Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2005 Suzuki Katana 600 Sportbike on 2040-motos

US $2,300.00
YearYear:2005 MileageMileage:29 ColorColor: Blue
Location:

Apollo Beach, Florida, US

Apollo Beach, FL, US
QR code
2005 Suzuki Katana 600 Sportbike , US $2,300.00, image 1

Suzuki Other photos

2005 Suzuki Katana 600 Sportbike , US $2,300.00, image 2 2005 Suzuki Katana 600 Sportbike , US $2,300.00, image 3 2005 Suzuki Katana 600 Sportbike , US $2,300.00, image 4

Suzuki Other tech info

TypeType:Sportbike PhonePhone:8134206747

Suzuki Other description

2005 Suzuki Katana 600, Good condition, runs good. Needs a side mirror. Need gone ASAP. No checks, money orders, or Paypal. Cash only. $2,300.00 8134206747

Moto blog

NZ Superbike Series Points Leader Is A Grandfather Of Three!

Tue, 14 Jan 2014

Dennis Charlett is stamping his authority on the New Zealand Superbike championship. The 45 year-old father of five and grandfather of three (no, those aren’t typos) won the first three races of the season during the series opener in Christchurch, placing him firmly at the top of the points standings heading into round two at Levels Raceway, near Timaru. The championship favorite certainly got the wake-up call as Taupo’s Suzuki rider Scott Moir raced to a convincing win in Saturday’s Superbike race, while Charlett was forced to settle for fourth place.

Suzuki Reveals B.O.S.S. Editions of Boulevard C90, M109R and C50

Fri, 24 May 2013

Last fall, Suzuki introduced a new tourer called the C90T B.O.S.S. The acronym was obvious enough, standing for “Blacked-Out Special Suzuki“, and that’s what the Suzuki C90T B.O.S.S. was.

2014 WSBK – Assen Results

Mon, 28 Apr 2014

Heavy rains and a fortuitous red flag were the difference in the World Superbike Championship‘s visit to The Cathedral of motorcycle racing, the TT Circuit Assen in the Netherlands. Aprilia‘s Sylvain Guintoli captured his second win of the season in Race 1, which was halted early by a red flag with five laps to go just as it looked like reigning WSBK champion Tom Sykes was gearing up for a final challenge. The second race was also shortened, not by a red flag but because of a rain, turning the 21-lap race into a 10-lap sprint.