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A brief history of the motorcycle brand

There are many great motorcycle companies in the market. Many of them strive to produce the fastest, sleekest bikes, and sometimes just the biggest two-wheeled beasts on the road. However, there is one company, maybe at least one, that focuses on all of this and genuinely designs motorcycle artwork.

MV Agusta has been around since 1945 and the company is based in Varese, Italy. The company was founded by Count Domenico Agusta. The MV in the company’s name stands for Meccanica Verghera, which is where the very first MV Agustas was made.

What really sets MV Agusta apart from other motorcycle manufacturers is that they not only aim to produce the sweetest dreams of two-wheelers, but they want to be the best while looking to the future. In reality, according to their official website, their mission is to “design, develop and manufacture the most advanced motorcycles in the world”.

If you haven’t heard of the MV Agusta, you wouldn’t be alone. They are not super popular. The company has grown in recent years, but they are still rare to see on the streets. There are likely reasons for this, some of which will be discussed later.

Since MV Agusta is not very well known in the general motorcycling community, we wanted to provide an overview of the company.

Here is a brief history of the MV Agusta.

What makes MV Agusta bikes great

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One of the things that sets MV Agusta apart from the rest is its process. They manufacture each bike by hand as well as with the use of advanced technology. This means that the products are not only guaranteed to be made with quality and care, but also have a personal touch. People who buy these bikes can almost feel like it was designed for them. This goes hand in hand with their dedication to excellence and being the best manufacturer of two wheeled machines.

The other thing that sets MV Agusta apart is their desire for their bikes to be works of art. It’s a bit like what Pagani does for cars. When you see an MV Agusta, you really see what they mean. Sure, their bikes look like normal bikes, but they each have something different. They stand out, it’s like they’re somehow improved over a regular motorcycle.

As an example, take a look at their Turismo Veloce. They call it their uncompromising tourer, and we can see why. It is a flexible sports bike that is also designed for touring and commuting. The slogan they use for this is the DNA of touring racing.

Their beginnings and their eventual decline

VIA MV Agusta

The company began to focus on motorcycles after World War II. Previously, they worked with airplanes, but motorcycles allowed them to continue to use their engineering and design expertise.

Their first motorcycle, the MV 98, was released to the public in October 1945. The company wanted to name its first motorcycle Vespa 98, but that name was already registered. Of course, we all know Vespa scooters. The MV 98 could be purchased as a touring or economy version. The engine was a 98cc two-stroke single cylinder. We don’t think we need to tell you what inspired the name of their first bike.

One of their most important bikes is the MV Agusta 750 Sport America. It was manufactured from 1970 to 1975. It was the company’s attempt to increase its presence in the United States. It should also be noted that this option was considered quite expensive.

According to autoevolution.com, MV Agusta experienced financial difficulties and ended up shutting down. However, the company was acquired in 1997 by Cagiva. They then released new bikes until 2004, when the company was later bought by a Malaysian car maker called Proton. The company is still struggling financially and Proton then sold it to an Italian finance company.

Not all businesses are meant to be popular

VIA MV Agusta

Again, if you’ve never heard of the name MV Agusta, you’re not alone. It’s a great company that really wants to move the motorcycle industry forward. They have their fans, but they’re nowhere near as big as many would expect a company to have been making bikes for as long as they’ve been.

One of the reasons they haven’t become more popular is that not all businesses need to be. Some companies are supposed to have their followers without attracting the attention of the general public. The problem is, this is a business and the income is significant. This is why they have been bought and sold so many times.

Another reason they are not more popular is that their communication with their potential buyers is extremely limited. Sure, leaning into the future sounds great, but a lot of people may look at the way they talk about their bikes and mistakenly assume they’re more works of art than real good rides. In other words, the business may need a facelift if it is to grow.

But again, their goal is to produce great bikes, which they’ve achieved.

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Delfast relaunches the Dnepr motorcycle brand

Photo: Delfast

We have another contender for the title of Ultimate Zombie Brand. After withering in the post-Soviet era, the Dnieper brand was revived. However, the revived society will be very different from the previous iteration.

Founded in post-WWII Ukraine, Dnieper was one of several Communist factories that built design adaptations of the BMW R71. The Germans and Russians used the R71 design during WWII, with a sidecar attached to the motorcycle for utility purposes (making it much easier to carry a light machine gun and a few belted ammunition crates of this way !). After WWII, the Soviets continued to produce the design, through factories in the Urals and Dnieper, and also gave the design to China, which used it to build the similar CJ750.

The new Dnepr is nothing like these bikes. It is an electric motorcycle, designed to handle speed races on land at the Bonneville Salt Flats. Obviously, it’s not an app aimed at consumers, but the accompanying press release reveals that it was Ukrainian e-bike maker Delfast that bought the brand. Does that mean we’ll see Dnepr come back as a budget battery bike brand? That would be very cool, if so!

We’ll probably know more about the Dnieper’s efforts in the salt marshes in a few days. Ukrainian runner Serhiy Malik rides his bike in Bonneville; it’s already rode in 2017 and 2018. That’s about all we know about this project at this point, though.

dnepr-delfast-electric-motorcycle-1 Ready to handle the salt marshes again. Photo: Delfast

Press release:

Delfast and DNEPR relaunch the legendary bike to break a speed record at Bonneville

Utah, United States (Aug 9, 2021) – Delfast co-creates the first prototype of the Delfast-Dnepr electric motorcycle. The new model participates in Bonneville Speed ​​Week 2021 to set a new speed record in the Omega “A” motorcycle category.

The Delfast-Dnepr electric motorcycle has been specially made for racing in partnership with the famous Ukrainian motorcycle manufacturer Dnepr. The model is based on the legendary Dnepr Electric motorcycle which set a record at Bonneville Speed ​​Week in 2018 with a speed of 104.78 mph. The new bike has been significantly improved to provide more power and greater range.

The rights to the DNEPR brand, including technological developments, design documentation, intellectual property for existing developments and the design of the iconic motorcycle model, belong to Delfast.

The author, ideologue and creator of the motorcycle is Serhiy Malik, a Ukrainian racer and motorcycle rider at this year’s competitions in Bonneville. He is also multiple champion at Bonneville Salt Flats in 2017 and 2018.

About DELFAST INC. :

Delfast revolutionized the electric bicycle market by setting the Guinness World Record for the electric bicycle with the longest charging range on record. People in over 40 countries enjoy the ride with Delfast, including ordinary citizens, police officers in Mexico and the United States, and individual entrepreneurs who use e-bikes for business purposes. Delfast employees are dedicated to reducing carbon emissions by making high quality electric bicycles and thus generating an environmentally friendly society.

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Bajaj could revive American motorcycle brand Excelsior-Henderson

Recently, Bajaj Auto filed a trademark for ‘Excelsior-Henderson’, sparking rumors about the resurgence of the American motorcycle brand.

Indian two-wheeler major Bajaj Auto filed a trademark in India for the name ‘Excelsior-Henderson’ on 4e December 2020, and another in Europe on the 15the December 2020. The latter is, interestingly, filed by Bajaj in the category of products and clothing, ie for motorcycle equipment and clothing.

Excelsior-Henderson began life as two different companies – Excelsior and Henderson – which were acquired and merged by Schwinn in 1912 and 1917, respectively. In 1931, Schwinn closed this merged acquisition. In 1993, Hanlon Manufacturing Company decided to develop a new V-twin cruiser motorcycle for the United States, which would later become the Excelsior-Henderson Super X in 1998, but in 1999 the company filed for bankruptcy.

In 2018, the brand was put up for auction and Bajaj appeared to have acquired at least partial rights to it. With its second commercial filing, we anticipate the company intends to make it a lifestyle brand, like Harley-Davidson and Royal Enfield. In theory, the motorcycle clothing market is larger than the motorcycle market itself.

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Concretely, a brand must either establish itself, first among enthusiasts, then among the general public, to really benefit from sales of motorcycle clothing. That said, motorcycle sales usually push clothing sales to the side, so the company might not have to worry as much. That said, there’s no confirmation yet on the relaunch of Excelsior-Henderson, so we’ll have to wait a bit before Bajaj makes an official announcement.

The motorcycle market has been growing in recent times, not only in India but across the world. High-end motorcycles, in particular, have seen an increase in the number of buyers, and we all know how active Bajaj has been in the two-wheeler business lately. The Indian manufacturer is also engaged in the manufacture of small capacity bikes from KTM and Husqvarna for the Indian and international markets, alongside its own.

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Interestingly, Bajaj is not the only Indian two-wheeler manufacturer intending to breathe new life into international motorcycle brands. Auto company TVS had acquired UK company Norton some time ago, and Classic Legends (backed by Mahindra & Mahindra) will soon introduce new Yezdi bikes (and it already has Jawa under its belt).

Harley-Davidson is Google’s most searched motorcycle brand in 83 countries

Born in 1903 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Harley has become the most popular motorcycle brand of all time. And by success, we don’t necessarily mean the best-selling one, but the one that most people and custom shops on this planet think / dream of.

As of 2017, Harley makes around 240,000 motorcycles each year – most of them remain in stock, but a large chunk of them go down to the aftermarket as well. Many other Harleys come from unofficial garages, which do custom races and try to gain attention by using Harley parts and putting the name on builds.

And the internet loves them all. According to a study by an Australian insurance company Direct budget, Harley-Davidson is the most sought after motorcycle manufacturer in many parts of the world.

How many? Well, our world is divided into about 195 countries, and Harley tops the search engine lists in 83 of them. And we mean the biggest, not a forgotten island state.

You can consult the map available in the photo gallery for more details. All of the regions you see in orange are governed by Harley searches, from the United States to the Far East and Northern Europe to Australia’s southernmost point.

There are also other names on the list. In some places people like Ducati or Honda more, so they use Google to search for them. Others go for Kawasaki or Royal Enfield, and there are even some who like to Googling Bajaj.

But a quick glance at the map shows who the real king of the kingdom really is.

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World’s Rarest Motorcycle – $ 35 Million Prize – The Cosmic H …

(MENAFN-EIN Presswire)

Jack Armstrong and Gretchen Taylor at the 2010 Harley Million Dollar Gala Launch

Cosmic Harley Davidson Launched 2010 now back on the market

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This is a signature painting and is priced at $ 110 million in the artist’s latest catalog.

The Cosmic Harley launched at $ 1 million sold in 2012 for $ 3 million and paved the way for others to create multi-million dollar motorcycles.

You can always make the money again, but you can never make the art again. – William Acquavella -Veteran NYC Art DealerMARINA DEL REY, CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, October 21, 2020 / EINPresswire.com / – The Cosmic Starship Harley Davidson motorcycle is officially 10 years old today and is currently priced at $ 35 million of dollars. It was first presented at a red carpet gala at the Bartels in Marina del Rey, Calif., In 2010, and was filmed by the global press. As noted in the DuPont ledger, Shelby 50th Anniversary Edition, the Million Dollar Harley sold in 2012 for just over $ 3 million.

Bill Bartel of Bartel’s, California’s leading Harley Davidson dealer, said: “Harley Davidson has been in business since 1903, and this Cosmic Harley, launched just 10 years ago, is the most famous motorcycle ever made. here rivaled most California film premieres, as artist Jack Armstrong landed from the sky in spectacular style, amid lights and sound, astride the motorbike and Lorenzo Lamas rode it along from the red carpet to the showroom. an extraordinary achievement “

Star Global International Inc. spokesperson Iain Hammer said, “This spectacular $ 1/2 million launch was conceived by CEO Robert Star who conceived the idea of ​​promoting this exceptional artist to a new generation of art lovers, similarly as a friend of the artist, Andy Warhol, promoted themselves with his can of Campbell’s soup. Warhol called the artist ‘The Last Magician of Art’. Jack Armstrong used several coats of paint plus 37 coats of clear and took 6 months to complete the project. The Cosmic Harley just completed a digital retrospective of 2 years in New York, Times Square and is still published in luxury magazines such as Life of Luxury and You’ve Arrived as well as other major media around the world.

Jack Armstrong’s cosmic art is animated by a mystical force that emanates from “The Black Star Sapphire of Queensland”. He had seen this gemstone as a child at the Smithsonian Museum and was mesmerized by it. He bought the gemstone some 45 years later and is estimated to be worth $ 100 million. The gemstone led him to create a specific number of paintings in a very specific way. Each of his 100 paintings is purposefully constructed with lines, figures, and movement, creating the appearance of an accidental, non-compositional technique. Embedded in the colorful, multi-layered acrylic paint, mysterious messages and words are strategically placed to convey the cosmic energy of the painting to the viewer.

Armstrong, known as the rebellious artist, has avoided the best galleries, dealers and auction houses due to their bad practices and set out to promote himself with his unique art form which he calls “Comic Extensionalism” in abbreviated “Cosmic X”. Armstrong’s only 100 unique, colorful and multi-layered canvases are expected to rival Basquiat’s $ 110 million price tag, auctioned in 2017, and become perhaps the most sought-after and beloved artist in history. Indeed, Alice Walton the billionaire Walmart is listed among the collectors of her art and has 2 of her paintings in her private collection.

A film about the life of this illustrious artist, who by chance is linked to Neil Armstrong the first man to walk on the moon, with Damian Chapa as Armstrong and Eric Roberts as Andy Warhol will be released soon. It has 3 Wikipedia entries and several hundred media references that reach all corners of the earth. Any researcher, barely a decade after the launch of the famous Cosmic Starship, must surely conclude that Armstrong’s Cosmic Harley along with its extremely limited 100 Cosmic Paintings is guaranteed to rise in value and make an important and courageous statement in the years. annals of art history. “

Iain Hammer PhDStar Global International Inc.

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Cosmic Harley Launch 2010

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Paris McGowan becomes first black female technician for famous Harley-Davidson motorcycle brand

Blacks face systemic challenges in the United States. The challenges are more pronounced among Black woman. Faced with all these adversities, a woman showed envy and tenacity.

Paris McGowan of St. Louis has defied all odds to make history as the first black female technician for Harley-Davidson, the world’s largest manufacturer of heavy-duty motorcycles. McGowan, 25, learned to ride motorcycles just two years ago.

” I am small. So when people see me on my bike, they say ‘Oh my god that’s a girl,’ “she said. KSDK. Her journey in a field often associated with masculinity began when she received a job offer at the Gateway Harley-Davidson store in southern St. Louis County.

“I came to Harley-Davidson for a job interview because I was always hanging out a bit. I saw the bike I wanted before going for the job interview. I ended up buying the bike, â€McGowan said.

Across America, women who ride motorcycles are on the rise. A national Motorcycle Industry Council (MIC) survey found that among all age groups, women make up 19% of motorcycle owners, down from less than 10% less than a decade ago.

The survey found greater ownership among the younger generations. Among Millennials, 26% of motorcycle owners were women. Among Generation X, 22% were women.

Although McGowan learned to ride motorcycles about two years ago, driving has always been a part of his family. “My uncles all rode on sports bikes, Kawasaki and Ninjas and everything. They have a picture of me somewhere, I’m about 8 years old sitting on a motorcycle, â€she said.

Last month she graduated from Motorcycle Mechanics Institute in Orlando with a specialization in Harley-Davidson. “I am the first African American female technician to work on Harley-Davidson,†said McGowan. “You hardly see black technicians working on Harley-Davidson, but here we are.”

“There are a lot of black Harley riding women or just black women in general,†McGowan said. “We need to be shown more. My mother, who is a strong and proud black woman, rides her own motorbike. I have aunts and cousins ​​who all ride together. I mean, we just did a Women’s Unity tour for Labor Day. I believe there were at least 300 or more female runners, and it was amazing.

What motivated McGowan to become a technician? According to her, this was fueled by her desire to fix things and find out how it works. She met people who tried to dissuade her from her ambition.

“A lot of people have told me to just be a nurse instead,†McGowan said. “Don’t listen to anyone who is preventing you from achieving your dream. Don’t do it because they don’t know you. They don’t know where you are from.

“We are in 2020. It is time to move on. We shouldn’t have these barriers anymore. If you can do it, I can do it. Also, maybe even better. I just found a passion for myself and I held onto it. I can only start the snowball, â€she added.

BMW names Hill Holliday Creative AOR for motorcycle industry

BMW assigned its creative US Motorrad account to Hill Holliday.

The IPG store will compete for the social and digital position of the automotive brand as its creative AOR for the motorcycle industry in America.

The account is said to be worth around $ 1 million in agency fees, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

MC Saatchi was the incumbent.

Roth consulting firm Ryan Hayes led the pitch, which began in August.

Other agencies vying for the company include Colle McVoy, The Via Agency and Pereira O’Dell, who currently runs BMW’s Mini business.

This follows a turbulent start to the year for Hill Holliday, who reportedly cut 2% of its staff in Boston and New York City following the loss of the AOR from Planet Fitness. The business landed in Barkley.

BMW, a motorcycle market leader in most parts of the world except the United States, seeks to overtake the American Harley Davidson icon.

Total sales of motorcycles in the United States fell 3% in 2018, according to McD. Harley Davidson reportedly suffered a unit loss of more than 10 percent last year.

Figures of Statistical suggest that some 472,000 bikes were purchased across America in 2017, up from around one million in 2007.

The most popular motorcycle states in the United States are Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York.

Globally, BMW Motorrad sold more motorcycles and maxi scooters in 2018 than ever before, moving a total of 165,566 vehicles.

The large European markets and the United States have largely contributed to its success. France moved 16,615 units, Italy sold 14,110 units, Spain ticked 11,124 units and the United States sold 13,842 units.

Earlier this month, BMW unveiled its Motorrad Heritage Collection 2020 which features new clothing such as leather jackets and boots.

Hill Holliday and Roth spokesperson Ryan Hayes referred the comment to BMW. MC Saatchi and BMW have yet to respond to a request for comment.

Harley-Davidson faces tough situation in motorcycle business

The news for Harley-Davidson, America’s most famous motorcycle manufacturer, looks bad.

In business for 116 years, Harley disappointed Wall Street this week by saying it actually did not make a fourth quarter profit. He cited tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump that hurt Harley in growing markets outside of the United States.

This was a worrying sign, because while Harley has been under commercial pressure for years – its owner base is aging and motorcycle sales in the key US market are in terminal decline – it has also been a mainstay of revenue. Since 2006, the company has had exactly one quarter in which it grossed less than $ 1 billion, and that was during the financial crisis.

Harley’s top of the line is enviable, but it’s based on selling big bikes at high prices. This market has been dominated by HOG for decades, with alternatives provided by Japanese cruisers – great bikes, but without that Harley attitude, roar and V-stomp and, of course, outlaw credibility. .

Read more: Here are 4 big opportunities that Harley-Davidson will tackle in the future

But nowadays Harley faces local competition from a resurgent Indian Motorcycle, a historic rival that faded in the 20th century to come back under a new owner in the 21st. Brands such as Ducati and Triumph have made a better pitch with young riders, while urban and entry-level markets are under attack from new entrants like Royal Enfield.

The outlook for Harley isn’t as bad as the headlines. Trump’s damage is undermining the brand’s growth and profitability in Europe and Asia, but Harley already has her hands full to develop the right product for those markets. The major problem is the timing of the decline in the United States.

This deadline is almost a classic business school case study. It could take decades for Harley to enter a serious decline. With its flagship product, bicycles with displacements greater than 600 cubic centimeters, it controls half of the American market. It’s like General Motors in the 1950s – and although GM’s business declined after the Eisenhower era, it took 59 years for the automaker to go bankrupt.

Hard work for the CEO

Harley-Davidson CEO Matt Levatich.

Thomson reuters

CEO Matt Levatich has a tough job ahead of him. He could presumably sit down and communicate to investors that even though stocks have fallen 45% over the past five years amid rapidly growing major stock indexes, Harley is paying a
from 3 to 4%, well ahead of the inflation rate. Those quarters of over $ 1 billion will continue to arrive. In the long run, everyone’s dead, but until then the only ride we could do is in the “Wild One” subdomain of Elon Musk’s Mars-based World Simulation.

Instead, Levatich tries to keep the business relevant, developing smaller bikes for new markets and younger urban riders, while also offering an electric bike, the $ 30,000 LiveWire, in the US market later this year. Harley has been here before – in the 1990s and early 2000s he supported a sports motorcycle brand called Buell, but put it to rest in 2009.

Harley has also tried to create a buzz around the legacy brand through merchandising, but it is more helpful to think of this as advertising. And it’s a big step to go from a $ 25 t-shirt to an entry-level $ 7,000 bike. (For starters, you have to learn how to ride it – something Harley does a great job of teaching through its dealerships – but it’s expensive and time-consuming.)

The news makes it look like Harley is doomed to fail. But it’s no more doomed than, say, Ford. The automaker is also over 100 years old, has seen its stock prices fall, is reinventing itself – and has made money for nearly a decade selling highly profitable full-size pickup trucks.

Obsession with Growth on Wall Street Makes Driving Difficult

The Harley LiveWire electric bike.

Harley davidson

Both companies are victims of Wall Street’s obsession with growth. Growth companies, historically, have been risky investments with stories to sell. You buy them knowing you could lose everything. Amazon changed that logic by fueling seemingly endless growth by forgoing stable earnings; the giant will not give in until the government accuses it of being a monopoly.

Harley doesn’t really need to grow, but because of that, investors have to pay a low stock price to access the company’s cash flow. Sadly, it’s a timed proposition, even though it will be the second Ocasio-Cortez administration before the last pig hits the road in the United States.

Meanwhile, Harley will stay cool. His product is glorious. Tariffs are generally bad business and could eventually go away. Electric motorcycles could become a thing. None of this will free Harley from the clutches of Wall Street short-termism, with markets pricing the stock for access to dividends rather than big future returns.

Worse yet, the sales trends and brand demographics are unlikely to reverse in the United States. But they’re not going to collapse either. This is why Levatich is in an impossible position. All About Harley makes a case for the stewardship of this latest group of baby boomers on their final commutes before heading to that big biker bar in the sky, while simultaneously bringing up a small group of members of Generation X and Generation Y on “real” motorcycles so that Harley’s decline was extremely gradual.

No CEO wants to oversee such a depressing narrative; as the generals say, nothing is more difficult than a combat retreat. What’s likely going to happen is that Harley will continue to struggle, at least until the next one.
– unless, of course, the company becomes delusional and borrows more money to continue growth, which adds to an already high debt situation.

Look, I know this is a little sad. But sometimes you have to accept that you are in the last chapter. Luckily for Harley, this chapter could take decades to write.

Motorcycle brand Buell relaunches production in Grand Rapids

Motorcycle brand Buell relaunches production in Grand Rapids

GRAND RAPIDS – Executives of an iconic American superbike brand are breathing new life into the company and relaunching production of “boutique†motorcycles in Western Michigan.

By establishing low volume production of EBR motorcycles in Grand Rapids, owner Bill Melvin hopes to bring sustainability to the company founded by famed motorcycle rider Erik Buell 35 years ago.

The discontinuation of a high volume business keeps EBR Motorcycles in the market and allows the brand to maintain its “panache” as a specialty limited edition manufacturer, Melvin said.

“It’s the only US-built superbike, a 185 horsepower track street bike that you can go right to the track and compete with a Ducati,†he said.

Melvin’s Liquid Asset Partners LLC, a Grand Rapids liquidation, auction and appraisal company acquired the assets of East Troy, Wis. Erik Buell Racing LLC in 2016 for $ 2 million after the company went into receivership.

Former parent company Harley-Davidson Inc. had designed the East Troy plant for high volume production of approximately 10,000 units per year. After operating the business for about a year after the purchase, Melvin realized the business needed to downsize.

“We made a big push in Wisconsin, we tried the old college and went with the full plant and trying to increase production volumes,†said Melvin, who has shut down production and switched in the fall of 2017 to an electronic commerce. Grand Rapids based model to support motorcycle parts orders.

“The high-volume factory is a great proposition,†he said, noting that the company is now taking a page of bespoke supercar makers, most notably Lotus or Koenigsegg, with production of handcrafted motorcycles and in limited series. “What we’ve done now is something more durable and special – and now they’re being built in Grand Rapids, Michigan. ”

As of late 2018, the company has built three EBR 1190 superbikes that cost around $ 20,000 and are capable of exceeding 185 mph when racing. As word of the new production series began to spread, the company had a list of more than 30 people interested in buying a motorcycle, according to Melvin, who expects demand to continue to exceed. the production.

“Erik Buell and his designs are highly regarded,†he said. “With the volumes that we do, they will fly away.”

EBR Motorcycles serves a small, high-end niche market in an industry that continues to be dominated by heavy touring motorcycles. Harley-Davidson, which discontinued the Buell Motorcycle lineup in 2009, remains the market leader in the United States, where it accounts for 46% of all motorcycle sales.

In recent years, however, the company’s sales have plummeted as customers shifted from heavy motorcycles to smaller, more affordable models, analysts said. As a result, Harley-Davidson sales fell 10% year-on-year in the first nine months of 2018, the most recent data available.

Meanwhile, sales of motorcycles with engines below 600cc are on the rise, according to a report by the United States International Trade Commission, reflecting the fact that more millennials are coming of age and looking for entry-level models. and baby boomers are aging out of the market. .

KEEP SMALL

For the initial production of three units late last year in Grand Rapids, EBR worked with a team of eight, including two former Wisconsin builders, to build each motorcycle.

“We start directly from the crank. It’s all put together and put together in town, â€said Melvin.

The superbikes all feature a handcrafted 1190cc V-twin engine capable of 10,600 rpm and a top speed rivaling “America’s fastest production vehicles”, according to Melvin.

The company sources worldwide from its historical suppliers, but uses a custom paint shop in Grand Rapids, which will allow the company to fulfill orders for specialty paint to meet customer needs, a- he declared.

By moving production to Grand Rapids, Melvin said the company now has better visibility and cost control over the manufacturing process.

“We’re from here, so we have more oversight, a more manageable cost structure,†he said. “We have a great team here who can help support the brand. ”

For 2019, the company plans to continue to introduce various upgrades to the EBR models, which still use Buell’s unique design, such as a fuel tank integrated into the motorcycle’s aluminum frame to help lower the center of gravity. and improve handling.

Melvin expects production at Grand Rapids to increase, albeit at a manageable level for the company.

“I think it’s really cool that we’re doing it in Grand Rapids. I think it’s exciting for Michigan to have a superbike being built in Michigan, â€said Melvin. “It’s an iconic brand and the design is super exotic. You put him on a race track next to the fastest production vehicles built and he’ll beat them. “