Dear all,
I was willing to start with you a chat regarding the evolution of prices of original parts for our beloved machines...
To summarize my life, I bought my first Panhead (49FL) in Uruguay in 1985 for 1'200 USD. This last week I bought a speedo for a 47F for 1'000 USD. I saw in eBay a 49 Deluxe solo seat closing at 4'500 USD, guide spotlights and bar closing at 1'000 USD, frames at 3'000 USD, engines at 9'000, starter pedals at 300 USD!!!
When I see these prices I automatically laugh, but honestly speaking I ironically laugh because in reality I am sad of being those things fully beyond my budget. And collecting old Harley was in my beginning by no way a rich man's hobby! This was just for those with enough love to old iron, enough nostalgic feeling and a good dose of masochism to push your 300kg heavy dead horse back home some few kilometers!!!
If we observe the exponential evolution of this OEM parts prices, the short question is how will this continue in the next 5, 10, 20 years?
In Europe and Japan (I can not speak for US), a fully top early Knucklehead achieves comfortable 70,000 USD. A late Knucklehead and the first Pan, in same condition is easily sold for 50,000 USD. Will we see these sames bikes above 100,000 in ten years? Will we pay 2,000 USD for the correct Guide headlamp in five years?
Ebay has made true the dream of each merchant: made the demand perfect (spread it worldwide) to let the offer reach the highest possible prices. I think that the amount of discoveries of up to date unknown Harleys is also almost finishing. 95% have certainly been spotted and have been restored, or have been cut in pieces to feed the mentioned demand...
I throw the question then to the AMCA arena... Is this just a wave? Will prices stagnate or even revert their crazy growth of today? Are Knuckleheads so damned "cool" today but will they loose value in the hands of new generations with zero connection to those 40's and/or new things much more attractive to collect? Will we be able to ride these machines in 10 years without paying thousands of penalties because of violation of every CO2, noise, consumption, brake performance, bla-bla-bla norms???
Let me hear your thoughts about this.
Nice weekend to all from sunny and windy Tokyo!
Chris.
I was willing to start with you a chat regarding the evolution of prices of original parts for our beloved machines...
To summarize my life, I bought my first Panhead (49FL) in Uruguay in 1985 for 1'200 USD. This last week I bought a speedo for a 47F for 1'000 USD. I saw in eBay a 49 Deluxe solo seat closing at 4'500 USD, guide spotlights and bar closing at 1'000 USD, frames at 3'000 USD, engines at 9'000, starter pedals at 300 USD!!!
When I see these prices I automatically laugh, but honestly speaking I ironically laugh because in reality I am sad of being those things fully beyond my budget. And collecting old Harley was in my beginning by no way a rich man's hobby! This was just for those with enough love to old iron, enough nostalgic feeling and a good dose of masochism to push your 300kg heavy dead horse back home some few kilometers!!!
If we observe the exponential evolution of this OEM parts prices, the short question is how will this continue in the next 5, 10, 20 years?
In Europe and Japan (I can not speak for US), a fully top early Knucklehead achieves comfortable 70,000 USD. A late Knucklehead and the first Pan, in same condition is easily sold for 50,000 USD. Will we see these sames bikes above 100,000 in ten years? Will we pay 2,000 USD for the correct Guide headlamp in five years?
Ebay has made true the dream of each merchant: made the demand perfect (spread it worldwide) to let the offer reach the highest possible prices. I think that the amount of discoveries of up to date unknown Harleys is also almost finishing. 95% have certainly been spotted and have been restored, or have been cut in pieces to feed the mentioned demand...
I throw the question then to the AMCA arena... Is this just a wave? Will prices stagnate or even revert their crazy growth of today? Are Knuckleheads so damned "cool" today but will they loose value in the hands of new generations with zero connection to those 40's and/or new things much more attractive to collect? Will we be able to ride these machines in 10 years without paying thousands of penalties because of violation of every CO2, noise, consumption, brake performance, bla-bla-bla norms???
Let me hear your thoughts about this.
Nice weekend to all from sunny and windy Tokyo!
Chris.
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