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2004 Harley-davidson Fxst - Softail Standard Cruiser on 2040-motos

US $8,595.00
YearYear:2004 MileageMileage:15 ColorColor: TEAL
Location:

Raleigh, North Carolina, US

Raleigh, NC, US
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2004 Harley-Davidson FXST - Softail Standard  Cruiser , US $8,595.00, image 1

Harley-Davidson Other tech info

TypeType:Cruiser Stock NumberStock Number:U4388A PhonePhone:8885223920

Harley-Davidson Other description

2004 Harley-Davidson FXST - Softail Standard, STOCK PHOTO SHOWN

Moto blog

Five Takeaways from Harley-Davidson's Q4 2022 Results

Thu, 02 Feb 2023

Del Mar delays, Project Fuel and the X350RA Harley-Davidson presented its fourth quarter 2022 financial results, and the results were generally strong, but not without a few hiccups. The quarter was strong, compared to the previous year, with revenues ($1.14 billion vs $1.02 billion), operating income (profit of $4 million vs loss of $7 million) diluted earnings per share ($0.28 versus $0.14) showing increases in 2022. For the year, Harley-Davidson reported revenues of $5.76 billion compared to $5.34 billion in 2021, and an operating income of $909 million compared to $823 million in the previous year.

AMA Honors Zero and Scot Harden with Bessie Stringfield Award

Tue, 04 Mar 2014

The American Motorcyclist Association has bestowed a special recognition award to Zero Motorcycles and its Vice President of Marketing, Hall-of-Famer Scot Harden, for their work in attracting new riders and the positive impact they’ve delivered to mainstream media. Harden (pictured above from our recent Zero FX dirt riding review) and Zero were awarded the AMA Bessie Stringfield Award which recognizes individuals who have been instrumental in bringing emerging markets to motorcycling. The award is named after 2002 AMA Hall of Fame inductee Bessie Stringfield, the first African-American woman to ride solo across the United States and a civilian motorcycle dispatch rider for the army in World War II.

Top 10 Album Covers featuring Motorcycles

Tue, 09 Apr 2013

1 of 11Next Last   Motorcycles and rock ‘n’ roll. Ever since The King threw his leg over his ’56 Harley-Davidson and the Black Rebels rolled into Carbonville, the combination of motorcycles and rock have been as combustible as gas and spark. Early moto-rock lived for the most part on the fringes of pop music, in the pomped-up rockabilly of guys like Eddie Cochran and Gene Vincent.

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