I had taken my time in trying and
selecting my Bonneville (Read my post comparing the Bonneville SE with
Bonneville T100 here). So now here it was! My new bright and shining
Bonneville T100. Unfortunately, the ownership experience went downhill within a
month. Here’s my tale of woe:
Experience I:
In less than a month during which I must have ridden not more than 200 kms, my bike broke down without warning,
leaving me stranded on the roadside. I was riding the bike on a fine Sunday
morning and the bike suddenly lost power. On checking, I found a lot of fuel
leaking from the exhaust joint of the right hand side exhaust. This was
worrisome. When I tried starting the bike again, I found a stream of fuel coming
straight out of the silencer! It looked like the fuel injector of this exhaust
was stuck in open position, thus allowing the fuel to pass through without
burning. I couldn’t even risk limping the bike home as a small spark could
light a very expensive fire.
I sent the video to Zubin, the
service in-charge at the Triumph Mumbai dealer at the time. I was told not to start the
bike and send it straight to the service station.
I figured that the bike breakdown
could be a one-off incident. But the subsequent events were a shock. The
showroom didn’t assist me in any way to get the bike to the service station (I
am based in Nasik, 200 kms. away from the service station in Mumbai). The
showroom sales people, the ones who had provided exceptional service before my
purchase, happened to be in Nasik at the time of this problem for a sales
promotion event. I approached them as well and thought that being their only
customer in Nasik, they would help me. All they did was give me the number of
the driver who transports their bikes from the warehouse to the showroom.
I was left to fend for myself. The
most expensive purchase of my life was standing at home, obviously from a fault
in the bike, and no one was ready to help. I got the bike transported to the
service station and paid for this from my own pocket.
My troubles did not end there. Time
passed slowly as I waited for a response from the service manager. A week past
and after several calls, I was informed that the bike had been analyzed and the
data had been sent to the company for analysis. This explanation sounded
extremely fishy. Couldn’t an authorized company service station figure out the
fault?
Fortunately for me, Zubin, the
service in-charge, turned out to be an honest guy. He informed me that the ECU
of my bike was faulty and had to be replaced. I understood that the showroom
was simply making excuses as they were waiting for the new ECU to arrive from
the UK.
I was furious. I visited the
showroom and threatened to leave my bike there for good and file a legal case if I
was not told the truth. They reluctantly informed me that the reason given by
Zubin was correct. As per them, “only 6 bikes with this problem were in India,
and this could not be termed as a recall because of the small number of bikes
involved”. But On the other hand, I read a blog on motorcycle.com that recalls for the same problem
were made by Triumph in several other countries. Indian customers are just not
worth the trouble, it seems.
After 3 weeks of waiting, I was told
that the ECU had arrived. On arriving in the showroom to collect my bike, I
realized that unlike the original ECU, the new ECU did not have the chassis
number of my bike. This could potentially be a big problem if I decided to sell
the bike later as it could mean I had swapped the original ECU. I demanded that
I be given in writing that the company has replaced the ECU under recall. After
much arguing and speaking to Sunil, India service head of Triumph India based
in Gurgaon, India (I had to speak to him as the Mumbai showroom simply refused
to give me anything in writing), I was sent a mail that the ECU has been
replaced. Not one word of recall or the problem was mentioned.
It was at this time that I was given
the registration of free RSA (Roadside Assistance) provided for every bike
complementary in the first year. Shouldn’t the showroom have informed me of
this at the delivery stage itself??
Experience II:
The next fiasco made by Triumph was
regarding the power output of the bikes. The website and brochures of the bikes
gave the specs quite clearly. The Bonneville had power output of 69 Bhp, the Street Triple of 105 Bhp etc. One fine day, a customer realized that the specs
on the website had been changed by the company. The output figures had been
reduced from 69 Bhp to 59.9 Bhp for the Bonneville and from 105
Bhp to 77.9 Bhp for the Street Triple. No customer was informed. There was no
announcement made by Triumph India. They had planned to simply fly under the
radar.
This raised a huge storm amongst the
existing customers. However, Triumph remained completely silent on this issue, despite
many customers demanding an answer.
Several blogs including bikesindia.org also highlighted this issue, but
alas it did not change the attitude of Triumph.
Meanwhile, the company had contacted
every Street Triple customer individually and offered rebate of Rs. 1.5 lacs in
cash back or in the form of accessories. No response was ever provided for
Bonneville customers. This again showed the apathy of the company and its
dealers towards their customers. Us Bonneville owners were left to fend for
ourselves at every stage.
Unofficially, the Mumbai dealer
verbally explained to me that the power output was different in India as the
earlier published figures were for tests done in UK where is ambient
temperature is taken as 10oC, vis-à-vis the 35oC taken for the Indian tests. But the fact remains that Triumph had the specs for India (Based on mandatory pre-launch ARAI test results) before they launched the bikes, and they misled all customers by knowingly marketing their European specs!
Experience III:
The fiasco continued even further.
About 3 months after the power output issue, which led to no logical conclusion
for the Bonneville users, a customer mentioned on a Bonneville owners group that
the Bangalore showroom had informed him of a recall of all exhausts in 2014
Bonneville. Since I have a 2014 Bonnie, I waited for some word from the Mumbai
showroom.
No information came forth, and after
waiting for 5 days, I called up the showroom who confirmed (after checking my
chassis number) that my bike was indeed under the recall list. It seems that
the stock exhausts were not meeting the environmental standards and thus had to
be changed. Of course, the dealer said they were “just about to call me” regarding this matter.
I had had quite enough of the
nonsense and I insisted that the dealership send a technician to Nasik to
replace the exhausts and there was no way I would bring my bike 200 kms to
Mumbai for a 20 minute job. The showroom had no choice but to accept. Their
service personnel came down to Nasik and changed the exhausts. Also, they
retuned the ECU. Even though the service head claimed that the ECU map was
the same as the original, the bike runs much smoother now.
Experience IV:
Recently, reports have surfaced about another problem. The left foot peg of some Bonnevilles fell off as the bolt holding them to the bracket snapped. There were no warning signs and about 6-7 such incidents came to my knowledge through Bonneville owner groups in India. Many users tried to discuss this issue with Triumph to ascertain the reason for this. Several explanations came forth including excessive heat from the exhaust, incorrect torque, quality of the bolt itself etc. Again, Triumph kept mum on the issue.
The broken foot peg |
The snapped bolt |
Since then, several owners have
tried their own 'jugaad' for ensuring the foot peg strength. Some useful tips such as on triumphindia.org have also been circulated. This
issue has made me lose confidence in the strength of the foot peg and I have
stopped standing on the pegs of my Bonnie, which is quite a common practice
while going over bumps, rumblers and while off-roading. The result is a sore
back after every ride, thanks to the severe jolts when the bikes goes through on bumps and rumblers.
Conclusion:
All these experiences have led me to
lose faith in Triumph India. Their head of Indian operations, Mr. Vimal Sumbly
has repeatedly ignored customers and seems to only appear during new model
launches and events.
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