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2001 Bmw 1100 Rt on 2040-motos

$3,300
YearYear:2001 MileageMileage:62000
Location:

Hobbs, New Mexico

Hobbs, NM
QR code
2001 BMW 1100 Rt , $3,300, image 1

BMW Other photos

2001 BMW 1100 Rt , $3,300, image 2 2001 BMW 1100 Rt , $3,300, image 3 2001 BMW 1100 Rt , $3,300, image 4

BMW Other tech info

TypeType:Touring PhonePhone:(575) 318-3292

BMW Other description

2001 BMW 1100 Rt , front tire new !!! rear tire 40% new battery and starter battery charger included last maintenance in March 2012 Please contact: peter_sticher@web.de 575-3183292 $3,300.00 5753183292

Moto blog

EICMA 2013: 2014 BMW R1200RT First Impressions Video

Tue, 05 Nov 2013

The R1200RT has gone liquid cooled, inheriting the new boxer engine with BMW’s “precision cooling” technology from the new R1200GS. But that’s not all that’s changed on the RT as Editor-in-Chief Kevin Duke points out in the video below from the 2013 EICMA show floor. With a new K1600GT-inspired look, more power and a number of factory-installed options, one of our favorite touring bikes is better than ever.   Get the Flash Player to see this player.

2023 BMW R NineT 100 Years and R 18 100 Years Editions First Look

Thu, 15 Dec 2022

A hundred years of BMW Motorrad BMW Motorrad is commemorating its 100th anniversary with the release of Special Heritage editions of the R nineT and R18. BMW will produce 1,923 units of each model, recognizing the debut of the brand’s first motorcycle, the R 32, in September 1923 at the German Motor Show in Berlin. Both models come with a number of chrome and Option 719 parts, including some milled pieces and several paint-on-chrome surfaces.

When is a 500 Not a 500? – Question of the Day

Wed, 24 Apr 2024

When it's a 451, d'uh. In our last Question of the Day, we asked about some of the more… questionable names given to motorcycles (Hondas seemed to come up fairly often in the replies, which is both interesting and somehow not surprising.) I mentioned how it’s generally safer for a manufacturer to stick to a combination of letters and numbers. While that’s generally true, apart from the occasionally comical practice of tackling on another “R” to make a model sound sportier ( looking at you again, Honda), it does bring the focus onto yet another common pet peeve: motorcycles with misleading numbers in the name.