Original flat-six cruiser
1996 reset
Before the 1996 Valkyrie F6C, no manufacturer had put a flat-six engine in cruiser bodywork. BMW K1600 (2011+) and Honda's own 2014 Valkyrie revival followed the formula. The original Valkyrie was the bike that proved flat-six cruisers could exist and have buyers — even if not enough buyers.
Why it ended 2003
Sales never broke through
Sold in tiny volumes — ~10,000/year worldwide at peak. Cruiser buyers wanted Harley V-twin character; flat-six was too foreign. Honda never made the Valkyrie pay. Killed 2003 to focus cruiser efforts on the parallel-twin Shadow line.
Used market position
Cult collectible
Valkyrie F6C used in 2026: $4.5-7k for clean low-mile. Pay attention to 6× carb sync, final drive splines, reg/rec. Bombproof Goldwing engine — these will run forever if maintained. Honda dealer support is patchy for the cruiser-specific parts; specialist independents better.
vs Honda Rebel 1100 in 2026
Different bikes
Rebel 1100 (1084cc parallel-twin, 86bhp): modern, electronic, A2-friendly, $8,499. Valkyrie F6C (1520cc flat-six, 100bhp): traditional, analogue, big-bore, $4.5-7k used. Different riders entirely. Valkyrie is for flat-six character lovers; Rebel 1100 is for modern cruiser buyers.
Real cost trajectory
Held value
$10,500 Valkyrie in 1996 ($21,000 today). Used market 2026: $4.5-7k for clean low-mile. Held value relatively well because of cult status and low production volumes. Pay attention to grey-import paperwork (UK bikes were imported from US production in Marysville, Ohio).
Rider aids count
0
Valkyrie F6C had nothing — analogue dials, 6× carbs, no electronics. Pure 1990s cruiser experience. Modern Goldwing Tour ($29,799) has cornering ABS, ride modes, DCT auto-clutch, smartphone connect — totally different generation.