According to WSJ average age is 65 of a Cadillac owner.
And I know A LOT about how they are built. Personally I would never even consider owning one.
Average life expectancy for a U. S. Male is 75 and some change.
So almost dead then.....he can drive it for 10 years
I think I can assume without too much risk that you know absolutely nothing about Cadillacs
The CTS-V series are NOT your grandfather's Caddys. Not even remotely close.
B B
There are car brands that have never worried about the younger generation being able to buy one of their products as long as they all want to someday be able to afford one of their cars. Cadillac is one such brand
again with the fantastic sedans they are producing. The CTS-V beat MB C55 AMG, , the Porsche 911, Nissan Skyline GT-R R32, Lotus Exige S, Aston Martin DB9, and the BMW Z4 M in Nurburgring. When I grow up I want me a CTS-V.
Ferrari, Lamborghini, Maserati, Porsche, etc, have done very well not making anything anyone under the age of 40 who is not a drug dealer can afford and they are doing just fine.
All HD has to do is follow their lead: Make great looking vehicles (already there) that have amazing performance (they need to try harder!

). Even reliability is not an issue here. I had a 2004 Porsche C4S and 3000 miles of the first 4000 miles on that car was driven by the dealership trying to figure out why it would suddenly drop the engine temp from operating temp to stone cold in 2 seconds flat and then go back up to operating temp and drop back down to 0 and on and on. I was ok with that because while they had my car I was driving one of theirs (same model). So customer service should be the same. No hassle warrantee work and don't leave me without a bike.
JMO, HD needs to keep making bikes the younger folks can't afford now but hope and pray that if they work hard enough (or become drug dealers) they will be able to afford someday.
HD