Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2004 Honda Aero Lots Of Chrome, 12000 Low Miles New Tires on 2040-motos

US $3,500.00
YearYear:2004 MileageMileage:12000 ColorColor: Blue/Black
Location:

Murfreesboro, Tennessee, US

Murfreesboro, Tennessee, US
QR code
2004 Honda Aero Lots of chrome, 12000 Low miles New tires, US $3,500.00, image 1

Honda Shadow photos

2004 Honda Aero Lots of chrome, 12000 Low miles New tires, US $3,500.00, image 2 2004 Honda Aero Lots of chrome, 12000 Low miles New tires, US $3,500.00, image 3 2004 Honda Aero Lots of chrome, 12000 Low miles New tires, US $3,500.00, image 4 2004 Honda Aero Lots of chrome, 12000 Low miles New tires, US $3,500.00, image 5 2004 Honda Aero Lots of chrome, 12000 Low miles New tires, US $3,500.00, image 6

Honda Shadow tech info

TypeType:Cruiser WarrantyWarranty:Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty For Sale ByFor Sale By:Private Seller VINVIN:JH2RC50324MOOO805

Honda Shadow description

Looks and runs like new, been in shop one time for oil change and 3000 mile maintenance. has Cobra exhaust pipes very nice sound. Lots of chrome with new tires. Never had any problems what so ever.  I'm selling this bike because I bought a !300 VTX  have no room for both.


Thank's for looking,

Any question call or text me (615) 785.3969

Moto blog

Do you remember Honda's EVO Blade?

Thu, 05 May 2011

I can remember exactly where I was when I first saw Honda's TT100 Evolution Fireblade: at the dinner table, reading MCN as a 16-year old lad and being told to put the paper down and get on with my dinner! I'm sure you appreciate why the lamb chops had to wait.. It was created by Honda to celebrate their 100th TT victory, however I'm pretty sure Honda had another agenda: to homologate it so they could put it up against the mighty new Yamaha R1 at the TT.

NEW: Yoshimura ends cans for Honda CB1000R

Wed, 10 Feb 2010

LEGENDARY JAPANESE tuning house Yoshimura has designed a series of slip-on performance end cans for Honda’s naked CB1000R.The brand new EEC-approved cans bolt straight onto the bike's exiting pipework and feature a stainless steel end cone and integral lower Yoshimura logoed cat-converter heat shield. Even with the dB-Killer baffle in place peak power is improved, as is mid-range torque with further performance gains available if the baffle is removed.A full race mid-pipe, extracting yet more power is on the way and will be available later in the year. The Yoshimura CB1000R Slip-On, including the supplied heat shield, is over 4kgs lighter than the OE item, the Carbon sleeve, even more so at just 4.65kg.Part Number/Sleeve Type/Weight/RRP including VAT1A0-480-5B50         Stainless Steel           2.61kg                       £712.711A0-480-5B80          Titanium                    2.45kg                        £770.181A0-480-5B80B         Titan Blue                 2.45kg                        £850.651A0-480-5B90          Carbon                      2.35kg                        £896.631A0-480-5B20          Metal Magic               2.61kg                        £793.17         Noise Output (decibels)Standard end can: 94dB    @ 5,000rpmYoshimura EEC Slip-On:  94.5dB @ 5,000rpm(with db-killer in place)

MotoGP should return to Suzuka

Thu, 14 Jul 2011

Suzuka was always one of the great circuits; unfortunately the Japanese track was dropped following the tragic death of Daijiro Kato in 2003 as the course was deemed too tight and dangerous for the rapid four-strokes. Owned by Honda, Suzuka is a magical place combining arching S-bends from the start of the lap, high-speed in the middle and finished off with the technical and oft racing deciding final chicane, the location of many fantastic last lap battles. However the death of Kato, and Honda’s major hope of a Japanese champion, placed a dark cloud over the 5.807 kilometres of tarmac.