barbagris
Mad Scientist
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2010
- Messages
- 12,988
- Location
- On the verge of insanity
- Ride
- 1979 Guzzi V1000G5 - 2018 KTM 790 Duke
Yup because officially they're still in for 2 years. And it will not surprise me at all if Brexit is reversed - though frankly I couldn't personally give a ****. Also (and I stand ready to be corrected) iirc the UK adopts the Euro Mot Criteria in 2017 - No Bureaucrats will reverse that in time. Anything to get nasty smelly, noisy M/C off the road.Does Triumph give any ****s about Euro 4 now after Brexit?
Think on this - It may also be an impetus for Triumph to shift manufacturing to Romania - In the Eurozone and dirt cheap labour. The Bloors run a company - not an "enthusiast mfr". It's what saved Triumph.
Triumph is a MASS producer but not a MONSTER MASS producer - it has to have a product that is acceptable to ALL markets. Others would be Guzzi, KTM. The only companies able to escape Euro4 are tiny bespoke companies like Ariel or Confederate. I know Guzzi had to castrate the Cali-1400 by about 25% to pass Euro4. Honda can happily say - ok Bike X we'll simply not sell to the Eurozone anymore. But I'll bet they wont design many new ones that cannot be sold there.
I did read that for example the Suzuki Hayabusa is also in the line of fire. KTM 1290. The current Ducati Paningale (they've made a smaller one).
The Thunderbird iirc is Euro4 compliant.