Hello from China. Owned this bike for exactly 2 weeks. Spitting water and dirt in your face when passing even the smallest of puddles. Sitting position is not comfortable. Rear suspension sucks, even the smallest of bumps you feel perfectly. And last, after 2 weeks of rather herbivore riding, the gearbox died. Full engine replacement (luckily, under warranty from the factory) was required. Sold it right after. If you want Chinese, get a CF. QJ is infamous in China for its reliability.
Thank you for that comment! I know CFMoto is good, but they don't have such a bike like QJ Motor SRV 600. btw, the best bike I think is Honda NC750S DCT. Manual is bad for a city.
@@KatyaLishch Can't stand automatic transmission, to be honest. It's shifts at all the wrong moments, it's slow and boring. Working the clutch in traffic takes some getting used to, but in the end you get a lot more pleasure from riding
yes there are negatives too.. like comfort seat and rear suspensions are not confortable... and there is a lot of on-off (we tell in the video probably you didn't notice) but this is common on most of cruisers. And considering the price the bike is quite well.
Made in China! Have we not seen enough of their manufacturing practices to not push their products? They manufacture cars but very little spare parts which is concerning but then couple that with their reputation for questionable reliability and it becomes a disaster waiting to happen. And that's with their cars. The situation is even worse with their motorcycle lines. The reality is, the chinese want to compete with the big names so invest a lot in their R&D but don't respect their customers enough to manufacture sufficient spare parts for their vehicles. Substandard materials used in their products means yellowing headlights and tainted plastic parts in 1-1.5 years, and then you'll be stuck with the ugliest bike on the road (assuming it still runs after 1-1.5 years) and without access to replacemrnt parts. Chinese vehicles are a pass for me. Not going to waste my money on them.
Thanks a lot for this test. Can you respond, what is fuel consumption per 100 km on this bike? Minimal and max? For slow and dymanic driving.
Hello from China. Owned this bike for exactly 2 weeks. Spitting water and dirt in your face when passing even the smallest of puddles. Sitting position is not comfortable. Rear suspension sucks, even the smallest of bumps you feel perfectly. And last, after 2 weeks of rather herbivore riding, the gearbox died. Full engine replacement (luckily, under warranty from the factory) was required. Sold it right after. If you want Chinese, get a CF. QJ is infamous in China for its reliability.
thank you for your comment they are always useful for our audience
Damn, must've been a terrible experience.
@@Edward0919 I mean... It wasn't the worst bike that I've ridden in China... But the worst one cost me only 200 bucks, on the other hand
Thank you for that comment! I know CFMoto is good, but they don't have such a bike like QJ Motor SRV 600.
btw, the best bike I think is Honda NC750S DCT. Manual is bad for a city.
@@KatyaLishch Can't stand automatic transmission, to be honest. It's shifts at all the wrong moments, it's slow and boring. Working the clutch in traffic takes some getting used to, but in the end you get a lot more pleasure from riding
For the money, there is nothing to complain about really. Resale value only
Which brand are the boots you are wearing?
Hi, Redwing shoes.
200kmh capable?
561cc V4 on a "cruiser"... I don't know what would be more appropriate laughing or crying.
so no negatives? wow that must be some very biased review
yes there are negatives too.. like comfort seat and rear suspensions are not confortable... and there is a lot of on-off (we tell in the video probably you didn't notice) but this is common on most of cruisers. And considering the price the bike is quite well.
561CC called a 600
Martin Scott Rodriguez Mary Lee Charles
Made in China!
Have we not seen enough of their manufacturing practices to not push their products?
They manufacture cars but very little spare parts which is concerning but then couple that with their reputation for questionable reliability and it becomes a disaster waiting to happen. And that's with their cars. The situation is even worse with their motorcycle lines.
The reality is, the chinese want to compete with the big names so invest a lot in their R&D but don't respect their customers enough to manufacture sufficient spare parts for their vehicles. Substandard materials used in their products means yellowing headlights and tainted plastic parts in 1-1.5 years, and then you'll be stuck with the ugliest bike on the road (assuming it still runs after 1-1.5 years) and without access to replacemrnt parts.
Chinese vehicles are a pass for me. Not going to waste my money on them.