Spam.This bike is like no other out there. I cant wait to get some out to customers and see what they think.. but Victory set out to make a very serious contender in the touring world, and they have definately done it!
I agree that the original post was spam for sure.Spam.This bike is like no other out there. I cant wait to get some out to customers and see what they think.. but Victory set out to make a very serious contender in the touring world, and they have definately done it!
+1
The attention I drew on the one I rode was a surprise to me. Middle Tennessee is an area where sport touring bikes are few and far between. If you walk into any UJM showroom, you'll find mostly metric cruisers. And when you drive around and do a census, most of what you see are H-D's, two up, flip flops, shorts, T's, and skid lids.On a last note I did not get any oohs or ahhhs when I stopped and it did not get a crowd looking at it. A few glances and some smirks but no real attention.
I don't know, kind of reminds me of an old friendthe Vision is flat plain assed UGLY~!
I was very entertained by your post. My oldest son was looking at these things, less than a year ago. He chased a couple down, but before dumping any money, he almost purchased one of the 'new' Indians, instead. Another (literally) shake-apart machine.Don't mean to hijack, but I rode my cousin's Excelsior-Henderson in mid July. Not much time and the wind was howling at 40-50 mph. He thought the big grin on my face was from pleasure, not suspecting I had been laughing my *** off. What a joke! An $18,000 two-wheeled tractor! Christ, an old John Deere two-lunger is twice as smooth! This thing has (chromed, of course) external fork springs that shimmy and shake and jive around at idle faster than the pistons go up and down. Very clunky, very mechanically noisy, just a very, very crude piece of machinery... But absolutely loaded with chrome! In the seat, you see the backside of the headlight nacelle - about the size of a basketball and makes a fine fun-house mirror as you stare at your own comically distorted image. And this thing is at about adams-apple height. Then there's the backs of the signal lights: yup, a couple of chromed softballs. Everything is just so over-sized, over-stated. It's like, "Look, we've got even bigger balls than a Harley!" If whacked WFO and held there, it will get up and go...about as fast as my son's 1996 Seca II, but it sure as hell doesn't want to and doesn't like it - it's literally trying to shake itself to bits, protesting like crazy. It was pathetic but still a very fascinating experience in riding a machine that is all about show and not at all about go. The company burned through $270 million in just a few years before going **** up, primarily because of lavish expenses and poor business management. Had they weathered the first three or four years, they'd have gone bankrupt for building a ridiculous and very heavy pile of junk.
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