Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

02 Honda Vtx C1800 on 2040-motos

$5,600
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:17
Location:

Cincinnati, Ohio

Cincinnati, OH
QR code

Honda VTX description

02 VTX c1800, FANTASTIC condition. Only 17,546mis, custom Honda paint. Extra Corbin two pass seat, Windshield (easy on & off). Just had Honda Dealership go over everything, excellent running condition as well. Heal toe shifter, driver and pass running boards just added. A lot more extras, need to see to appreciate. Front high beam lamps, drivers back rest removable. Asking $5600.00. OBO. Accent lamps to show motor and underneath bike. So whoever buys, is getting 1 heck of a deal. Need the money! Contact

Moto blog

Honda Raises MSRP for 2013 NC700X But Lowers Price for DCT Option

Wed, 13 Feb 2013

The 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.

And it's goodbye to all that ...

Wed, 20 Oct 2010

WHAT, you may well be asking, is a picture of an upturned helicopter doing on a website dedicated to motorcycles? Chopper fans amongst you may know this isn't any ordinary helicopter, it's an Agusta 109C; an 8-seat twin-turbine multi-million dollar aircraft capable of whisking its occupants across the sky at around 170mph. And my point is?

A Weighty Issue

Mon, 03 Nov 2008

For as long as I can remember, motorcycle manufacturers have been playing fast and loose with regard to what they claim for the weight of their bikes. The “dry weights” they foisted upon us had little basis in reality. The “dry” part of that claim meant that listed weights on a spec chart were the result of all fluids being MIA from the bike, including necessities like engine oil, coolant and fork fluid (not to mention fuel), but even that didn’t fully explain the overly optimistic specs.