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MZ ETZ 125 1985 Motorcycle Photos and Specs. Get the latest Specifications for MZ ETZ 125 1985 Motorcycle from mbike.com! Mbike - Catalogue. You are not logged in. Sign in or sign up for a free account. Role: Other Users in Sub-Role.
We reach a dedicated, worldwide group of real travellers, and are the only website focusing exclusively on long distance motorcycle travellers. If you sell motorcycles or motorcycle accessories, riding gear, camping equipment and clothing, transport motorcycles, organize motorcycle tours, or have motorcycles to rent, you should be Help keep your favorite website going and get additional. Much reduced in circumstances - posh talk for flat broke - I find myself looking at MZs. My 'round the world Transalp was stolen a while back unfortunately. I have just got a MZ ETZ 125 for about town and am impressed. Not without its faults, but for strength economy and simplicity it is brilliant.
Good front brake too. But a bit small for touring in Europe (the lightweight GF might manage though).
So I am thinking about upgrading to a 250 ETZ and making it my do-everything bike. Performance and looks have never been important to me (nor to my girlfriend, ho ho). I like the characterfulness of it. That's the biker shorthand for ugly brute loads of trouble yes?
There's something cheerfully curmudgeonly about old MZs. You can put on the cheapest nastiest tatty luggage and it will fit right in. No wallet-withering touratech nonsense. Everything fabricated from old tin cans, emergency roadside engine rebuild with a hammer and spanner in less than an hour, that sort of thing. And boy are they cheap. That's a disservice really. The most impressive aspects of the 125 is the engineering.
They are designed to take knocks, keep going, run on low grade fluids, handle bad roads, be cheap to run, be easily serviceable and go speeds that people need. Realworld use, to fall back on a Bike mag cliche. That's a triumph. It's exactly the absence of crappy overdesigned plastic that makes them attractive to me. The side faring is metal and lockable. How neat is that?
The DDR must have been using a different dictionary to the west. Design was defined by utility, not fancy looks. This made for some miserable architecture - all that brutal concrete, whew - but in vehicles it is kind of refreshing. Being a 40-something male I am sick and tired of the useless designer crap that intrudes into my life. The MZ ETZ is the town-centre car park of bikes.
I am happy to put some work in to get it in shape; in fact, it's the best way to get to know the machine. It's about time I learnt how to overhaul a top end. Planning to slow tour Europe on this (funny how slow in this part of the world means faster than most people have been in their lives). Looking around the net I see they can make motorway/autoroute speeds - although not for all day - and those east Europeans having been greenlaning on them for years. So: they're versatile. Am I in need of some? As a lifelong MZ'er I think you've got it spot on.
The big tank, enclosed chain, stupidly simple mechanics etc. Make these real world bikes. Get yourself hooked up with the MZRC via Yahoo if you didn't already and see if they'll send you a copy of this months mag. Chap there crossed the Andes on one he built out of 5 army cast off's.
The only thing that I really worry about is the condition of bikes that are now at least mostly over 10 years old (even if you include Kanuni's). If people abuse two strokes by having leaks or incorrect timing they fight back. If you've lived with a 125 you know all this though, the only mechanical change with the 250/251/301 is that the clutch is now crank mounted. I hate to do this as you say dosh is an issue, but if you plan to tour I'd double the value of your average MZ and go for a 301 with MZ-B ignition. The great news is that MZ prices are rising. £500 for a runner is giving half the MZRC nose bleeds!