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2004 Ttr 125 Le Yamaha Electric Start & Big Wheels (bonney Lake) on 2040-motos

$850
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Seattle, Washington

Seattle, WA
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2004 ttr 125 LE yamaha electric start & big wheels (bonney lake), $850, image 1

Yamaha Other description

2004 ttr125le Has aftermarket competition t-4 pro circuit pipe and sounds real good....battery is weak..will throw in a helmet..terrific tires.. Has new chain and new aircleaner. Good title. Trade for Things that go bang. $850 253-343-XXXX

Moto blog

Snow riding and my new LC

Mon, 21 Jan 2013

I reckon the only thing to do when the snow comes is to get on a bike and my weapon of choice is usually a Yamaha TTR 125. I’ve had TTRs in the garage now for around eight years after Raceways Yamaha in Fleetwood put some on offer for just £900 and apart from a few broken spokes and worn out gearbox sprockets they have been indestructible. One of the two has an electric start and incredibly starts as easily as the day I took delivery.

Win tickets to Silverstone BSB

Tue, 25 Sep 2012

MCE Insurance British Superbike Championship competition The MCE Insurance British Superbike Championship title race is hotting up as Silverstone gears up to host the penultimate round of the Showdown this weekend (28/29/30 September) as the leading protagonists prepare to fight it out for the two crucial victories. After a dramatic event at Assen last weekend Josh Brookes stole the lead in the overall standings with just two points separating him and double champion Shane 'Shakey' Byrne. Swan Yamaha’s Tommy Hill had a nightmare start to the Showdown but is determined to fight back this weekend.

R1 noise, bike porn and a quick lap

Tue, 24 Apr 2012

Trawling the internet for a sound clip of the Crossplane Crank Yamaha R1 on full chatter, I came across this: a few fast laps on board with New Zealand Superbike racer Tony Rees as he works the CABS Throttle Blipper on his 2011 R1. (Skip to 7:35 for the fast ones.) CABS is a system used by Superbike teams that makes use of the R1’s digitally controlled throttle. When you change up a gear, the bike blips in the perfect amount of revs to save time on track and make downshifts as quick and easy as clutch-less upshifts.