Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2009 Aprilia Sportcity 125 Scooter on 2040-motos

US $1,795.00
YearYear:2009 MileageMileage:4 ColorColor: Aprilia Black
Location:

Garden City, Georgia, US

Garden City, GA, US
QR code
2009 Aprilia Sportcity 125  Scooter , US $1,795.00, image 1

Aprilia Other photos

2009 Aprilia Sportcity 125  Scooter , US $1,795.00, image 2 2009 Aprilia Sportcity 125  Scooter , US $1,795.00, image 3 2009 Aprilia Sportcity 125  Scooter , US $1,795.00, image 4 2009 Aprilia Sportcity 125  Scooter , US $1,795.00, image 5 2009 Aprilia Sportcity 125  Scooter , US $1,795.00, image 6 2009 Aprilia Sportcity 125  Scooter , US $1,795.00, image 7

Aprilia Other tech info

TypeType:Scooter Stock NumberStock Number:001404 PhonePhone:8778480985

Aprilia Other description

2009 Aprilia Sportcity 125, 55+ MPH Ready to Ride!!

Moto blog

Q3 2013 US Motorcycle Sales Results

Fri, 01 Nov 2013

Motorcycle and scooter sales in the U.S. in 2013 remain consistent with last year’s figures, according to data released by the Motorcycle Industry Council. Several manufacturers blamed poor weather for the poor start this year, and the rebounding sales in the third quarter helped to negate the slow sales from earlier in the year.

Aprilia’s Banned AD [Pics and Video]

Fri, 08 May 2009

The Italian motorcycle company Aprilia withdrew this advert following complaints from the Women’s Institute of Spain, whose advertising monitoring wing considered it to be sexist. Tag translation: “The Arrecife Range: Now several sizes smaller”, I thought Europeans were hip to this kind of thing… Check out the uncensored photo and a controversial Aprilia TV AD after the jump. Not so bad.

Charge Up you iPhone While You Ride

Fri, 12 Feb 2010

Motorcyclists can now enjoy total freedom on the open road confident in the knowledge that their cell phones, GPS, MP3 players and latest generation of iPhone/iTouch devices will remain fully-charged and in-service for the duration of the ride thanks to Powerlet’s plug and play systems. “Our product line was inspired by personal experience and the realization that there were no worthwhile options for clean, reliable on-board power for cell phones, stereos and GPS devices,” says Powerlet Products founder Adam Bonislawaski. “Before we came on to the scene, riders would bust out the black tape and wire strippers and cut into their bike’s fragile wiring to tie-in a cheap cigar lighter to power their devices.