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Ducati Cruiser

Started by heatherp, July 22, 2010, 02:31:01 AM

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heatherp

Okay - I'll bite.

I have seen a lot of this picture on different sites lately.  I personally think Ducati and cruiser just don't go together. And I know it's just a prototype (if it is even real).  But What are they thinking  [puke] [puke] [puke] [puke] [puke] [puke] [puke] [puke]

http://www.visordown.com/motorcycle-news--general-news/new-ducati-cruiser---more-pictures/12889.html

It looks like a Monster slept with a Rocket 3!!!

Mr.S2R

#1
cmon what are you saying Heather?? I would love to get my hands on a Ducati cruiser - bring back the Indiana.  Now there is a cruiser everyone has forgotten about.....


ducatiz

The persistence of this myth amazes me.

Ducati would sooner sell trikes than a cruiser.
Check out my oil filter forensics thread!                     Offended? Click here
"Yelling out of cars, turning your speakers out the window to blast your music onto the street, setting off M-80 firecrackers, firing automatic weapons into the airâ€"these are all well and good. But none of them create a merry atmosphere of insouciance and bonhomie quite like a revving motorcycle.

heatherp

 [puke] [puke]
Sorry, not my cup of tea  [coffee]

Looks like a Guzzi Californian.  Haven't seen many good looking Guzzis.


Mr.S2R

Quote from: heatherp on July 22, 2010, 02:45:43 AM
[puke] [puke]
Sorry, not my cup of tea  [coffee]

Looks like a Guzzi Californian.  Haven't seen many good looking Guzzis.


yeah I agree about it looking like a Californian.  Good looking Guzzis are far and few between - my bro in law bro had a Le Mans Sport 1000, black, clip ons, very nice  [moto]

Betty

Its a complicated issue with many things in play ... but bottom line is, well, the bottom line. For Ducati to stay in business they need to sell bikes ... the more profitable lines that they have, the more chance they have of staying in business. And you don't know what is profitable until you put something on the market.

Trends, styles, fashions, priorities and tastes change ... if your whole business is based on Superbikes and then you produce a 999, the whole business could be at risk.

People have varying views but it is existing Ducati owners that seem to object the most to this MegaCruiser - should that concern Ducati? Maybe, but not necessarily ... I mean how many new Ducatis do we buy? I mean we don't even buy from their performance catalogue or get servicing from their dealers.

I could keep going for ages so I'd better stop ... for now.
Believe post content at your own risk.

ducatiz

Quote from: Betty on July 22, 2010, 02:50:56 AM
People have varying views but it is existing Ducati owners that seem to object the most to this MegaCruiser - should that concern Ducati? Maybe, but not necessarily ... I mean how many new Ducatis do we buy? I mean we don't even buy from their performance catalogue or get servicing from their dealers.

That's a very good point.  If it attracts new owners and new buyers, they are successful.

As far as new Ducatis, I have bought 3 in my lifetime over 20 years of riding.  But plenty of used bikes.

It seems to me Ducati could make tons of money just selling parts for 10-20 yo bikes, if they would just keep making them....

Check out my oil filter forensics thread!                     Offended? Click here
"Yelling out of cars, turning your speakers out the window to blast your music onto the street, setting off M-80 firecrackers, firing automatic weapons into the airâ€"these are all well and good. But none of them create a merry atmosphere of insouciance and bonhomie quite like a revving motorcycle.

Mr.S2R

I am not against Ducati producing a cruiser, in fact I applaud Ducati for testing new grounds and trying to expand their market reach.  However, I fear that Ducati has fallen in to the same syndrome as Harley and Porsche.  You look at both companies, they tried something different, wasnt successful, and reverted back to old designs.

Example 1:  the V-Rod initially wasnt all that readily accepted because despite technology and reliability, it still wasnt the classic push rod design.

Example 2: Porsches failed forays in to front engine vehicles - 924, 944, 928.  The have resorted back to the stable 911 foundation that has kept the company afloat.

So I hope Ducati has a lesson learnt from the 999.  Whilst it was a bold statement, it was basically rejected by Ducatisti and other market alike.  I hope they get the design and style right, and open up new markets.

thus end my dribble  [laugh]

J5

Quote from: heatherp on July 22, 2010, 02:45:43 AM
[puke] [puke]
Sorry, not my cup of tea  [coffee]

Looks like a Guzzi Californian.  Haven't seen many good looking Guzzis.



thats slowly changing due to aprilia needing to sell more bikes out of guzzi to make it more profitable

new prototypes at the bike shows of a sports nature


i think it will be released , to start seeing it on the road means it prob isnt far away

Like all companies they need to broaden their market


look at triumph they have slowly branched into sportsbikes , thats a hook for younger buyers , the rocketIII  , to gain some of the cruiser market

how many people have started on a superbike and then later got onto a monster / st etc

its the same reason hypermotards came along

the cruiser will come and with any luck it will be a success and a decent bike to boot



i dont care if you have been a mechanic for 10 years doing something for a long time does not make you good at it, take my gf for an example shes been walking for 28 years and still manages to fall over all the time.

Betty

Quote from: Mr.S2R on July 22, 2010, 02:59:37 AM
Example 2: Porsches failed forays in to front engine vehicles - 924, 944, 928.  The have resorted back to the stable 911 foundation that has kept the company afloat.

But then they did the MegaSUV (I know I would name it incorrectly) and from what I understand sold shitloads (well relative shitloads anyway). So who knows?

The other path is that of BMW - all about the volume. From what I understand every bastard in the UK has one, kinda not the same anymore.

Ducati could just have the right balance  :-\
Believe post content at your own risk.

avizpls

#11

NFG

Quote from: avizpls on July 22, 2010, 03:12:12 AMthats not a cruiser.
I'm with you.  It's huge and weird and, IMO, a rather striking (if hard to accept initially) design.  Doesn't really fit my cruiser profile.

mattyvas

Can we say US market.
Sales = $$$ for racing.

heatherp

Quote from: Mr.S2R on July 22, 2010, 02:49:03 AM
yeah I agree about it looking like a Californian.  Good looking Guzzis are far and few between - my bro in law bro had a Le Mans Sport 1000, black, clip ons, very nice  [moto]

I sat on the back of one of those for 8 years.  Which I why I now sit at the front of a Monster.  [laugh]

ducatiz

Check out my oil filter forensics thread!                     Offended? Click here
"Yelling out of cars, turning your speakers out the window to blast your music onto the street, setting off M-80 firecrackers, firing automatic weapons into the airâ€"these are all well and good. But none of them create a merry atmosphere of insouciance and bonhomie quite like a revving motorcycle.