Best Selling Cruiser
Best Selling Cruiser
Does anyone know what the best#1 selling cruiser is regardless of cc's or price?
- BuzZz
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Really? That surprises the hell out of me. Very, very much. Specially since Ive never seen a Victory(wait, I never NOTICED any) on the road, but can name 5 people I know personally who bought new H.D.'s this year. There must be a ton of Victories running around the American roads, cause they ain't up here.Aggroton wrote:actually...victory sold more units than harley did last quarter according to my father-in-law.
No Witnesses.... 

- Wizzard
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Since I don't have any statistics to lie with I would opt for saying that the most popular cruiser is probably the Yamaha V-Star 650 . Ya sure see a hell of a lot of them around here and around the forums .
Regards, Wizzard
Regards, Wizzard

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I have a lot more experience with ATV's than motorcycles but I noticed that what we may see a lot of depends on what dealers are in the area. Large cities probably have them all but smaller towns don't. Some dealers really market aggressively also and some don't. There must be a more bean-counting approach than this. Maybe some DMV records could be searched for an idea. AMA maybe?Wizzard wrote:Since I don't have any statistics to lie with I would opt for saying that the most popular cruiser is probably the Yamaha V-Star 650 . Ya sure see a hell of a lot of them around here and around the forums .
Regards, Wizzard
Jeff
'04 Black Honda Rebel
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- dr_bar
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Sorry about the cut and paste but here's some info for you...
Top brands in 2003, the latest available market-share data, according to the MIC: Honda, with 27.4% of sales; Harley-Davidson, 23.7%; Yamaha, 17.4%; Suzuki, 10.8%; and Kawasaki, 8.7%.
The average age of motorcyclists rose to 41 in 2003, the latest available data, from 32 in 1990. (The average age in 2004 was 44 according to JD Power) Most were married. A third were college graduates, nearly double the 1990 number. Baby boomers "drive the market," says Larry Little, publisher of Cycle World magazine
Classically styled so-called cruiser bikes account for about one of every three motorcycles sold, making them the biggest segment. But there's "continual growth in all categories," says Tom Orbe of Kawasaki Motors USA
Top brands in 2003, the latest available market-share data, according to the MIC: Honda, with 27.4% of sales; Harley-Davidson, 23.7%; Yamaha, 17.4%; Suzuki, 10.8%; and Kawasaki, 8.7%.
The average age of motorcyclists rose to 41 in 2003, the latest available data, from 32 in 1990. (The average age in 2004 was 44 according to JD Power) Most were married. A third were college graduates, nearly double the 1990 number. Baby boomers "drive the market," says Larry Little, publisher of Cycle World magazine
Classically styled so-called cruiser bikes account for about one of every three motorcycles sold, making them the biggest segment. But there's "continual growth in all categories," says Tom Orbe of Kawasaki Motors USA
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"Four wheels move the body.
Two wheels move the soul!"
"Four wheels move the body.
Two wheels move the soul!"
- Sev
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Which means we still don't know what the most popular cruiser is, just the company.
Personally just via guess based on what I've seen/heard. Either the v-star 650 or the honda shadow. Just because of the recognition factoy. If you aren't willing to plunk the green on a Harley, that's where you turn.
Personally just via guess based on what I've seen/heard. Either the v-star 650 or the honda shadow. Just because of the recognition factoy. If you aren't willing to plunk the green on a Harley, that's where you turn.
Of course I'm generalizing from a single example here, but everyone does that. At least I do.
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