Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2008 Yamaha Yzf R1 on 2040-motos

$8,000
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:5
Location:

Heber Springs, Arkansas

Heber Springs, AR
QR code

Yamaha YZF description

Hello all. Here you have a 2008 Yamaha R1. Its my baby and Im not highly motivated to sell it. Just putting out feelers to gauge interest. Not really looking to trade. Its stretched and lowered. Paint is great, never abused or raced. Never layed down. Below is a list of some things done to the bike not all inclusive--programmer--headers--shorty exhaust--K&N Air filter--lowered about 3 ins--9" extension--high performance stainless wrapped rear brake cable--massive chain--high performance rear sprocket--in-fairing smoked flush mount front blinkers--halo headlamp--smoked tail with integrated blinkers--blacked out windscreenIm sure theres some stuff that Ive forgotten. Let me know if you have any questions. Thanks for checking out my bike.

Moto blog

Zero-mile, still crated Yamaha RZ500N for sale

Fri, 31 Jan 2014

This brand new, unregistered, never-even-been-fired-up Yamaha RZ500N has been revealed in the warehouse of a motorcycle dealer in Australia. We know it was the RD500LC but over in Australia (and Canada) it was called the RZ500N. It comes exactly as it arrived from Japan, with two keys, the service manual, mirrors etc.

Yamaha Customer Information Leaked – Personal Data for 607 Japanese Customers Compromised

Wed, 23 Nov 2011

Yamaha has confirmed the personal information of 607 customers in Japan was leaked to a third party. According to Yamaha, personal information for recall and product improvement measures was leaked byYamaha Motorcycle Sales Japan Co., the manufacturer’s domestic group company. The information including names, mailing addresses, vehicle names and VIN, and dealership information for 607 customer accounts in the Aichi, Fukuoka and Kagoshima prefectures were received by an anonymous third party via fax on Nov.

Air time Kenny Roberts-style

Thu, 25 Nov 2010

I can’t get enough of pictures that capture a specific, hard to define moment; the successful encapsulation of the absolute balls-to-the-wall, life or death commitment that riding a motorbike as fast as possible involves.  We all know. We’ve all been there – even if it’s only a once-in-a-lifetime moment. Maybe (for us mere mortals) it’s that rapidly, yet unexpectedly, tightening left-hand bend with a shitty, mud-covered veneer just at the apex.