Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1993 Bmw R100gs Standard on 2040-motos

US $5,700.00
YearYear:1993 MileageMileage:36 ColorColor: Black
Location:

New Philadelphia, Ohio, US

New Philadelphia, OH, US
QR code
1993 BMW R100GS  Standard , US $5,700.00, image 1

BMW Other photos

1993 BMW R100GS  Standard , US $5,700.00, image 2 1993 BMW R100GS  Standard , US $5,700.00, image 3 1993 BMW R100GS  Standard , US $5,700.00, image 4

BMW Other tech info

TypeType:Standard PhonePhone:8667245485

BMW Other description

1993 Bmw R100GS, BMW saddle bags and handguards, classic

Moto blog

BMW Streamlines WSBK Program, Hands Reins to BMW Italia

Mon, 16 Jul 2012

BMW announced it realigning its World Superbike Championship program, with BMW Motorrad Italia taking over as the company’s factory team in 2013. The German manufacturer is currently represented by two teams in the WSBK championship, the BMW Motorrad with Marco Melandri and Leon Haslam and the BMW Motorrad Italia Goldbet team represented by Michel Fabrizio and Ayrton Badovini (there is also a privateer effort of Mark Aitchison riding a BMW S1000RR for the Grillini Progea team.) Next year however, BMW’s Milan-based Italian arm will be responsible for the factory team as well as chassis development and testing. BMW Motorrad itself will focus on developing the power train and electronics.

Provisional 2012 World Superbike Championship Entry List Released

Wed, 18 Jan 2012

The International Motorcycling Federation has released a preliminary entry list for the 2012 World Superbike Championship. The preliminary list includes 24 entries representing six manufacturers: Aprilia, BMW, Ducati, Honda, Kawasaki and Suzuki. Noticeably absent is Yamaha which announced last summer it would pull out of WSBK racing.

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.