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2013 Yamaha V Star 950 Tourer 950 Tourer on 2040-motos

$9,690
YearYear:2013 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Davie, Florida

Davie, FL
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2013 Yamaha V STAR 950 TOURER 950 TOURER , $9,690, image 1

Yamaha V Star photos

2013 Yamaha V STAR 950 TOURER 950 TOURER , $9,690, image 2 2013 Yamaha V STAR 950 TOURER 950 TOURER , $9,690, image 3 2013 Yamaha V STAR 950 TOURER 950 TOURER , $9,690, image 4 2013 Yamaha V STAR 950 TOURER 950 TOURER , $9,690, image 5 2013 Yamaha V STAR 950 TOURER 950 TOURER , $9,690, image 6 2013 Yamaha V STAR 950 TOURER 950 TOURER , $9,690, image 7

Yamaha V Star tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:(888) 366-3990

Yamaha V Star description

2013 YAMAHA V STAR 950 TOURER, YOU'RE FREE TO GO. Fully equipped with windshield, passenger backrest and leather-wrapped hard sidebags, the moment you pull your V Star 950 onto the on-ramp, the highway is yours.

Moto blog

2014 Yamaha MT-09 Street Tracker Revealed

Wed, 11 Jun 2014

Yamaha Motor Europe has announced another variant on the MT-09 platform (FZ-09 for us in North America). Following the original model and the Street Rally comes the new Yamaha MT-09 Street Tracker. Unfortunately it looks like the Street Tracker will be a special edition variant only available in Europe, though many of the parts may be available in Yamaha’s part catalog.

Day 11 Dakar 2014: Coma Wins, Extends Overall Lead

Thu, 16 Jan 2014

Day 11 marked the longest stage to date of the Dakar Rally, as the competitors tackled the 605km (376 miles) special stage, covering a variety of terrain, hard ground, mountains, plus 120km (75 miles) of sand and dunes in the Copiapo area. Despite this, and a fall at the beginning of the stage, Marc Coma again demonstrated his status as boss of the Dakar 2014, by picking up his third victory of the year, further reinforcing his position at the top of the general standings. Five-time Dakar winner Cyril Depres opened the piste for 400km before dropping slightly to finish just 02:31 behind Marc Coma in first.

Filling a void with an RD350LC

Mon, 29 Jul 2013

Last winter I managed to fill a void in my life when I stumbled on a very reasonably priced Yamaha RD350LC.  It was a tad scruffy, had the wrong exhausts but most importantly it was blue and white with all numbers matching.  I had the usual euphoria when the deal was done but I underestimated how much pleasure this particular purchase would continue to deliver another eight months down the line. The difference with this old bike is, instead of just taking it for the occasional ride I was talked into doing a full nut and bolt restoration.  Having never taking a bike apart completely before, initially it was quite daunting but I soon found the RD is easy to work on so it turned into a truly satisfying experience.  I’ve had some help from LC enthusiasts with the rebuild, however, the stripping, sourcing and organising was a total labour of love.  And call me sad but it has made me bond with this bike like no other which only adds to the feel good factor.  The bike cost £1800 and I’ve spent around £1000 but I reckon my mint Elsie is now worth a fair bit more.   I fancy rejuvenating a Fizzy  next time but there’s lots of other cheap 70’s and 80’s winter projects  out there so why not have a go yourself?