Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
All may not be lost. Courtesy Top Speed.
"After reporting on Harley-Davidson’s decision to suddenly kill Buell Motorcycles, we’re happy to hear that the American brand may have a chance after all as a group of officials from the Village of East Troy, Walworth County Board and East Troy Chamber of Commerce, formed by the Walworth County Economic Development Alliance, plan on taking over the [COLOR=blue !important][COLOR=blue !important]Buell[/COLOR][/COLOR] name and continue producing motorcycles at the East Troy, Wisconsin plant, where more than 180 people currently work.
According to reports, the group of American businessmen will meet with company founder Erik Buell to discuss about the possibilities to revive what until last week was the wholly-owned subsidiary of HD. We hope for the best".
Authorities from Walworth County the Wisconsin home of Buell - are trying to put together a business deal to save the company as a going concern, after parent Harley-Davidson announced the operation was to close.
According to Fred D. Burkhardt, executive vice president of the Walworth County Economic Development Alliance, no response has been forthcoming from Buell as yet. Burkhardt added that they have had Very preliminary contact from an investment group out of the Chicago area and also out of the Minneapolis area.
However, a rescue bid seems unlikely to succeed, as Harley-Davidson director Bob Klein reiterated "We (H-D) are discontinuing the Buell product line rather than selling the business because of how deeply integrated Buell is into our business systems and distribution network."
The Buell closure will see the loss in Walworth County of 100 salaried jobs and a further 80 hourly positions.
http://www.motobke.co.uk
Ah, but if HD owns the IP, any resurrection will depend on its willingness to part therewith, or at least licence back on favourable terms.
This is when we find out whether HD do actually wish EB the best, or whether the acquisition was, as Ocean1 hinted at above, a typical corporate Murkn 'embrace, extend and exterminate'.
kiwibiker is full of love, an disrespect.
- mikey
In fact, the article said it was selling it, not that it had sold. The other thread had a reference that said HD were looking to sell MV but hadn't found a buyer yet.
Kinda stupid them buying MV in the first place, as it doesn't really fit in with the whole HD pholisophy and image anyway.
... and that's what I think.
Or summat.
Or maybe not...
Dunno really....![]()
The MV angle ties in with what I have been able to find out. There are rumours of an Italian consortium and also Chinese interest, but nothing confirmed about a buyer as yet.
As for why HD bought MV? Well, aside from completing the alphabet, the move was made in boom times... and then, you had an aspirational sportbike range, which would fit with Harley's angle of being an aspirational brand.
If it had paid off, I still think Buell would have had a shaky future; Buell didn't fit the aspirational slant. As it stands, Harley are having to make cost cuts and hang on in there, so neither brand fits in the current situation.
http://www.motobke.co.uk
Yep, totally agree re the poor dealer support etc in the 'States....
....but can't agree with racing the up to the minute 1125cc Buell against aging 1000cc twins and 600cc IL4's. Why was the ducati 848 the Buell opposition and no 1098 or KTM RC8's allowed? They are supposedly direct competitors to the 1125. Wouldn't be anything to do with the fact that Buell are (were?) listed as the only official manufacturer as a partner to the AMA?
As for handicaping, what's that? Sorry mate, a 20lb (9kg) weight penalty doesn't quite cut it when you've got an extra 20hp and extra dispensation for: magnesium rims, a larger airbox, front forks, connecting rods, and a converted chain drive.
The whole category stank as a result, and Buell have rightly lost credibility, not gained it, which may have played a small part in it's demise. For HD to heavily invest in an open class sports twin and have it compared to middleweights must have stung.
Having said all that the 1125CR is a nice lookin' ride that I'd happily park in the shed.
your right I am struggling with the concept of ignoring every proven design rule relating to a GOOD ROAD BIKE:
brakes which will stop
weight low enough to allow a normal human to handle the plot
enough power to break 100mph with ease even if you generally don't want to
adoption of the best modern technology to improve reliability
and all done for a price which is both reasonable and competative
Your struggling all right.
But please, I implore you, never ever widen that narrow vision of yours, ever.
My bike cracks 200km/h easy enough, Not that I ever go there, Is a beautiful machine to ride, even around corners. And any fuck knuckle can hit a corner too hot due to not being capable of comprehending his own abilities (or lack of) no matter what use was in mind when the bike was designed. Its not the bikes fault.
a simple solution would be to ride a harley thingy from Auckland to Wellesford and then swap it for any modern Jap road bike for the return journey and then declare to the world which one you'd sooner head back to Wellesford on
or you could read almost any bike mag article comparing the two
but I think the actual experience could be of some value to you and would save having to read
and doing it blindfolded might help overcome any preconceptions you might have
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