Probably not news to anyone here, but this article was published three days ago. We need new blood...
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...cycle-industry
Probably not news to anyone here, but this article was published three days ago. We need new blood...
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...cycle-industry
From the article:
"Profit margins are far fatter on something like a Honda Gold Wing F6B, an 844-pound locomotive that starts at $20,500. But that swollen kit doesn’t hold much street cred where Pacheco parks in Manhattan, in part because the folks buying those big cruisers are quickly transitioning from the roadhouse to the golf course."
Locomotive? I guess that makes us engineers!
Sounds like they're all working hard to get new riders. They'll get hooked and eventually need something bigger and the cycle will begin anew.
I read with interest - that article played out the many chapters of my 48+ year riding life and I'm positive its a relevant article as I seen it with my own eyes. However, I've always been a Ducatisti and have owned a half dozen through the years. I can look at a sea of bikes and to me the Ducatis stand out like a stripper at family reunion - I notice them. The author writes that "In its first full year its Scrambler was on the market, Ducati sold 15,000 of them—28 percent of its total business." I must say I've never seen one on the road - not one. I also haven't seen an abundance of the light/mid weight bikes mentioned. I can't help but wonder if the trend isn't a regional phenomena.
If I was 16 -18 years old, I'd give that Rebel a try. Looks like a fun bike for short rides. My first street bike at 16 was a '81 GL500 Silver Wing Interstate. Was a fun bike and I , of course , customized the stereo. I sold my dirt bike to help buy te Kenwood cassette deck and the Alpine speakers I put in it., Plus a new helmet.
"Go sell crazy somewhere else, we're all stocked up"