The Sportster. - Is It the Bike that Saved Harley Davidson?
We know why, though.....dead man's throttle. And the Buckhorn handlebars...they were the best...can't even find them anymore. I had a 1972 XLCH that was my key to freedom. Ah, the good old days. 
[IMdG]http://i227.photobucket.com/albums/dd307/67beast/72Sportster02_filtered.jpg[/IMG]
The "X" model as in XL, XLCH, XLX, etc. The Sportster.
The company was doing okay when the Sporty came out. So I don't make it the one that saved the co.
The XL-series hit the dealers in 1957. Labeled the Sportster, launching one of the most famous and well-termed motorcycles in history. The XL was a pure, American hot rod motorcycle. It was the first American muscle bike, and today remains the most popular machine in its class.
The model that I believe saved the company, was the "Factory Experimental" model they came out with in 1971.
Take an X series front end, and marry it to an F series chassis, VOILA, the "FX". I believe, please correct me, the best selling model of ALL time for HD, the FX series. The Japanese were running rampant over the land, along with the tail end of the British bikes.
This was also a couple of years into AMFs slash and burn technique to make HD profitable, again. BOY, that worked then, just like it does now, huh? And WE still talk about the quality issues, 40 yrs (YEP, 40 this year) later.
My one and only "NEW" store bought HD, a '76 XLCH.

The Best of Harley-Davidson for Lifelong Riders
Last edited by gambler; Feb 10, 2009 at 05:41 PM.


