Honda Shadow tech info




Honda Shadow description
I bought this bike new in 2002 and only have put 3,900 miles on it since. The bike ran perfectly when I parked it over 4 years ago. It definitely needs cleaned, a new battery, and it has bad fuel in it so the fuel system and carb needs cleaned out. Has some light surface rust on the fork and rims but would still look great if cleaned up. Let me reiterate, this bike hasn't been started in 4 years. It is not currently running. It ran great before and I never had any problems with it. Someone who knows what they are doing could have this up and running in no time I imagine. |
Honda Shadow for Sale
1993 honda shadow(US $5559)
2006 honda shadow(US $3,899.99)
2002 honda shadow(US $2,650.00)
1998 honda shadow(US $2,600.00)
2009 honda shadow(US $2,600.00)
2003 honda shadow(US $2,800.00)
Moto blog
Don't become another crime statistic
Mon, 13 Jun 2011On average approximately 50,000 motorcycles are stolen each year. They're taken from outside homes, from large urban environments across the countries major cites and highly organised gangs are at the heart of thefts preying on innocent motorcyclists. Experts of motorcycle security, Acumen advise on how to protect your bike: How to reduce the chance of theft Protection is like layers of an onion – the more the layers; the longer it takes.
Honda Raises MSRP for 2013 NC700X But Lowers Price for DCT Option
Wed, 13 Feb 2013The big news from Honda last week was the introduction of the new CTX700 and CTX700N cruisers. Flying a little under the radar however was a change to American Honda‘s pricing structure for the 2013 NC700X which sees a price increase for the base model but a price cut for combined anti-lock brakes and a dual clutch transmission Honda introduced the NC700X last year at an impressively low price of $6999 for the base model and $8999 with ABS and DCT. The low price point was one key advantage we awarded the 2012 NC700X over the $7899 Kawasaki Versys in our recent Middleweight Multi-Tool Shootout.
NEW: Yoshimura ends cans for Honda CB1000R
Wed, 10 Feb 2010LEGENDARY JAPANESE tuning house Yoshimura has designed a series of slip-on performance end cans for Honda’s naked CB1000R.The brand new EEC-approved cans bolt straight onto the bike's exiting pipework and feature a stainless steel end cone and integral lower Yoshimura logoed cat-converter heat shield. Even with the dB-Killer baffle in place peak power is improved, as is mid-range torque with further performance gains available if the baffle is removed.A full race mid-pipe, extracting yet more power is on the way and will be available later in the year. The Yoshimura CB1000R Slip-On, including the supplied heat shield, is over 4kgs lighter than the OE item, the Carbon sleeve, even more so at just 4.65kg.Part Number/Sleeve Type/Weight/RRP including VAT1A0-480-5B50 Stainless Steel 2.61kg £712.711A0-480-5B80 Titanium 2.45kg £770.181A0-480-5B80B Titan Blue 2.45kg £850.651A0-480-5B90 Carbon 2.35kg £896.631A0-480-5B20 Metal Magic 2.61kg £793.17 Noise Output (decibels)Standard end can: 94dB @ 5,000rpmYoshimura EEC Slip-On: 94.5dB @ 5,000rpm(with db-killer in place)
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