Church of MO: 2008 Big Dog Choppers

For some, it is all a big joketh. Whilst the temptation is to scoff, hurl stones and jeer at the failure of the pre-Recession chopper industry, a quick consultation in the book of Google reveals that Big Dog is still in business back in Wichita, good for them! Ten years ago, they’d just moved into a big factory showroom in Costa Mesa, California, where the Apostle Fonzie sampled all their wares, beginning with the bargain-basement $24,000 Coyote. It all goeth around and cometh back around in a big circle, now is the time to stock up on custom motorcycles at steep discount.
2009 Big Dog Motorcycles Review – First Ride
Woof! Woof! And Wolf!
From pro-street to classic choppers to touring, Big Dog Motorcycles will soon have an award-winning motorcycle for you – if they don’t already. Their high-style high-performance motorcycle niche comes from within their 150,000 square foot factory in Wichita Kansas. BDM is proud of their engineering and craftsmanship, from the least expensive model to the top-of-the-line Wolf model. BDM also plans to soon grow out of its 100 national dealers and into the Canadian market with sights on the world market later in 2009. A slow but steady growth process, thanks in part to BDM Founder Sheldon Coleman’s leadership, is responsible for growing the brand worldwide.
Looking into the hearts of the machinery, we see the new tri-cam 121 cubic-inch OHV 56 degree X-Wedge engine, available only on the new top-of-the-line Wolf. That’s nearly a 2000cc EFI slap in the saddle – and it’s fully polished of course! The remaining five bikes come equipped with the 117 cubic-inch engine, and two models are available with an optional closed-loop EFI system. All are mated to the six-speed BDM Balance Drive introduced in 2005, bringing the final drive to the right side of the bike for better balance, cornering and maintenance.
For the economic-minded rich kid that just bought a $40K chopper, BDM claims 42 mpg for all its motorcycles. For the record, we didn’t get to measure any of our own mileage reports. Although we did notice that the reserve allowance on the Pitbull will carry you much further than experienced on the 2004 Ridgeback. I learned that the hard way.
Despite being in the lineup for 10 years now, The Pitbull has had a complete overhaul in 2008 and returns again in 2009 for it’s 11th model year with not many changes. If it ain’t broke… Declared a best of the best by industry leading magazines, I had to get a taste of the rigid board-tracker for myself. The 20-inch/280mm rear-end matched with a 23-inch/130mm front tire sandwich a frame with 33 degrees of rake and 6-inches of trail.
As the “entry” level chopper and model replacement for the MY08 Mutt, the Coyote ain’t no joke. Upgrading the model and dropping the price a thousand bucks, the new Coyote swaps a spoked wheel for a billet one, includes modified shocks, an updated exhaust, a longer kickstand and softer seat. The Coyote comes with the same 117ci engine and 6-speed Baker tranny available on all the other Dogs in the kennel. Even the seat height is the same, yet it feels like a small bike when you compare it directly to the Wolf, which is 10-inches longer and one inch higher. The only thing small about the Coyote is the price, at the bottom of the spectrum at $23,900. “When we approached the Coyote, we had one goal,” explained Paul Hansen, BDM Marketing Director, “To build a motorcycle that would appeal to a broader range of riders, namely through a more attractive price, but not compromise the design, style, and performance that has been expected from Big Dog Motorcycles for fifteen years. At less than $24,000, the Coyote succeeds on all counts.”
Surrounding the massive powerhouse is a new single downtube 45-degree raked frame and a shallower, more radical swing arm design meant to compliment the sleek long and low overall design.
Not yet available, but meant to expand the touring capabilities of the Wolf, are detachable hard saddlebags which you can see in the CAD drawings in the gallery. Of the three bikes I’d ridden that day, the saddle of the Wolf had been the hardest on the tailbone. You might be interested in the accessory saddles right from the get-go.
In the end, we only had time to check out the ProStreet lineup but we’ll get back in the saddle later this year and bring you a report on the newest tourer when Big Dog gets the Bulldog ready for the market in the spring of 2009.
The 2009 Bulldog will bring back a rubber mounted engine after a nine year hiatus – packing the 117ci six-speed engine with BDM Balance drive. It will be BDM’s full-time touring bagger with paramount design and comfort. From an iPod/satellite radio-ready dash, minimal gauge fairing and lockable hard luggage large enough for a half-sized helmet, the Bulldog is meant to go the distance. Completing the package with floorboards, chin fairing, a 5-gallon gas tank, smooth and controllable 250mm rear tire and a passenger-ready design with a price estimated at $37,900.
ProStreet
Coyote $23,900
Mastiff $27,900
Pitbull $26,900
Wolf $35,900
Chopper
Ridgeback $27,500
K-9 $28,900
Touring
Bulldog $37,900 (estimated)
Big Dog also offers more than twenty color packages that range form $400 to $550 to take your dream bike further into fantasy land.
In The Company DNA The family enterprise that created the Coleman lantern began with a pressurized-gas personal lantern, moving into the electric age when the world changed around the market. Now-a-days, Coleman lanterns burn more than one fuel in order to keep up with the ever-changing market. Bobbing and weaving with the public demand is one trait Sheldon Coleman has carried from his childhood into building this modern day luxury item. Just as sleeping out of the home was an unusual-come-commonplace occurrence over the second half of the last decade, today’s dispensable cash is spent on what has grown up within a tighter arc of publicly accepted (and now publicly wanted) chopper motorcycles. Diversity helped Sheldon Coleman’s father save the family business through the first national depression by creating and changing his product portfolio and catalog to reach out to world markets. The founder and CEO of Big Dog Motorcycles, Sheldon Coleman, carries out the same diversification lesson and continues to successfully operate the world’s first and largest production chopper outfit in today’s tumultuous world market. |
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