Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2010 Honda Fury Custom on 2040-motos

US $11,500.00
YearYear:2010 MileageMileage:2 ColorColor: silver
Location:

WEATHERFORD, Texas, US

WEATHERFORD, TX, US
QR code
2010 Honda Fury  Custom , US $11,500.00, image 1

Honda Fury photos

2010 Honda Fury  Custom , US $11,500.00, image 2 2010 Honda Fury  Custom , US $11,500.00, image 3 2010 Honda Fury  Custom , US $11,500.00, image 4 2010 Honda Fury  Custom , US $11,500.00, image 5 2010 Honda Fury  Custom , US $11,500.00, image 6 2010 Honda Fury  Custom , US $11,500.00, image 7

Honda Fury tech info

TypeType:Custom VINVIN:JH2SC610XAK001459 PhonePhone:8172287431

Honda Fury description

2010 Honda Fury , custom wheels, corbin seat, fork extensions, custom triple clamps, low millage, ridden around town $11,500.00 8172287431

Moto blog

2012 Honda Ace CB125 and Ace CB125-D – $627 Motorcycles for African Market

Thu, 29 Sep 2011

Honda announced two low-priced small-displacement motorcycles to be produced and sold in Nigeria. The Honda Ace CB125 and Ace CB125-D were developed to be affordable, durable, easy to use and offer good fuel economy. Honda will introduce the CB125 and CB125-D at about 100,000 Nigerian naira (US$627), a price point that Honda expects to be affordable for many Nigerians, with the manufacturer targeting annual sales of 100,000 units.

2013 AMA Supercross San Diego Race Report

Mon, 11 Feb 2013

Davi Millsaps captured his second main event win of the season and expanded his AMA Supercross championship lead to 19 points with a wire-to-wire victory at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego. The Rockstar Energy Suzuki rider jumped ahead at the start for the holeshot and held that lead for the entire 20-lap race for the win. Finishing 2.386 seconds back was Team Honda Muscle Milk‘s Justin Barcia while Red Bull KTM‘s Ryan Dungey finished 10.300 seconds back for third place.

2011 Vyrus Moto2 Grand Prix Racer Preview

Fri, 14 Jan 2011

Motorbike cognoscenti recognize the Vyrus name, the Italian brand producing exotic sportbikes based on the amazing hub-center-steered Bimota Tesi. The Vyrus story begins when Bimota filed for bankruptcy in the early 2000s. Vyrus principal Ascanio Rodorigo, a former Bimota employee, began producing his version of the Tesi after Bimota let its patents expire while it was in bankruptcy.