Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

St Vincent From Q Vic Mix Bag Various Designs And Over Prints Used on 2040-motos

US $78
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Port Melbourne, VIC, Australia

Port Melbourne, VIC, Australia
QR code
St Vincent from Q Vic mix bag various designs and over prints Used, US $78, image 1

Vincent All photos

St Vincent from Q Vic mix bag various designs and over prints Used, US $78, image 2 St Vincent from Q Vic mix bag various designs and over prints Used, US $78, image 3

Vincent All description

St Vincent from Q Vic mix bag various designs and over prints Used.   Postage Australian buyers Standard $2.00.  Registered $5.00. Overseas buyers Standard $4.00, Signed for $15.00 Please note I combined lots for Postage. Lot in excess $100 will be sent by signed MAIL. Thanking you. Note Postage to India must be sent by Registered Post

Moto blog

Brough Superior Fetches $427k At Bonhams Auction

Mon, 28 Apr 2014

The ex-George Brough, Brough Superior SS100, which was projected to sell in the neighborhood of $235k – $300k, actually brought in nearly half a million dollars Sunday. Registered in 1939, the motorcycle was campaigned by George Brough himself in the London-Edinburgh Trial that same year.The grand final tally for the Bonhams Stafford Sale of Pioneer, Vintage, and Collectors’ Motorcycles & Memorabilia totaled $3,419,981. “We are delighted with the results achieved for this long and well-established sale.

Behind the “Bathing Suit” Picture

Fri, 09 Jan 2009

Few motorcycle photographs are as iconic as that of the famous Bonneville “Bathing Suit Picture.” While you have undoubtedly seen this image before, you may not know the story behind it. The scantily clad and debatably crazy rider was a man by the name of Roland “Rollie” Free. The bike, often thought by many to be a Vincent Black Shadow, was in fact a Black Lightning – the fastest Vincent ever to see production.

The New Age Of Custom Motorcycles – Video

Mon, 26 Aug 2013

In a world where modern motorcycles are full of computers, sensors and plastic, there are still those folks who yearn for the days of yore. A time when motorcycles were made of metal and you used a wrench — not a keyboard — to make your bike go faster. Careful and skilled craftsmanship, along with independent thinking, is a mark of pride among these men and their machines, some of whom are featured in the video below by Gestalten.tv.