Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado on 2040-motos

$3,999
YearYear:2007 MileageMileage:3901 ColorColor: Raven
Location:

Lancaster, Pennsylvania

Lancaster, PA
QR code

Yamaha V Star tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:(866) 371-4046

Yamaha V Star description

2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado, Low Miles, Local owner. Enjoy a fully equipped Silverado with pre-owned savings. - ROAD-TRIP READY. With a dressed-out V Star Silverado, you'll know how there's nothing more satisfying than the relaxed beat of a V-twin out on the highway. Except maybe the knowledge that you didn't have to spend a fortune to get there.

Moto blog

Back in the day, the All Japan 500cc Championship at Tsukuba

Fri, 24 Jun 2011

This ‘you tube’ gem sent to me recently brought back some funny memories from the scary but incredibly exciting days of 500cc two stroke racing. This particular race was the final round of the All Japan 500cc Championship at Tsukuba Circuit where I enjoyed a head to head battle with national hero Tadahiko Taira. Yamaha’s favourite son at the time, ‘tie wrap’ as we liked to call him, was taller and better looking than most Japanese riders (maybe a war baby?) and went on to win nearly everything in Japan during his career.

Infamous Canadian Motorcyclist Found Not Guilty in 186-mph Highway Stunt

Fri, 25 Oct 2013

We don’t know if this is a case of a guilty man going free or of a braggart facing trial for something he didn’t do. Either way, Randy Scott, 26, was found not guilty of a Trans-Canada Highway run at 299 km/h in April 2012. The viral YouTube video of a Yamaha R1 rider weaving in and out of traffic was used by police to track down Scott with the help of a concerned neighbor’s tip.

John Reynolds: Riding Masterclass

Fri, 17 Dec 2010

When I first started racing about a thousand years ago, my local stomping ground was a place called Three Sisters near Wigan.  It wasn’t glamorous but it was brilliant. An hour from home and with about a million corners crammed into just a km of tarmac. The Three Sisters was a reference to the three coal slag heaps that had once occupied the site before.