Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2006 Yamaha Virago 250 on 2040-motos

$2,200
YearYear:2006 MileageMileage:5000
Location:

San Diego, California

San Diego, CA
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2006 Yamaha Virago 250 , $2,200, image 1

Yamaha Virago photos

2006 Yamaha Virago 250 , $2,200, image 2 2006 Yamaha Virago 250 , $2,200, image 3

Yamaha Virago tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:(619) 534-2215

Yamaha Virago description

2006 Yamaha Virago 250, Very Clean, runs great, good starter bike and daily commuter. Custom side bags. call 619-534-2215 for more information. $2,200.00 6195342215

Moto blog

Yamaha Reports Q3 2012 Results

Tue, 06 Nov 2012

Yamaha‘s North American sales were up over the first nine months of 2012, representing the lone bright spot in the company’s third quarter report. North American consumers purchased 51,000 Yamaha motorcycles (including scooters and ATVs), for a 13.3% increase from the 45,000 units sold in the opening nine months of 2011. North American sales translated into 30.7 million yen (US$382 million) in revenue for Yamaha, a 15.0% increase from the first three quarters of 2011.

Giacomo Agostini Celebrates 70th Birthday with a New 2012 Yamaha T-Max

Mon, 18 Jun 2012

Racing legend Giacomo Agostini celebrated his 70th birthday at the British Grand Prix at Silverstone this weekend, where he was celebrated by Yamaha. “Ago”, who holds the all-time record for Grand Prix wins (122) and Grand Prix World Championships (15), was feted in a ceremony that also included current Yamaha riders Jorge Lorenzo and Ben Spies as well as retired racers Loris Capirossi, Phil Read, John Cooper, Angel Nieto, Franco Uncini and Jim Redman, as well as MotoGP promoter Carmelo Ezpeleta and Yamaha Classic Racing Team principal Ferry Brouwer. Yamaha presented Agostini with a one-off T-Max scooter with livery inspired by his 1975 championship-winning YZR500 OW23.

BSB 2012; Mystic Mac investigates

Tue, 03 Jan 2012

In my opinion, the smartest move in the BSB off season has to be Michael Laverty moving from Swan Yamaha to HM Plant Honda. With a ban on electronics for 2012, and in particular traction control, WFR's Graham Gowland has already proved to Laverty how competitive an EVO spec Fireblade can be - so I’m tipping both these riders to be bang on the money at the Brands Hatch season opener in April. Unlike BMW, Kawasaki and Yamaha, Honda have deliberately developed their road-going Superbike without electronics to give a user friendly feel with good mechanical traction, so it’ll be interesting to see how the opposition copes with their high-tech trickery stripped off.