Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2006 Honda Vtx1300r (vt1300r) on 2040-motos

$6,299
YearYear:2006 MileageMileage:13006 ColorColor: Candy Black Cherry
Location:

Crossville, Tennessee

Crossville, TN
QR code
2006 Honda VTX1300R (VT1300R) , $6,299, image 1

Honda VTX photos

2006 Honda VTX1300R (VT1300R) , $6,299, image 2 2006 Honda VTX1300R (VT1300R) , $6,299, image 3

Honda VTX tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:(866) 225-5890

Honda VTX description

2006 Honda VTX1300R (VT1300R), Beautiful Bike - The VTX1300R has everything you would expect in a retro motorcycle. Cast wheels. Dual exhaust with custom-looking short pipes. And crisp tank-mounted instruments and gauges. Not to mention an impressive 1312cc V-twin making it sound as good as it looks.

Moto blog

MotoGP Lifts Rookie Rule, Caps Factory Prototype Entries and Adjusts Other Regulations

Fri, 29 Jun 2012

As expected, MotoGP organizers have officially lifted the rule barring rookies from racing for factory teams, but the Grand Prix Commission also tweaked some other regulations including a cap on factory prototype machines. We’ve discussed the lifting of the rookie rule already, with the main impetus being to allow a manufacturer such as Honda to sign up-and-coming Moto2 star Marc Marquez when he is expected to move up to the premiere class next season. As of Jan.

2013 European Junior Cup to Use Honda CBR500R

Wed, 14 Nov 2012

As expected, Honda announced its new CBR500R sportbike will be featured in the 2013 European Junior Cup, a single-spec racing series that competes at European rounds of the World Superbike Championship. We saw this coming when Honda announced it would supply an all new sportbike for the European Junior Cup, but the news wasn’t official until after Honda unveiled the CBR500R alongside its siblings the CB500F and CB500X at the 2012 EICMA Show. Plus this also gives us an excuse to run a 39-picture gallery of the new CBR500R after the jump.

The future. But we can't have it

Thu, 10 Nov 2011

It's no secret that we motorcyclists are getting older. We're ageing because less people are passing their bike test each year (roughly 30,000 last year compared to 50,000 for the 10 years before the new two-part test) and so not only is the pool not growing it's not even being replenished and so the average age isn't being diluted down by yoof. When the going gets tough in any situation, you really get to see who's got their shit-sorted and who's light enough on their feet to adapt to change.