yeah I've been in the powersports industry for many years too
CVT's will work in most applications. Some are MUCH better than others. Yamaha absolutely annhilates the competition (Polaris, most of the kawasuki's, etc). It is a wet clutch design that runs the actual CVT so that there is always constant tension on the belt, so the belt does not wear out. I have never replaced a yamaha CVT belt, ever. To get to the point, the early 2000's kawasaki atv's also used a belt drive (CVT) with a deflection sensor and an actuator that supposedly kept tension on the belt so it wouldn't take off as if it was in neutral down a hillside (engine braking). That system was totally flawed, it was weird to drive/ride, and when (not if) it failed in one way or another, it was way too expensive to fix. Similar to early Nissan CVT stuff in that sense. When it quit, you replace the vehicle.
Give me a manual transmission over a cvt or automatic. Automatics are pretty tough transmissions for the most part but same deal, when they die (and they all do at some point), grab your ankles--especially with autos built in the last 10 years or so. Completely electronic controls over the hydraulic system. Solenoids to shift rather than valving. It might be simpler and less expensive for the manufacturer but the end user pays the price. A rebuild on the 4R100 in my truck is going to be about $4800 (to do it right, with updates), and the truck isn't worth $5000 on the market. I may tackle it myself. I ain't new to automatics. All my other vehicles are manual transmission. It's a whole lot easier and less expensive (by far!) to replace a clutch than it is to rebuild an automatic. Just did a Tremec T5 rebuild recently, amazing how simple they are, and therein lies it's beauty--even though they aren't terribly strong. Unfortunately, the manual transmission is dying. 86% of Americans can't drive a manual. 14% can and I'm one of them. I prefer them.
Recently my GF and I were out in town and when we got back home, I just shut the key off and left the keys in the ignition (bad habit that I'm trying to rid myself of). She asked if I was gonna grab the keys out of the car, and I said naw, ain't but a few people can drive a stick anyway, so that "automatically" eliminates 86% of potential thieves....
Recently looked at buying a newer Mustang to replace my 93 (4 cylinder) coupe. Looked quite a bit between the Ecoboost and Coyote. I like them both, with the V8 having more power than I really need, and the litlte ecoboost 4 being impressive! But the problem is, they are pushing the 10 speed auto's and I just don't want one. Yeah, it's fun, it's faster than the MT-82 6 speed, but it's just not AS fun as rowing my own gears and choosing my own stall speed. So for now, I'm keeping my old turd. Why not, it's paid for and very very inexpensive for minor repairs, insurance, taxes, etc. The only bad part is, it rides rough, it's a little noisy, and the GF hates it. Good, she can drive her nice new expensive Acadia all she wants (and it is a nice car), until it needs some more repair, and she can pay to have it done because I can't....but I can repair every single part of my antique, at home, with mostly basic tooling.