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2004 Harley-davidson Sportster 883 Custom Cruiser on 2040-motos

US $5,500.00
YearYear:2004 MileageMileage:8
Location:

Chicopee, Massachusetts, US

Chicopee, MA, US
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2004 Harley-Davidson Sportster 883 CUSTOM Cruiser , US $5,500.00, image 1

Harley-Davidson Sportster photos

2004 Harley-Davidson Sportster 883 CUSTOM Cruiser , US $5,500.00, image 2 2004 Harley-Davidson Sportster 883 CUSTOM Cruiser , US $5,500.00, image 3

Harley-Davidson Sportster tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:4136268214

Harley-Davidson Sportster description

2004 Harley-Davidson Sportster 883 CUSTOM, Custom Paint - Silver/Grey Ghost Flames -Always Garaged - Vance & Hines Short Shots - nice and loud - Badlander Seat - Low Profile Sissy Bar - (removable) Over $900.00 in aftermarket chrome $5,500.00 4136268214

Moto blog

Harley-Davidson Reports Q4 2011 Results

Tue, 24 Jan 2012

Harley-Davidson reported a 10.9% growth in motorcycle sales in the fourth quarter and a total annual growth of 5.9% for 2011. The growth resulted in a net profit of $599.1 million for Harley-Davidson. The Motor Company sold 235,188 motorcycles in 2011, up from 222,110 units sold in 2010.

2015 Harley-Davidson CVO Lineup Revealed

Tue, 26 Aug 2014

Harley-Davidson revealed its four-model Custom Vehicle Operations lineup for 2015, adding new CVO versions of the Road Glide Ultra and Street Glide to go with the returning CVO Softail Deluxe and CVO Limited. Our own Evans Brasfield is currently in Sonoma, Calif., for Harley-Davidson’s 2015 press launch, and he’ll have full first ride reports later this week. For now, let’s take a look at the CVO models.

Vespa goes back to the future

Thu, 22 Nov 2012

IT'S been a while coming, but the gorgeous Vespa 946 - EICMA 2012's Best of Show - has finally introduced something to the two-wheeled world that our four-wheeled counterparts have had for a while.  I call this 'reverse retro-futurism' - the art of borrowing lines from models past and imbuing them with a sleek sense of future direction (as opposed to retro-futurism, the pre-1960s design trend of depicting the technology of the future. The term 'decopunk' may come close, but feel free to tell me if there's a more exact term.) It's what the New Mini and the New Beetle (both 1997 and 2012 versions) have done so well, and so successfully: building an all-new model as a tribute to a classic, something that's modern yet already timeless, with a widely-appreciated, inclusive aesthetic (and here we eliminate the Plymouth PT Cruiser from the conversation). The biking world is great at retro, indeed thrives on it, but not so good at adding in a taste of the 21st century.