Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2012 Yamaha Road Star Silverado S S on 2040-motos

$15,590
YearYear:2012 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Springfield, Ohio

Springfield, OH
QR code
2012 Yamaha ROAD STAR SILVERADO S S , $15,590, image 1

Yamaha Road Star photos

2012 Yamaha ROAD STAR SILVERADO S S , $15,590, image 2 2012 Yamaha ROAD STAR SILVERADO S S , $15,590, image 3 2012 Yamaha ROAD STAR SILVERADO S S , $15,590, image 4

Yamaha Road Star tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:(877) 212-7406

Yamaha Road Star description

2012 YAMAHA ROAD STAR SILVERADO S, BAG A TRULY MAJOR CLASSIC Fill up the 4.7 gallon fuel tank, plant your feel on the floating floorboards and let that big 102-cubic-inch fuel-injected V-twin have its head. Medium-size adjustable windshield. Color-matched hard sidebags. Touring saddle and passenger seat with backrest. You're ready to go. The Road Star Silverado S adds chrome accents and more. Available from October 2011

Moto blog

What We Ain’t Getting: Yamaha Race-Blu Livery for R1, R6 and R125

Thu, 13 Sep 2012

We reported earlier today Yamaha Motor USA unveiled new colors and graphics for its 2013 YZF-R1 and YZF-R6. Mechanically unchanged from last year’s models, Yamaha‘s two sportbikes each get three color options including a “Team Yamaha” blue and white model. What Yamaha isn’t offering to its U.S.

Stoner to Miss Brno for Surgery – Title Defence Likely Over

Thu, 23 Aug 2012

Casey Stoner has withdrawn from the Brno, Czech Republic MotoGP round to undergo surgery on his injured ankle. Trailing Yamaha‘s Jorge Lorenzo by 39 points and Honda teammate Dani Pedrosa by 21 points with seven rounds to go, Stoner’s hopes of repeating as MotoGP champion before retiring at the end of the season are all but dashed. The Repsol Honda rider injured his ankle in a high side crash in last weekend’s Indianapolis Grand Prix.

Yamaha Named Official Motorcycle Of Road America

Thu, 02 May 2013

The economic downturn hit the motorcycle world particularly hard, as many factory-backed road racing efforts closed shop. The decision, while unfortunate, isn’t hard to understand, as racing at the highest levels isn’t cheap, and a factory involvement means added pressure to succeed, which ultimately means spending more money to do so. Through it all, however, Yamaha has remained involved with the sport, fielding factory teams and sponsoring various riding schools and even racetracks.