Buell’s Super Cruiser isn’t just another V-twin, it blends sportbike DNA, 175 horsepower, and aggressive styling to challenge the very definition of a cruiser.

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In a market where cruisers often mean heavy frames, chrome accents, and relaxed ergonomics, Buell is about to throw a wrench into tradition. The upcoming Super Cruiser doesn’t just aim to compete with Harley-Davidson and Indian, it looks ready to rewrite the rulebook.
A Cruiser With Sportbike DNA
Where most manufacturers design cruisers for comfort and style, Buell is building one around 175 horsepower of sportbike-bred V-twin muscle. The 1,190cc engine, borrowed from the Hammerhead 1190 and 1190SX, is an absurd starting point for a cruiser, power figures that dwarf anything else in the category. Even if Buell retunes it for more accessible torque, it’s still operating in a different universe than the competition.
That alone makes the Super Cruiser something unique: it’s not trying to be a laid-back tourer, nor a retro-styled throwback. It’s a muscle machine designed to make a Harley feel slow.
Built to Corner, Not Just Cruise
The chassis pushes the concept even further. Instead of the usual long-wheelbase, heavy-steel construction that defines the cruiser aesthetic, Buell’s prototype shows a lightweight perimeter frame and fully adjustable sportbike suspension. That’s not subtle, it’s Buell telegraphing that the bike isn’t just meant to roll straight down Main Street, but to lean hard and fast through corners.
If the weight comes in where many expect, well below Harley or Indian rivals, the Super Cruiser could ride more like a naked sportbike disguised in cruiser form.
A Statement Piece
The styling, developed with Roland Sands Design, amplifies that aggression. Low, stretched, but with sharp edges and a minimalist stance, the Super Cruiser signals rebellion without dipping into cliché retro cues. It’s a bike that looks like it belongs in a fight, not parked in front of a bar for photos.
Testing at the Extremes
Buell is proving the concept by punishing prototypes across the U.S., from desert heat to high-altitude mountain passes. The focus isn’t just performance but durability: can the bike live up to the demands of daily riding while carrying sportbike-level performance?
That kind of validation matters because the Super Cruiser isn’t just another model; it’s Buell’s pitch to stand apart in a cruiser market often accused of being stagnant.
Why It Matters
The Super Cruiser matters not because it’s another V-twin option, but because it’s a direct challenge to the idea of what a cruiser is. Instead of tradition, Buell is chasing performance. Instead of playing safe, it’s leaning into its outsider identity.
If it succeeds, Buell won’t just have built a new bike, it will have created a whole new lane in the cruiser segment.


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