Still are!
Not only do they look great but the 250/260 Comanche get you Bonanza performance at a lower initiation fee.
My little airport has at least 5 Comanches, including the 400 I posted a picture of earlier. Unfortunately the hull values are now so low that if anything happens the insurance companies tend to write them off. Couple of friends of mine had a gear problem in theirs earlier this year. Did as perfect a landing as one could expect and the plane didn't look too banged up. But it got written off and it was sad to see it trucked away with the wings off a few days later. I hope someone salvages and rebuilds it. I asked what they were going to replace it with, and one decided to go back to flying commercially for a living and the other is indulging his vintage motorcycle habit with the proceeds.
It's a common outcome for these things nowadays. It's not so much that the low hull values auto-terminate them, it's that the cost of repair and replace is higher than newer vintages. Control surfaces and wing components a la carté? Complete non-starter in that airplane. Everybody speaks to these things being acts of God, but based on my experience in a community hangar, or even the most cursory off-station ramp overnight, no way in hell I sink avionics money of any consequence into a comanche considering these replacement economics. In a Cherokee you just cross the road from where you crashed it and someone has it on the shelves.
Additionally, people generally have held on to them and as that demographic has aged out, these things have gone into disrepair, as they don't find a suitable niche in the training market (even overseas, where my engine-runout Warrior II ended up at), so they become parts fodder. Bonanzas have a more robust legacy support baseline by virtue of being more popular, even though I consider the comanche more desirable both on the engine, airframe (Al vs Mg) and cabin volumetrics fronts.
I suppose the upside, much like the Aztec/Apache storyline, is that there should be some surplus parts salvaging for a good decade or so, based on these retirements. I still don't consider that a compliment to ownership, BUT, again as is the case with the Aztec, there's simply no new equivalent that does what these Lock Haven relics do for the money. And that
is a compliment to the types. Truly bittersweet set of circumstances for American GA.
If Cirrus is the only thing the recreational individual market has for an answer in the aggregate, we're right effed. Those bathtubs are not going to age well; their unaffordability in insurance claims when fully depreciated will make the comanche woes look like kindergarten. What's worse, there's actually not that many of them compared to the 70s production numbers of the combined Pi-Cess-Craft vintage.