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2002 Yamaha Road Star Warrior on 2040-motos

US $
YearYear:2002 MileageMileage:8876 ColorColor: Maroon
Location:

San Marcos, California

San Marcos, CA
QR code
2002 Yamaha Road Star Warrior , US $, image 1

Yamaha Road Star photos

2002 Yamaha Road Star Warrior , US $, image 2 2002 Yamaha Road Star Warrior , US $, image 3 2002 Yamaha Road Star Warrior , US $, image 4

Yamaha Road Star tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:(877) 258-2416

Yamaha Road Star description

2002 Yamaha Road Star Warrior, Hot Rod Cruiser! Tons Of Torque!! Superior Handling!!! - Part muscular modern-day streetfighter, part cruiser from a bygone era, the Warrior is the two-wheeled embodiment of the timeless icon that seduced so many before it: the classic, all-American Hot Rod. Imagine an air-cooled, pushrod, 102-cubic inch V-twin (1670cc) with the Road Star powerplant as the engine base.

Moto blog

Happy 50th Hizzy

Wed, 11 Jan 2012

On the 11th January 1962, Steve Hislop was born in Hawick, Scotland. Today would have been his 50th birthday, but he was tragically killed in a helicopter accident in 2003. Hizzy was a genius on a motorbike and when he was happy with everything around him, he was amongst the best in the world.

Niall Mackenzie Blog number 3

Wed, 15 Sep 2010

This picture of me chasing Foggy on the Daytona banking in 1991 brought back some bitter sweet memories recently. I did half a season as his team mate on the Silkolene RC30s before scurrying off to Japan to ride a factory Yamaha Superbike. I’ve never been a quitter but I felt the team that year was gear stretched running two riders so it was a case of last in first out.

Yamaha Recalls R1 and Super Tenere for Overheating Headlights

Mon, 24 Feb 2014

Yamaha has started a recall campaign on 2009-2013 YZF-R1 sportbikes and 2012-2013 Super Ténéré models because of a risk of headlight failure due to overheating. The recall campaign affects 19,045 units of the R1 and 4,683 units of the Super Ténéré in the U.S. According to documents released by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, heat generated by the headlight bulb socket may cause the terminal ends to expand, resulting in arcing between the terminal connector and bulb contact.