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2013 Yamaha Vmax Cruiser on 2040-motos

US $19,990.00
YearYear:2013 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, US

Canonsburg, PA, US
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2013 Yamaha VMAX  Cruiser , US $19,990.00, image 1

Yamaha Other photos

2013 Yamaha VMAX  Cruiser , US $19,990.00, image 2 2013 Yamaha VMAX  Cruiser , US $19,990.00, image 3 2013 Yamaha VMAX  Cruiser , US $19,990.00, image 4 2013 Yamaha VMAX  Cruiser , US $19,990.00, image 5

Yamaha Other tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:8666189685

Yamaha Other description

2013 Yamaha VMAX, All Muscle. All Brains.The VMAX is the ultimate fusion of brawn and brains. The unique features of this iconic beast are richly blended with advanced sportbike technology and forward-thinking style. It all adds up to a machine with immense performance and visual power. The VMAX truly is in a class by itself.

Moto blog

Suzuka Eight Hour capers

Mon, 05 Sep 2011

Chatting to TT legend John McGuiness recently about his first Suzuka Eight Hour experience got me thinking of a few capers the boys and me managed a few years back at what is still Japan's most important race of the season. It is a unique event that starts at 11am and finishes at 7pm making  it a pukka endurance race as the last hour is run with headlights on in the dark. It is essentially an eight hour sprint that showcases the trickest endurance machinery and manufacturer’s sales can be affected the following year depending on who wins or loses.

Are Motorcycles Safer With Antilock Brakes?

Tue, 30 Dec 2008

A new report says riders with ABS-equipped bikes can dramatically reduce the chance of a fatal accident. The study compared fatality rates among riders on bikes that have antilock brakes, and it found that death rates were 38% lower on motorcycles equipped with the optional ABS systems compared to non-ABS bikes. In 2005-2006, the fatal crashes per 10,000 registered motorcycles without antilock brakes was 6.6.

Anti clockwise Knockhill and riding in the North East with GP winners.

Wed, 06 Jun 2012

I was both nervous and excited for my first ever reverse direction track day last week at Knockhill. From rushing downhill into the left hand off camber hairpin to sweeping up onto the start/finish, nothing bears any resemblance to riding round clockwise. I actually raced my 350LC in the opposite direction in 1982 but it still took a few laps to get my head round what essentially is a brand new track for Scotland.