Such a deal!

The year was 1991, and the last thing in the world I was thinking about was buying another motorcycle, and within the confines of that thought, the very, very last thought I would have ever had was buying a Harley-Davidson. I had previously owned a ’79 Electra-Glide I bought new in Texas, and that bike was a beautiful disaster. I called it my optical illusion (it looked like a motorcycle).  I wrote about the bad taste it left in an earlier blog. Nope, I’d never own another Harley, or so I thought when I sold it in 1981.

My ’79 Electra-Glide Classic, as shown in the 1979 Harley catalog. It was the most unreliable and most beautiful motorcycle I ever owned. I wish I still had it.

But like the title of that James Bond movie, you should never say never again. I was a big wheel at an aerospace company in 1991 and I was interviewing engineers when good buddy Dick Scott waltzed in as one of the applicants. I had worked with Dick in another aerospace company (in those days in the So Cal aerospace industry, everybody worked everywhere at one time or another). Dick had the job as soon as he I saw he was applying, but I went through the motions interviewing him and I learned he had a Harley. DIck said they were a lot better than they used to be and he gave me the keys to his ’89 Electra-Glide. I rode it and he was right. It felt solid and handled way better than my old Shovelhead.

Dick Scott on his ’89 Electra-Glide. The day after I took this photo in Baja, Dick died when he crashed his motorcycle.

That set me on a quest. I started looking, and after considering the current slate of Harleys in 1991, I decided that what I needed was a Heritage Softail. I liked the look and I thought I wanted the two-tone turquoise-and-white version. The problem, though, was that none of the Harley dealers had motorcycles. They were all sold before they arrived at the dealers, and the dealers were doing their gouging in those days with a “market adjustment” uptick ranging from $2000 to sometimes $4000 (today, most non-Harley dealers sort of do the same thing with freight and setup). There was no way in hell I was going to pay over list price, but even had I wanted to, it would have been a long wait to get a new Harley.

One day while driving to work, a guy passed me on the freeway riding a sapphire blue Heritage softail, and I was smitten. Those colors worked even better for me than did the turquoise-and-white color combo. The turquoise-and-white had a nice ‘50s nostalgia buzz (it reminded me of a ’55 Chevy Bel Air), but that sapphire blue number was slick. Even early in the morning on Interstate 10, I could see the orange and gray factory pinstriping, and man, it just worked for me. It had kind of a blue jeans look to it (you know, denim with orange stitching).  That was my new want and I wanted the thing bad. But it didn’t make any difference. Nobody had any new Harleys, and nobody had them at list price. I might as well have wanted a date with Michelle Pfeiffer. In those days, a new Harley at list price or less in the colors I wanted (or in any colors, actually) was pure unobtanium.

The Harley Softail I bought at Dale’s Modern Harley. I negotiated a hell of a deal. I kept that Harley for 12 years and rode the wheels off the thing.  I’ve since learned how to pack a little better.

So one Saturday morning about a month later, I took a drive out to the Harley dealer in San Bernardino. In those days, that dealer was Dale’s Modern Harley (an oxymoronic name for a Harley dealer if ever there was one). Dale’s is no more, but when it was there, it was the last of the real motorcycle shops. You know the drill…it was in a bad part of town, it was small, everything had grease and oil stains, and the only thing “modern” was the name on the sign. That’s what motorcycle dealers were like when I was growing up. I liked it that way, and truth be told, I miss it.  Dealerships are too clean today.

Anyway, a surprise awaited. I walked in the front door (which was at the rear of the building because the door facing the street was chained shut because, you know, it was a bad part of town).  And wow, there it was: A brand new 1992 Heritage Softail in sapphire blue.  Just like I wanted.

Dale’s had a sales guy who came out of Central Casting for old Harley guys. His name was Bob (I never met Dale and I have no idea who he was).  Bob.  You know the type and if you’re old enough you know the look. Old, a beer belly, a dirty white t-shirt, jeans, engineer boots, a blue denim vest, and one of those boat captain hats motorcycle riders wore in the ‘40s and ‘50s. An unlit cigarette dangled from one corner of his mouth. His belt was a chromed motorcycle chain. I’d been to Dale’s several times before, and I’d never seen Bob attired in anything but what I just described. And I’d never seen him without that unlit cigarette.  Straight out of Central Casting, like I said.

“What’s this?” I asked Bob, pointing at the blue Softail.

“Deal fell through,” Bob answered. “Guy ordered it, we couldn’t get him financing, and he couldn’t get a loan anywhere else.”

“So it’s available?” I asked.

“Yep.”

Hmmm. This was interesting.

“How much?” I asked.

“$12,995, plus tax and doc fees,” Bob answered, walking back to his desk at the edge of Dale’s very small showroom floor.

$12,995 was MSRP for a new Heritage Softail back in 1992. That would be a hell of a deal. Nobody else in So Cal was selling Harleys at list price.

I followed Bob to his desk and sat down.  I was facing Bob and the Harley was behind me. Bob was screwing around with some papers on his desk and not paying any particular attention to me.

“I’ll go $11,500 for it,” I said.

Bob looked up from his paperwork and smiled.

“Son,” he said (and yeah, he actually called me “son,” even though I was 40 years old at the time) “I’m going to sell that motorsickle this morning.  Not this afternoon, not next week, but this morning.  The only question is: Am I going to sell it to you or am I going to sell it to him?”

Bob actually said “motorsickle,” I thought, and then I wondered who “him” was. Bob sensed my befuddlement.  He pointed behind me and I looked. Somebody was already sitting on what I had started regarding as my motorsickle.  That guy was thinking the same thing I was.

“Bob,” I began, “you gotta help me out here. I never paid retail for anything in my life.”

“That’s because you never bought a new ’92 Harley, son, but I’ll tell you what. I’ll throw in a free Harley T-shirt.”  I couldn’t tell if he was joking or if he was trying to insult me, but I didn’t care.

I looked at the Harley again and that other dude was still sitting on it.   On my motorcycle.   And that’s when I made up my mind. $12,995 later (plus another thousand dollars in taxes and doc fees) I rolled out of Dale’s with a brand-new sapphire blue Harley Heritage Softail. And one new Harley T-shirt.

11 thoughts on “Such a deal!”

  1. Great story. That salesman knew he had you. Sometimes it’s better to admit defeat and pay the man.

    I paid retail for a Toyota truck. It killed me but it was after a big hurricane and everybody’s cars went under seawater. The dealers were selling cars as fast as they could get them.

    It was the same, “if you don’t buy this truck it’ll be sold by the end of the day.” Deals.

  2. Great story. I truly miss those old-style dealers also. I think the internet has helped ruin that. Shopping on line has changed the whole dynamic. On-line stuff should be limited to cool blogs or huge discount specials on Yoo-Hoo. 🙂

  3. Great story Joe. When I was a kid growing up I lived not too far from Harley Davidson of Inglewood here in So Cal. My mom used to send me to the store and it was on the way there. I would go in and stare at the Sportsters and just feel the lust for it in my blood. As far as I was concerned, the two most beautiful things on the planet were Harley Sportsters and P-51 Mustangs. It took another 30 years and I went through a lot of other bikes but I finally got one. Bought from the original owner in 2002, it was an XL 1200 in Aqua Pearl and Silver that had all of 100.3 miles on it. Yeah – 7 years old and had 100 miles on it. It was so new it still had the inspectors tags on the brake lines. I still have it and it now has about 32k miles on it and has been a wonderful bike and I’m still totally in love with it. I have several other bikes but that’s the one I ride almost exclusively. Just picked up a really nice ’73 Ironhead Sportster that has been sitting for 10 years and is in near mint condition. When I was buying it we were going through all the paperwork the owner had on the bike including the original sales contract and, coincidence of coincidence, the original selling dealer was Harley Davidson of Inglewood. Some things were just meant to be.

    1. Very cool. Gresh is a big time Sportster fan, too. Never owned one. Always thought they had the right look.

  4. My 1991 FXR came from Trenton Harley in NJ ( I was the 3 owner) and the place looked like you described Dale’s as looking right down to the employes but their cigs were lit. My bike started life with a red paint job then went to pearl white with teal pinstriping with silver leaf panels. I swapped out the tins for more of a tough guy look and a tank with two fill openings then had a well known automotive painter do a red candy base with multi-color pearl to orange to red flames bordered by tangerine pinstriping – the bike was hot and looked like it was going 100 mph just sitting there. After moving to CA in 98′ I rode that bike for many years before I had a hip replacement and my doc told me that I’d better sell the bike if I wanted to continue walking better. I sold it to my mechanic who wanted it for his son and now that bike has gone from coast to coast to coast and Sturgis many times. They did have to rebuild the motor when it dropped a valve 4 years ago.

    1. I’ve seen your photo of that bike, Paul, and it was indeed a great-looking motorcycle.

  5. They have since doubled in price I’m on my second ultra my wife loves it nice blog

  6. Hi Joe. I like it when your time in the aerospace industry creeps into your blogs. More of that please. I’m told there is a 4 part series running on KCET called “Blue Sky Metropolis” that deals with the history of that industry in the Southern California region. I’ll be setting up my DVR to get it. Also, did you purchase a new Enfield twin?

    1. Thanks, Marty. I’ll be adding more in the future; Gresh wants me to do that, too. Regarding the Enfield, the dealer one of the two dealers in the area is the one that did such a lousy job (i.e., no job) in prepping the bullet, so that guy is out. The closer dealer wants $1200 freight and setup (and I want to hit the lottery; let’s see which one happens first). So, no, I haven’t bought one yet. I also want to start hearing that the parts network is in place before I leap (CSC could make it happen, so I’m thinking Enfield can, too).

  7. Reminds me of our small-town Harley dealer. He was an aging, former coal operator who bought the shop with his extra coal money. He was crusty and had little patience or tact. A friend of mine had gotten friendly with him and they’d actually joke with each other. Anyway, the dealer had placards on the bikes telling customers to stay off the bikes. My friend just ignored the signs and sat on any bike he wanted. We were standing around chatting with the owner and my friend climbed off one of the bikes. Another customer, taking a cue from my friend, hopped on the bike. The dealer spotted him and yelled “get your ass of that bike”, which the customer did immediately, saying “he was sitting on it”, to which the dealer said, “I wasn’t talking to him!” You can guess where my friend bought his Road King.

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