Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2012 Yamaha Road Star S S on 2040-motos

$13,290
YearYear:2012 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Stillwater, Oklahoma

Stillwater, OK
QR code
2012 Yamaha ROAD STAR S S , $13,290, image 1

Yamaha Road Star photos

2012 Yamaha ROAD STAR S S , $13,290, image 2 2012 Yamaha ROAD STAR S S , $13,290, image 3 2012 Yamaha ROAD STAR S S , $13,290, image 4

Yamaha Road Star tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:(888) 530-0855

Yamaha Road Star description

2012 YAMAHA ROAD STAR S, BUILT TO PERFORM AND CUSTOMIZE LIKE NOTHING ELSE The Road Star S is one of the most customized air-cooled V-twins in the business... and with good reason, too. It simply looks good, due mostly to the classic appeal of that hardtail-looking steel frame and all the classic-looking hardware that goes with it. The Road Star S gets even more chrome accents to the front end including chrome switchgear, front brake master cylinder, front fork and levers. Available from November 2011 (CA available from March 2012)

Moto blog

And in my front room this evening...

Tue, 24 Nov 2009

NO IT'S NOT an illusion: you're looking at the 1981 Yamaha OW53, ridden by double World Champion Barry Sheene in the first three rounds of the '81 500GP championship. The bike's owner, aircraft engineering entrepreneur Chris Wilson, has lent the £100,000 GP machine to Visordown for our stand at this year's NEC Motorcycle Show - 27th November to 6th December 2009. Sheene raced the bike in the 1981 championship, where he finished fourth at Salzburgring, sixth at Hockenheim and third at Monza.

Who To Watch In AMA Pro Superbike This Weekend

Tue, 11 Mar 2014

Photo: Brian J. Nelson Even though reigning AMA Pro Superbike champ Josh Herrin has left the series to try his hand in the Moto2 series, the Superbike field is still filled deep with talent heading into this weekend’s series opening round at Daytona. Here are just a few names to keep an eye on this weekend.

A Different Bike Magazine

Thu, 12 Feb 2009

Motorcycle Retro is a pet project of former Motorcyclist editor Mitch Boehm, launching as Motorcyclist Retro in early 2008 under the Source Interlink media umbrella. It featured a contemporary look at motorcycles of the 1960s through the 1980s. However, the circulation numbers of MR didn’t meet the expectations of the media conglomerate, and they cancelled production of the magazine after just two issues.