Hi John,
Interesting question but if I were Cruzbike's marketing manager I'd have a lot more background and knowledge of other things Cruzbike to be able to respond better but I'll wing it.
Since you released the Silvio 2.x the "Silvio build" threads and "I bought a Silvio" threads have jumped dramatically - and maybe some "I kind of want a Silvio but I'm going to build a conversion first to make sure before I buy a Silvio" threads. Additionally, with the introduction of the Silvio v2 you managed to tilt some of the strong doubters of the Cruzbike MBB strengths into actually buying, building, and riding instead of just nay saying. Shortly accompanied by some rather succinct "I was wrong about Cruzbike MBB" confessions.
I haven't seen the same of the Vendetta other than maybe a brief spike when the new hydroformed frame was first introduced and
before the first glimpses of the version 2 Silvio HF started to appear. Also, Nanda posts photos to Flickr of customer builds but the impression I have is mostly Silvio. No idea what Vite bikes or other dealers have been doing regarding sales volumes.
Most of the buyers of either Silvio or Vendetta that I am aware of seem to be older, likely with more money to spend than younger folks or they have less expenses for other things than younger folks. For these, I'd guess the price difference is not a really a significant financial issue but one more of choosing between comfort, utility, all around riding fun, speed, performance, etc.
Personally what I'd like to really see happen is a lot of young folks like
Jacquie Schlitter's daughter and people in their teens and twenties starting competing on Vendettas and Silvios to see what some young, serious racers can do with the Cruzbike platform.
I would surmise most of us older folks (with a few exceptions) are not as interested in racing or at least formal racing but still like the idea of a fast bike but may be leery of a purpose built race bike. This would suggest more Silvio sales and fewer Vendetta sales. Probably even more so now that the frame and ride recline are a lot more similar. Why spend $710 more for a Vendetta if a Silvio can end up looking more like a black Vendetta with suspension? Ivan's bike as a particular example.
As you know, I was originally shopping for a Silvio but what drew me to the Vendetta is the fact that at the time it was strikingly different from the then Silvio v1.x and just flat out looked way faster and I seem to like riding fast and going far. A 45 degree recline vs a 20 degree recline. A much bigger boom and slider assembly with the contrasting colors accentuating the lines. Cleaner and sleeker lines than the old Silvio. If I was just coming to Cruzbike now the distinctive difference isn't really there anymore - especially after seeing photos of Ivan's bike looking very Vendetta-like and even more so with the recent photos of him in his Tropical Century.
So in essence you seem to have outdone yourself with the new Silvio and stolen some of the Vendetta's thunder.
I'm kind of with Bob in some ways. Continue with your skunk works. Use the Vendetta to keep pushing the boundaries. Make it roar again (or perhaps it's successor).
Get the front-end much lighter somehow. Scrap the current seat and headrest and create something new using real carbon fiber and follow the cues of the CARBONTRIKES seat but even more clever and unique to the Vendetta. Think of Maria's different riding posture along different types of terrain during RAAM - can you make a seat system that could be adjusted either on-the-fly or very, very easily for different conditions?
Include the option for at least two different aero carbon fiber trunks - one for the randonneuring crowd and a smaller one for racers. Integrate rear lighting. Make sure it looks something like the Zockra trunk in fit and finish quality.
Integrate Di2 wiring and power supply into the handlebars and frame, perhaps along with hydraulic brakes. Think of what you could do different with handlebar shape and position and molded in Di2 controls.
Heck, get with Dirk Strothmann of Magnic Lights and integrate dual front headlights and dual rear taillights into the next Vendetta frame. If the darn things really work as well as it looks, no more fiddling with batteries ever again. Integrate controls for the lights into the handlebars similar to Di2 so you can control the lights as easily as the shifting. Make sure the taillights function as brake lights when you hit your brakes.
Build an iPhone/Garmin/Smartphone receptacle into the frame such that it plugs into an additional replaceable battery inside the frame (or account for wiring from a dynamo hub) so that you can power continuously for at least 24 hours, protect the phone from water, weather, shock, etc and doesn't block GPS or cellular signals. Or along these lines partner with Wahoo or someone and integrate Smart Bluetooth speed sensors directly into the bike. I was constantly knocking my SC sensor askew...
Along the lines of your bullhorns, consider some other custom cockpit configurations for the Vendetta - how about this Zockra cockpit for some ideas? Except go entirely clean sheet and toss out current art to create something new that works better for recumbents that isn't just a transplant from the DF world. Yeah, people probably want to re-use their current bits and existing tech but then you aren't pushing the boundaries and trying to find a better way to go faster with more power and greater comfort.
All that said, I love my Vendetta. It is wicked fast and sooo much fun to ride. I did 100 miles at 2013 Bike Sebring on your Cuzbike Quest in 7:19:06 total (6:45:28 moving, 0:38:20 stopped). A year later, on my Vendetta I did that same 100.0 miles in 5:33:57 total (5:24:21 moving, 0:09:36 stopped) and this 100 miles was at a 24 hour pace. Now I'm curious how low I can get my 100 mile time. Pretty darn good for a 55 year old, eh? Some of that is me working for it but a lot is the Vendetta, my hat is off to you.
Contradictorily, I'm also intrigued by a different tangent. I'm curious if you could get the current Vendetta price low enough to attract the teenagers and 20+ crowd into trying recumbent racing. Maybe some sort of sponsorship. As I mentioned further above, I'd love to see more young people kicking butt on these things. I'm not really sure if a low price would make a difference, I'm finding racing is actually a lot more expensive than the bike - at least if you are traveling a good ways to race. But boy would I love to see an ever larger and larger group of young people getting into these things.
-Eric