Mutt in administration

Mutt in administration

Author
Discussion

trickywoo

Original Poster:

12,896 posts

244 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
I see Mutt is in administration.

I know they are Chinese with a thin British veneer but I thought they were cheap and different enough to have a sustainable niche.

Likely quite messy for anyone needing parts I'd have thought.

mgv8

1,652 posts

285 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
It is sad, as others like Honda and Triumph are doing very well with the small retors.

Shooter McGavin

8,174 posts

158 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
I know someone who worked there. Didn't have a lot positive to say about the head honcho - a bully, according to them.

I thought their product was ridiculous, personally. If you want a low capacity machine then the established brands more than adequately cover this market segment.

gareth h

3,940 posts

244 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
Weren’t they for wannabe hipsters?

Crudeoink

1,056 posts

73 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
Everyone i saw was always in a pretty terrible condition, rusting fasteners, fog filled lights etc even when the reg indicated it was pretty new. I guess they were bikes built to a budget and probably left outdoors etc

Discendo Discimus

695 posts

46 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
Can I get done for anything if I share my experiences from working there for a trial day in their "workshop"?
Not sure if a company can sue for defamation if it's in administration?

zzrman

670 posts

203 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
Discendo Discimus said:
Can I get done for anything if I share my experiences from working there for a trial day in their "workshop"?
Not sure if a company can sue for defamation if it's in administration?
If you tell the truth you won't have a problem.

Bob_Defly

4,693 posts

245 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
Who?

trickywoo

Original Poster:

12,896 posts

244 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
Discendo Discimus said:
Can I get done for anything if I share my experiences from working there for a trial day in their "workshop"?
Not sure if a company can sue for defamation if it's in administration?
Just preface it with saying your experience of Dogg. Its only PH that might get jumpy but the mods don't really spend much time in the bike section.

Discendo Discimus

695 posts

46 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
Okie dokie, a few friends of mine worked at *dogg* motorcycles in the advertising / merchandise departments and at the time I was looking to shift careers into something more bike related.
When I heard about a vacancy at *Dogg motorcycles I gave them a call and asked if I could have a trial day there to put the bikes together.

Perhaps naively, I expected it to be a production line type place, fitting engines to frames, building bikes up from bare components but was disappointed when I saw the warehouse was full of crates.
The build process consisted of removing the box from the crate, undoing the transit straps, securing the handlebars, controls and mudguards and doing a quick electrical test.
Frames were often scratched / scraped and the fix for this was to cover the exposed metal in permanent marker.
The mudguards didn't really fit, so they would drill new holes next to the factory ones, leaving swarf and exposed metal all over the bikes.
The brakes were woeful, even when pushing the bikes around the workshop.

I walked away, unable to feel any pride in the brand and knew it wasn't for me. I follow the *Dogg Motorcycles reddit page and owners complain about a huge list of issues. It's no surprise that the service department isn't great as the bikes aren't assembled there to start with.

Bit of a shame really, I'm a Brummie and was keen to see a properly Birmingham built bike again but it wasn't to be.

airsafari87

3,072 posts

196 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
Discendo Discimus said:
Okie dokie, a few friends of mine worked at *dogg* motorcycles in the advertising / merchandise departments and at the time I was looking to shift careers into something more bike related.
When I heard about a vacancy at *Dogg motorcycles I gave them a call and asked if I could have a trial day there to put the bikes together.

Perhaps naively, I expected it to be a production line type place, fitting engines to frames, building bikes up from bare components but was disappointed when I saw the warehouse was full of crates.
The build process consisted of removing the box from the crate, undoing the transit straps, securing the handlebars, controls and mudguards and doing a quick electrical test.
Frames were often scratched / scraped and the fix for this was to cover the exposed metal in permanent marker.
The mudguards didn't really fit, so they would drill new holes next to the factory ones, leaving swarf and exposed metal all over the bikes.
The brakes were woeful, even when pushing the bikes around the workshop.

I walked away, unable to feel any pride in the brand and knew it wasn't for me. I follow the *Dogg Motorcycles reddit page and owners complain about a huge list of issues. It's no surprise that the service department isn't great as the bikes aren't assembled there to start with.

Bit of a shame really, I'm a Brummie and was keen to see a properly Birmingham built bike again but it wasn't to be.
Disappointing. 2/10

snagzie

644 posts

74 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
airsafari87 said:
Discendo Discimus said:
Okie dokie, a few friends of mine worked at *dogg* motorcycles in the advertising / merchandise departments and at the time I was looking to shift careers into something more bike related.
When I heard about a vacancy at *Dogg motorcycles I gave them a call and asked if I could have a trial day there to put the bikes together.

Perhaps naively, I expected it to be a production line type place, fitting engines to frames, building bikes up from bare components but was disappointed when I saw the warehouse was full of crates.
The build process consisted of removing the box from the crate, undoing the transit straps, securing the handlebars, controls and mudguards and doing a quick electrical test.
Frames were often scratched / scraped and the fix for this was to cover the exposed metal in permanent marker.
The mudguards didn't really fit, so they would drill new holes next to the factory ones, leaving swarf and exposed metal all over the bikes.
The brakes were woeful, even when pushing the bikes around the workshop.

I walked away, unable to feel any pride in the brand and knew it wasn't for me. I follow the *Dogg Motorcycles reddit page and owners complain about a huge list of issues. It's no surprise that the service department isn't great as the bikes aren't assembled there to start with.

Bit of a shame really, I'm a Brummie and was keen to see a properly Birmingham built bike again but it wasn't to be.
Disappointing. 2/10
Agreed. Expected bestiality

Rubin215

4,154 posts

170 months

Thursday 20th March
quotequote all
snagzie said:
airsafari87 said:
Discendo Discimus said:
Okie dokie, a few friends of mine worked at *dogg* motorcycles in the advertising / merchandise departments and at the time I was looking to shift careers into something more bike related.
When I heard about a vacancy at *Dogg motorcycles I gave them a call and asked if I could have a trial day there to put the bikes together.

Perhaps naively, I expected it to be a production line type place, fitting engines to frames, building bikes up from bare components but was disappointed when I saw the warehouse was full of crates.
The build process consisted of removing the box from the crate, undoing the transit straps, securing the handlebars, controls and mudguards and doing a quick electrical test.
Frames were often scratched / scraped and the fix for this was to cover the exposed metal in permanent marker.
The mudguards didn't really fit, so they would drill new holes next to the factory ones, leaving swarf and exposed metal all over the bikes.
The brakes were woeful, even when pushing the bikes around the workshop.

I walked away, unable to feel any pride in the brand and knew it wasn't for me. I follow the *Dogg Motorcycles reddit page and owners complain about a huge list of issues. It's no surprise that the service department isn't great as the bikes aren't assembled there to start with.

Bit of a shame really, I'm a Brummie and was keen to see a properly Birmingham built bike again but it wasn't to be.
Disappointing. 2/10
Agreed. Expected bestiality
Bestiality, necrophilia and sadomasochism.

Flogging a dead horse basically...

Discendo Discimus

695 posts

46 months

Friday 21st March
quotequote all
Did I forget to mention I saw the owner bumming a cow and the workshop manager was walking around naked the whole time?

wildone63

1,021 posts

225 months

Friday 21st March
quotequote all
If it means less chinese two wheeled ste in motorcycling then thats a good thing

KTMsm

28,803 posts

277 months

Saturday 22nd March
quotequote all
Crudeoink said:
Everyone i saw was always in a pretty terrible condition, rusting fasteners, fog filled lights etc even when the reg indicated it was pretty new
This ^^^

I thought the name was apt as they looked dog rough after 2 years biglaugh