Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1996 Honda Gl 1500 Se on 2040-motos

US $5,499.00
YearYear:1996 MileageMileage:37 ColorColor: Red
Location:

Mount Vernon, Washington, United States

Mount Vernon, Washington, United States
QR code
1996 Honda GL 1500 SE, US $5,499.00, image 1

Honda GL 1500 SE photos

1996 Honda GL 1500 SE, US $5,499.00, image 2 1996 Honda GL 1500 SE, US $5,499.00, image 3 1996 Honda GL 1500 SE, US $5,499.00, image 4 1996 Honda GL 1500 SE, US $5,499.00, image 5 1996 Honda GL 1500 SE, US $5,499.00, image 6 1996 Honda GL 1500 SE, US $5,499.00, image 7

Honda GL 1500 SE description

Moto blog

2022 Honda Navi Review – First Ride

Mon, 22 Nov 2021

From India with love, via Mexico Credit: Photos by Drew Ruiz Jeez, people, have we really gotten this crusty? After I posted a pic of the new Honda Navi on my Facebook a couple days ago (cause that’s how crusty I am) at its SoCal coming-out party, my old pals pounced. “A face, body, and everything only a mother could love”, “another Honda styled by tupperware.” “Ugly.

14-Year-Old Canadian Stacey Nesbitt First Woman to Win a National Road Racing Title

Mon, 22 Aug 2011

Quebec teenager Stacey Nesbitt has won the Canadian Superbike Championship’s 2011 Honda CBR125R Challenge title. We’re still checking, but organizers are already calling Nesbitt the first woman to win a  national road racing championship (excluding women-only categories). The 14-year-old from St-Lazare, Quebec, swept both Honda CBR125R Challenge races in the season finale at Mosport International Raceway in Bowmanville, Ontario, to win the title with 421 points, 52 points ahead of runner-up Austin Shaw-O’Leary.

Piaggio Slashes Vespa LX125 Prices in India to Bolster Slow Sales

Tue, 08 Jan 2013

Piaggio launched its Vespa scooter brand at last January’s Indian Auto Expo to much fanfare but sales have fallen short of expectations. The Vespa LX125 launched in Indian showrooms in April as the first new Vespa scooter offered in the country in 13 years, but Piaggio has only sold about 25,000 units. That might seem like a lot, and would be, for the U.S.