That is a Softail, yes? It looks clean. It's hard to find good unmolested Evo's but there are plenty modified ones out there, needing work and $ to set them right.
You probably can see more Evo-engine H-D's on the road than VMax'es, because the bike brought H-D out of a near bankruptcy. In the '80's and into the '90's, you had to 'wait your turn in-line,' to buy a new H-D. The Evolution was first available in the 1983 calendar year. You can read a great detailed history of the motivation by H-D to design and to build the Evo as-told by everyones' favorite motorcycle technical writer, Kevin Cameron:
https://www.cycleworld.com/harley-davidson-evolution-v-twin-motorcycles-history-big-twin/
Here in south Florida, to buy an Evolution bike, you either had to trade-in a H-D or the dealership made you spend close-to $2,500 in accessories for your bike, and then charge you for installing them. You got 'listed,' and when the factory shipped the dealer the bikes, you got a call. If you wanted that bike, you had to speak-up then and there, or the dealer went to the next name on the list. No choice of color, just a chance to buy an FX or an FLT or an FLST, or whatever-else came-out of the H-D transporter.
The Evo's were far-better than the Shovelhead which preceded it.
https://www.cycleworld.com/harley-davidson-shovelhead-v-twin-motorcycles-history-big-twin/
The problem of dissimilar metals used in engine components and gasket construction (Shovelhead) was solved in the Evolution engine by using aluminum largely; the aluminum cylinders did have iron sleeves. I recall when the Shovelhead was released in 1966, replacing the Panhead. I was a teenager in high school, no bike, no money. Triumph, BSA and Norton all built parallel vertical twins as their performance-leaders. The largest Honda was the CB450 which also was a vertical parallel twin, featuring DOHC and 'hairpin springs' for the valves. The game-changer CB750-4 was still in the future (January 1969) with its SOHC transverse-four cylinder, front hydraulic disc brake, and 5-speed transmission.
The Twin-Cam came out in 1998, Evo's continued for 3 years (1998-2000) in one style or another and a lot of Evo owners either traded-in their Evo's or sold them, to buy the Twin-Cam. The TC bikes were very popular, though there were issues causing the engine to be redesigned for the 2007 model year (TC88 B). They lasted a long time but because of noise and emissions, and riders wanting more power, the Milwaukee Eight was released (2016). It was 'deja-vu, all-over again' and the 'new, improved' engine series pushed many Twin-Cam owners to buy the NKOTB. I know one guy who has
two Twin-Cams sitting unridden in his garage, because he had to have the Milwaukee Eight, and he wasn't willing to take a bath on his Twin-Cam bikes, trying to sell them. The dealer wasn't going to give him anything respectable on the trade-in, so they sit, year-after-year, in the garage, unloved, unridden, unsold. One of the bikes is a CVO, and his wife wasn't enjoying being a rider, so those two bikes sit. He likes his Milwaukee Eight though. I don't think the Twin Cams have a total of 13K miles, between the both of them.