chris56
Active member
is this a yoke only ??
http://www.buell.com/en_us/
http://www.buell.com/en_us/
is this a yoke only ??
http://www.buell.com/en_us/
I fail to understand why they didn't try to sell it off. This is much more complex than simple economy, I suspect.
Just out of curiosity, what is the market share of the Spyder?While the Buell design, engineering and performance were noteworthy, it is very hard to stay in business when your market share does not rise to noteworthy levels. With less than 1% of the bike market, they are like Saturn is (was) to the auto market.
Very sadbut not surprising. Hard to compete with the big four in their turf. Maybe HD refocus on developing the leaning Harley trike::dontknow:
![]()
3D
Just out of curiosity, what is the market share of the Spyder?
Thanks for the info. Very interesting. A total of million bikes a year would make the Spyder about a tenth of a percent. Pretty low, but far exceeding the 1,500 units (0.15%) a year BRP initially anticipated. They exceeded their goals, and came out with a new model in just two years, so they must be happy. BMW, Triumph, and Ducati are pretty much expensive niche bikes in this country, I'm afraid. Their dealer networks make BRP's Spyder network seem positively robust, by comparison. Let's hope that there is more than simple economics involved in the demise of Buell, and that nothing else, including the Spyder, follows suit.Doesn't register yet, but BRP is counting on the aging market and design of the Spyder to create a new market segment. Below are the MC market shares of the approximately 1 million units per year. Interesting also are the ATV statistics where BRP is last, but they are a relative newcomer to that market. Unlike Buell, BRP has snowmobiles, PWCs, ATVs and boats to help new product launches. Selling a line of products with different markets, uses and seasons spreads costs and risks. Buell didn't have that going for it. That doesn't explain BMW, Triumph or Ducati.
My wife is looking at a used Buell Blast for her first bike. What do you think this will do to prices? What do think will happen with service and support?
That doesn't explain BMW, Triumph or Ducati.
Motorcycles
HD = 28%
Honda = 25%
Yamaha = 17%
Suzuki = 13%
Kawasaki = 11%
KTM = 2%
BMW = 1%
Triumph = 1%
Ducati = 1%
. . . . . HD decided to kill Buell. That was my take-away from the statement and Q&A. Sad. The motorcycle market could use a lot more diversity instead of herding the "market" to just one style of bike or one 'style' of riding.
My following statement probably won't sit well with the HD contingency here, but this is just another (corporate) step in converting THE rebel brand into a bunch of clones for the suburban biker who wants/needs a bada** image.
Tom