Think Gen-Z. Traditional Harley's appeal to us more mature folk.Isn't one of the primary attractions of a Harley Davidson the way that the engine sounds? I mean - it's not really a performance bike - more of a lifestyle purchase.
I can imagine electric working for other brands, but hard to imagine on a Harley.
Think Gen-Z. Traditional Harley's appeal to us more mature folk.
Isn't one of the primary attractions of a Harley Davidson the way that the engine sounds? I mean - it's not really a performance bike - more of a lifestyle purchase.
I can imagine electric working for other brands, but hard to imagine on a Harley.
Gen-Z would probably avoid the H-D name, regardless of the product produced just to avoid the stigma.
Old joke: what's the difference between a Hoover and a Harley? The position if the dirtbag . . . .
!
Harley only has maybe a year left. They will be gone by their own hand...
Old joke: what's the difference between a Hoover and a Harley? The position if the dirtbag . . . .
Harleys aren't too bad if you like vibration and noise. Personally, I hate being behind one on the road; forget being behind of them!
Can you get loud pipes for it?
Could always install a playing card in the spokes for noise....
I've owned several HDs over the last 15 years. Never had a problem. My preference was the stock bike with no add-on pipes, etc. No extraordinary vibration or noise. Very cool sound though. Throatier rumble than my Japanese bikes, although if you're honest I didn't notice a big difference in power.
An ebike would be alright. I think I might even like it. But it would feel different.
The H-D name has been on weird Italian motorcycles, including some two-strokes, in the past.Isn't one of the primary attractions of a Harley Davidson the way that the engine sounds? I mean - it's not really a performance bike - more of a lifestyle purchase.
I can imagine electric working for other brands, but hard to imagine on a Harley.
Far as I can tell, the primary attraction is all the shirts, jackets and wall hangings that say Harley Davidson on them. I think they may also have made motorcycles at one time but it doesn't seem like that is their primary business anymore.Isn't one of the primary attractions of a Harley Davidson the way that the engine sounds? I mean - it's not really a performance bike - more of a lifestyle purchase.
Of course with some heavy duty speakers and a good sound chip you could have whatever pipe noise generated you wanted. Could run from a belching softtail to a well-tuned eletraglide or a overreved rice burner.
The H-D name has been on weird Italian motorcycles, including some two-strokes, in the past.
My neighbor had one of these:That would be Aermacchi
Aermacchi also make(d) these
At least they realize the have a problem.
The boomer bike owners have mostly bought their last Harley.
There are fewer gen x harley people. And fewer still millennials.
Harleys just aren’t cool anymore. They are a senior citizens bike. Like a corvette!
And generally, wider seats, for their target demographic.At least the Corvette still stands at the top of the pack for performance per dollar value against its competition (essentially all six-figure Supercars). The H-D brand doesn't have as much to boast about against its competitors, aside from wider array of t-shirt designs!
'Murica, F-Yeah!And generally, wider seats, for their target demographic.
Didn't hd try this with the Erik Buell line... And fail?
Here's what Buell is up to now. Marketing to the market correctly I'd like to think.
https://jalopnik.com/erik-buells-new-company-fuell-jumping-into-the-electric-1833050677