second or less the engine still pulls before the throttle is really turned off and you get normal engine brake. Mechanically the throttle is releasing normally both in the handle bar and in the EFI body, so I’m guessing it has something to do with the EFI controller that maybe still providing fuel to the engine. Also the check-the-engine red warning light in the dashboard is very slightly illuminated during normal use. Not bright as when you turn the ignition on and not yet start the engine, just a small glow that one can only see in dark. Didn’t have time to ask the dealer yet about this as I’m travelling now, but will ask.

 

Meanwhile, did anyone else experience the same sticky throttle issue and have any fix for it?

Posted

Having owned a Chinese bike built in Thailand and listened to some of the Youtube reports I have come to the conclusion that these bike need a little owner input.

 

The Honda Wave I bought 5 years ago, was A1 right from the time I picked it up, but the Lifan I bought late last year certainly wasn't. It barely ran when I went to collect it, the gearchange was dreadful and I was sent away for a week. When I did pick it up half the nuts and bolts were loose, there was a fuel leak and the seat cover was thin and was starting to give out...mmmm.

 

I wanted to upgrade the seat anyway, so throwing a poor quality cover away wasn't an issue. The dealer got then engine properly, fixed the leak and we got the clutch adjusted properly, so now all is well.

 

I now have a nippy fun dirt bike that sounds good for around £900 ( my dosh comes from the UK, where incidentally that money buys me nothing). In contrast the Wave which was perfect out of the box, is a dull as ditch-water run around.

 

My guess is that things may be the same with the Stallion 400, that compared to a Honda CB300, you may have to suffer a little for your art. But if you do the rewards are worth it, plus my knees and spine may thank me in the long run.

 

Now I know what to expect, I will see what sterling does later this year.

 

Just noticed that one of the models has painted mudguards so that would be the first thing I would do. I hate chrome, especially when it is done poorly. 

  • Like 1
  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

As has been said on this thread already, the Stallions CT 400 is sold in UK & Europe as the Mash Roadstar.

 

The Mash UK website is now showing pictures, but nothing more, of a cafe racer-style bike, the Mash TT40, using the same engine as the CT 400.

 

I found a short road test on the Mash TT40  --  http://www.motofire.com/2016/09/reviews/first-ride-mashing-mash-tt40-black-7/   --  and the UK price is £4700 or about 215,000 baht at today's rate.

 

Features include F&R disc brakes, 4-pot front caliper, beefed-up front forks, box section swinging arm, frame-mounted top fairing. It also has ABS which can be switched on or off. 

 

Is it bound for Thailand one day?

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Is the documentation provided to new buyers by Stallions in Thai only or also in English?

 

I got these attachments from MASH Motorcycles in UK - English language versions of the Owner's Handbook for the 400 and a spare parts listing for the Scrambler. 

 

Might be useful for somebody.

 

I'm interested in the Scrambler but it's not at the local dealer's shop for another month or so.

MASH 400 Scrambler catalogue 2015.xlsx

MASH 400 User Manual.pdf

  • Like 2
  • 1 month later...
Posted

Just saw one at a sticker shop, with a tallish Thai guy on it, looked good, so I wondered over. Not sure whether he has done anything to it, it wasn't brand new as it already had it's plate...but it looked absolutely fantastic, all black......... welds all good, great chrome and panels fitted.

 

Now that's a nice bike..........sounded good, but then they all see too.

  • Like 1
Posted
11 minutes ago, sebastion said:

I'd rather wait for the new royal enfields. Not much more money than this.

Really, how much?

  • Like 1

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