I almost bought this exact bike a few weeks ago, love this scorched orange but i ended up backing out, so glad i did because after seeing the Indian Challenger, i gave my $1000 deposit and ordered the 2020 Indian Challenger limited in Ruby Metallic with the tour package.
Haha funny joke... actually due to poor engineering and bad customer service Indian will be in the shop... and IF speed is the only thing... you do t want a Polaris you want a ninja... fastest production bike made... so if speed is all you want you don’t want a Polaris and if other things are also important you still don’t want an Indian... unless the only important thing is a moving windshield you can sit in your garage and move it up and down haha what a joke from someone who doesn’t know what he is talking about or doesn’t care about facts... you must be a democrat
Good luck selling that Polaris also The hottest motorcycles on the road don't come cheap. But some of the best of them keep their value after you put them on the road. Bikes made by Harley-Davidson, BMW, and Ducati, in fact, seem to hold their MSRP value better than any others. By brand, according to data compiled by the Kelley Blue Book Official Motorcycle Guide, Harley-Davidson motorcycles retained an average of 84% of their value over a five-year period. BMW was not far behind, at 81%, with Indian, Ducati and Triumph trailing slightly at 77%, 73% and 72%.
A worsening sales decline Polaris Industries is not transparent at all when it comes to telling you how its motorcycle business is performing. Where Harley breaks down sales and shipments by geographic region and type of motorcycle, Polaris provides vague percentage increases or declines, maybe calling out a model once in a while, but never giving investors any real insight into how Indian's various motorcycles are performing. What we do know is that despite double- and even triple-digit sales growth early on, Indian Motorcycle sales are now quickly spiraling down. Even as Polaris obscures the actual numbers, a mid-teen-percentage decline in retail sales that far eclipses the contraction of the broader motorcycle market suggests that this is becoming a big problem for the bike maker. Worse, the downdraft is accelerating. In the second quarter, Polaris said Indian retail sales were down by almost 10%, while in the first quarter they were almost 10%, while in the first quarter they were down by high single-digit rates. In last year's fourth quarter they were down by low double-digit amounts, which was a big drop since they had been positive the quarter before. That doesn't bode well for when Polaris reports results the next time around. Even though the bar has been lowered considerably on sales, there's no reason to think it will be able to rebound -- precisely because Indian is still making the same kinds of heavy, big-bore bikes as Harley. It just released its newest touring motorcycle, the 2020 Challenger, that houses its bigger, more muscular liquid-cooled PowerPlus engine that evokes images of Harley's Road Glide.
I almost bought this exact bike a few weeks ago, love this scorched orange but i ended up backing out, so glad i did because after seeing the Indian Challenger, i gave my $1000 deposit and ordered the 2020 Indian Challenger limited in Ruby Metallic with the tour package.
Great if I see you... you will be the first guy I have seen that actually bought one... and I ride everyday
The small writing on the mirrors read...
"indian will pass you"
Haha funny joke... actually due to poor engineering and bad customer service Indian will be in the shop... and IF speed is the only thing... you do t want a Polaris you want a ninja... fastest production bike made... so if speed is all you want you don’t want a Polaris and if other things are also important you still don’t want an Indian... unless the only important thing is a moving windshield you can sit in your garage and move it up and down haha what a joke from someone who doesn’t know what he is talking about or doesn’t care about facts... you must be a democrat
Good luck selling that Polaris also The hottest motorcycles on the road don't come cheap. But some of the best of them keep their value after you put them on the road. Bikes made by Harley-Davidson, BMW, and Ducati, in fact, seem to hold their MSRP value better than any others.
By brand, according to data compiled by the Kelley Blue Book Official Motorcycle Guide, Harley-Davidson motorcycles retained an average of 84% of their value over a five-year period. BMW was not far behind, at 81%, with Indian, Ducati and Triumph trailing slightly at 77%, 73% and 72%.
Wearing a backpack on a Touring bike ?
Normally we wouldn't, but the GoPro attaches to it. :)
That’s a copy and paste not just me talking
A worsening sales decline
Polaris Industries is not transparent at all when it comes to telling you how its motorcycle business is performing. Where Harley breaks down sales and shipments by geographic region and type of motorcycle, Polaris provides vague percentage increases or declines, maybe calling out a model once in a while, but never giving investors any real insight into how Indian's various motorcycles are performing.
What we do know is that despite double- and even triple-digit sales growth early on, Indian Motorcycle sales are now quickly spiraling down. Even as Polaris obscures the actual numbers, a mid-teen-percentage decline in retail sales that far eclipses the contraction of the broader motorcycle market suggests that this is becoming a big problem for the bike maker.
Worse, the downdraft is accelerating. In the second quarter, Polaris said Indian retail sales were down by almost 10%, while in the first quarter they were almost 10%, while in the first quarter they were down by high single-digit rates. In last year's fourth quarter they were down by low double-digit amounts, which was a big drop since they had been positive the quarter before.
That doesn't bode well for when Polaris reports results the next time around. Even though the bar has been lowered considerably on sales, there's no reason to think it will be able to rebound -- precisely because Indian is still making the same kinds of heavy, big-bore bikes as Harley.
It just released its newest touring motorcycle, the 2020 Challenger, that houses its bigger, more muscular liquid-cooled PowerPlus engine that evokes images of Harley's Road Glide.