Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2004 Yamaha Yzf-r on 2040-motos

US $8,200.00
YearYear:2004 MileageMileage:1
Location:

Avenel, New Jersey, United States

Avenel, New Jersey, United States
QR code
2004 Yamaha YZF-R, US $8,200.00, image 1

Yamaha YZF-R photos

2004 Yamaha YZF-R, US $8,200.00, image 2 2004 Yamaha YZF-R, US $8,200.00, image 3 2004 Yamaha YZF-R, US $8,200.00, image 4 2004 Yamaha YZF-R, US $8,200.00, image 5 2004 Yamaha YZF-R, US $8,200.00, image 6

Yamaha YZF-R tech info

For Sale ByFor Sale By:Private Seller

Yamaha YZF-R description

2004 yamaha r1 wit 1000 miles , lots off chrome , bike its like brand new 

Moto blog

Build your own Yamaha VMax

Tue, 15 Jun 2010

For the origami fans out there, Yamaha have a printable Paper Craft version of their VMax motorcycle (or should that be PMax - P for paper obviously) Download each of the five individual PDF pages and get folding. Might want to stock up on printer ink and A4 paper though as it looks like it will be a frustrating model. As it looks fairly impossible and time consuming I'm putting the challenge out for anyone to go out and complete the paper model themself.

Rossi Finishes Second to World Champion Loeb at Monza Rally Show

Mon, 28 Nov 2011

Valentino Rossi is back on the podium. Not a MotoGP podium, mind, but for a rally car race at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza in Italy. (Post updated with video.) Driving a Ford Fiesta RS with co-driver Carlo Cassina, Rossi won two of nine stages and finished second overall to eight-time World Rally Car Champion Sebastien Loeb at the 2011 Monza Rally Show.

Magneti Marelli to Supply Electronics System to MotoGP Teams

Wed, 26 Sep 2012

It’s no secret that promoter Dorna Motorsports has been trying to push a standardized electronics control unit for teams in the MotoGP World Championship. The lack of a top-tier electronics package has been one of the biggest challenges faced by MotoGP’s claiming rule teams, and a spec ECU would narrow the gap between the CRT bikes and the factory prototypes. The manufacturers competing in the series, Honda, Ducati and Yamaha, understandably are resistant to the idea considering the effort they’ve put in to develop their electronics systems.