Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1966 Harley-davidson Touring on 2040-motos

US $16,500.00
YearYear:1966 MileageMileage:12 ColorColor: Red
Location:

Voluntown, Connecticut, United States

Voluntown, Connecticut, United States
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1966 Harley-Davidson Touring, US $16,500.00, image 1

Harley-Davidson Touring photos

1966 Harley-Davidson Touring, US $16,500.00, image 2 1966 Harley-Davidson Touring, US $16,500.00, image 3

Harley-Davidson Touring tech info

WarrantyWarranty:Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty TypeType:Touring For Sale ByFor Sale By:Private Seller

Harley-Davidson Touring description

1966 Harley Davidson  with 1960 side car. 12,013 miles bike is as original as it gets. Starts and runs like new.  $16,500 call 860-234-7005

Moto blog

Most Obvious Press Release Of 2013: Biker Chicks Sexier Than Pedestrians

Tue, 31 Dec 2013

In a misallocation of funds Harley-Davidson recently spent an untold buttload of money proving something men have known for years: That women who ride motorcycles are sexier and better between the sheets than women who don’t ride. Common responses from male motorcyclists to the press release were: Duh; Tell me something I didn’t already know; Can I be a recruiter? Meant to entice non-riding females into the Harley-Davidson army by pimping the Bar & Shield’s website, www.h-d.com/women, the press release was peppered with effeminate catchphrases such as “physical intimacy, “communication,” and “improves relationships” but the basal message is one of female motorcyclists being sexier, happier and more confident than their non-riding counterparts.

Zero Motorcycles Named to Made in USA Foundation Hall of Fame

Tue, 03 Jul 2012

The Made in the USA Foundation has named Zero Motorcycles to its 2012 Hall of Fame class, recognizing the electric motorcycle manufacturer’s commitment to American manufacturing. Zero Motorcycles, founded in 2006 in Santa Cruz, Calif., by former NASA engineer Neal Saiki, becomes the second motorcycle manufacturer named to the Foundation’s Hall of Fame. Harley-Davidson was inducted in 2011.

AMA Honors Zero and Scot Harden with Bessie Stringfield Award

Tue, 04 Mar 2014

The American Motorcyclist Association has bestowed a special recognition award to Zero Motorcycles and its Vice President of Marketing, Hall-of-Famer Scot Harden, for their work in attracting new riders and the positive impact they’ve delivered to mainstream media. Harden (pictured above from our recent Zero FX dirt riding review) and Zero were awarded the AMA Bessie Stringfield Award which recognizes individuals who have been instrumental in bringing emerging markets to motorcycling. The award is named after 2002 AMA Hall of Fame inductee Bessie Stringfield, the first African-American woman to ride solo across the United States and a civilian motorcycle dispatch rider for the army in World War II.