I rode for about 18 years or so and sold the last of my bikes in 2013. At one point I had 3 in the garage- Goldwing, Ninja and an old Yamaha 400. I was heavily into long distance riding back in the 2000's and put in thousands of miles. Pretty much rode a bike to work every day if the roads weren't ice/snow covered. Today, unless I'm out in the middle of nowhere I rarely see anyone on a motorcycle. Even during the summer up here in NW Wisconsin the bar parking lots may have a handful of bikes in them whereas 20 years ago it was nothing but bikes.It was mentioned that Motorcycling in general is in decline. It definitely is.
Your mixing metaphors - one time use plastic and Chinese junk in general is a problem but thats a choice. GM had lots of intake manifold gasket issues in the same era with metal intakes. Ford intake was a poor design, and my first 6 vehicles were Ford and I would not own another likely, so thats on them also.I guess it depends on how you look at it.
I can still see my Grandmothers bright shinny chrome toaster, she owned it with pride, never had any crumbs in the bottom, she even had a nice cover for it. Her home was spotless and so was her toaster, made to last and almost a work of art made with pride in the USA!
My plastic intake on my used Police Crown vic is a known issue and is an expensive repair when the water line cracks over 100K The part with labor cost almost more than the car is worth...
I once owned a 1995 Volvo T5-R that came factory with glass ( not plastic lens ) Hella, halogen headlights. To this day even with modern LED those headlights were the best and would light up up a road like a high school football stadiums field on a Friday night!
I think about and remember this glass headlamps as I'm using one of those plastic restore headlight haze remover kits, Im actually saying bad words as i'm hand wet sanding plastic lenses wondering why did things go from glass to plastic?
Don't get me started about how good a Classic Coke is in a glass bottle!
I'm old, even my Tonka trucks were metal as a kid in the 70's. I walk down the toy isle now at Walmart, Toaster isle too and nothing but a sea of China Plastic Crap! No, i'm not a fan and would pay more for better made goods and is why I purchased a new Volvo in 1995, Now even Volvo is China owned Plastic...
That building is about the size of my local Harley Shop from 25 years ago that the owners sold the business and the new owner closed that small shop, moved 6 miles and built a mega store right off the Interstate!This is the #1 Royal Enfield dealer in sales in the US. It’s in the middle of BFE Iowa. No need to have a 150,000 square foot palace.
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I'd think at some point the design would need a refresh, or else it would become stale. Even the best design can grow passé or out-of-style in the fickle American marketplace. How many times has Ford tweaked the styling of the "retro" 2005+ Mustang? Even if they faithfully reproduced the original 1964-1/2 Mustang, eventually sales would tail off once everyone who ever dreamed of owning one bought one, while meanwhile fans of the Fox Body are kept waiting forever. "Retro" is just another style and when it falls out of fashion, the buying public will abandon it, whether it be cars, motorcycles, architecture, furniture, etc.Any company that makes anything, should just do a study and see what older item that they made in years gone by that was popular.
And re make that item. And not like GM did with the HHR and the SSR as they were not even close. I'm not just talking cars and trucks either. They need the what ever look exactly like the original. Sure do some small internal upgrades but that is all. And keep the plastic out of it, if it didn't have that originally.
Amazingly, in 2026 toasters start at $12 on Walmart's website. I'm sure it's a pretty poor toaster though. Most are in the $30 range.A toaster in 1960 was between $10 and $20. Thats like $100 to $200 today. No one will pay that amount of money for a toaster today.
That's interesting, as I don't see nearly as many bikes on the road anymore in MN. I know some older guys with HD have had to give the sport up.I rode for about 18 years or so and sold the last of my bikes in 2013. At one point I had 3 in the garage- Goldwing, Ninja and an old Yamaha 400. I was heavily into long distance riding back in the 2000's and put in thousands of miles. Pretty much rode a bike to work every day if the roads weren't ice/snow covered. Today, unless I'm out in the middle of nowhere I rarely see anyone on a motorcycle. Even during the summer up here in NW Wisconsin the bar parking lots may have a handful of bikes in them whereas 20 years ago it was nothing but bikes.
2x, I'm seeing this in snowmobiling now also. 15-20k new sleds.When the generation that would take over the sport (Millennials, young gen x) can't afford child care, how do you peddle expensive hobbies ?
Gee my crescent wrench is just old and stale.I'd think at some point the design would need a refresh, or else it would become stale.
I’m a dual sport / adventure bike rider myself and I thought HD did a pretty good job on the PanAm for their first go at an adventure bike.Someone mentioned dual sport being the fastest growing, well HD did make Pan America dual sport model, which looked pretty good IMO and was a decent value compared to BMW. Guess what? It didn’t sell.
Same thing goes for every other model they try.
I want a dual sport or sport touring bike BAD, but I see enough absolutely oblivious drivers going to and from work that it's an instant turn off.I rode for about 18 years or so and sold the last of my bikes in 2013. At one point I had 3 in the garage- Goldwing, Ninja and an old Yamaha 400. I was heavily into long distance riding back in the 2000's and put in thousands of miles. Pretty much rode a bike to work every day if the roads weren't ice/snow covered. Today, unless I'm out in the middle of nowhere I rarely see anyone on a motorcycle. Even during the summer up here in NW Wisconsin the bar parking lots may have a handful of bikes in them whereas 20 years ago it was nothing but bikes.
I think anyone who has been paying attention to the motorcycle industry over the last decade or so has seen this starting, but I think it's a lot worse than people thought. Personally, I don't know how Harley saves themselves. A CEO who doesn't know motorcycles, a culture which resulted in dealers turning up their noses at customers who didn't want to spend $30k or more on a high end bike, against a company which makes good bikes at low prices, whose CEO actually made employees ride their motorcycles to work so they would understand the products they are selling.
I don't see how Harley pulls off a recovery, they've alienated the very customer base they need now.
I think anyone who has been paying attention to the motorcycle industry over the last decade or so has seen this starting, but I think it's a lot worse than people thought. Personally, I don't know how Harley saves themselves. A CEO who doesn't know motorcycles, a culture which resulted in dealers turning up their noses at customers who didn't want to spend $30k or more on a high end bike, against a company which makes good bikes at low prices, whose CEO actually made employees ride their motorcycles to work so they would understand the products they are selling.
I don't see how Harley pulls off a recovery, they've alienated the very customer base they need now.