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1979 Harley Davidson Electraglide Flh on 2040-motos

$6,000
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:19
Location:

Greensboro, NC

 Greensboro, NC
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1979 Harley Davidson Electraglide Flh, $6,000, image 1

Harley-Davidson Other photos

1979 Harley Davidson Electraglide Flh, $6,000, image 2 1979 Harley Davidson Electraglide Flh, $6,000, image 3 1979 Harley Davidson Electraglide Flh, $6,000, image 4 1979 Harley Davidson Electraglide Flh, $6,000, image 5

Harley-Davidson Other description

THIS IS ONE SWEET BIKE AND IS PRICED TO SELL! 19,000 ORIGINAL MILES. FACTORY STICKERS. CLEAR TITLE WITH MATCHING SERIAL NUMBERS. CONTACT US AT 706-234-5073 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION.

Moto blog

2014 Harley-Davidson Touring Lineup Updated with Project Rushmore Enhancements

Mon, 19 Aug 2013

Harley-Davidson announced a number of updates to its touring models, a cumulative result of a product development effort the company dubs Project Rushmore. The enhancements cover several areas, addressing performance, comfort, style and infotainment needs, and will be implemented across eight 2014 Harley-Davidson Touring models: the Road King, Street Glide, Street Glide Special, Electra Glide Ultra Classic, Electra Glide Ultra Limited, the Tri-Glide Ultra Classic trike and the CVO Road King and CVO Limited. “Project RUSHMORE has been touched by thousands of people, most of them being our customers and our employees,” says Scott Habegger, Harley-Davidson Director of Motorcycle Planning.

Small-Displacement Class Considered for 2015 AMA Pro Racing Season

Wed, 04 Dec 2013

More and more manufacturers are entering the small-displacement sportbike market and AMA Pro Racing has taken notice, opening the possibility of adding a new racing class representing the growing segment. With plans to consolidate the Daytona Sportbike and Supersport classes and the Vance & Hines Harley-Davidson series signed through 2015, a spot will open up on race weekends for another racing class to support the premier Superbike Championship. The logical choice is to introduce a new small-displacement class.

Vespa goes back to the future

Thu, 22 Nov 2012

IT'S been a while coming, but the gorgeous Vespa 946 - EICMA 2012's Best of Show - has finally introduced something to the two-wheeled world that our four-wheeled counterparts have had for a while.  I call this 'reverse retro-futurism' - the art of borrowing lines from models past and imbuing them with a sleek sense of future direction (as opposed to retro-futurism, the pre-1960s design trend of depicting the technology of the future. The term 'decopunk' may come close, but feel free to tell me if there's a more exact term.) It's what the New Mini and the New Beetle (both 1997 and 2012 versions) have done so well, and so successfully: building an all-new model as a tribute to a classic, something that's modern yet already timeless, with a widely-appreciated, inclusive aesthetic (and here we eliminate the Plymouth PT Cruiser from the conversation). The biking world is great at retro, indeed thrives on it, but not so good at adding in a taste of the 21st century.

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