Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1986 Honda Gold Wing 1200 on 2040-motos

$2,195
YearYear:1986 MileageMileage:122454
Location:

Hastings, Nebraska

Hastings, NE
QR code
1986 Honda Gold Wing 1200 , $2,195, image 1

Honda Gold Wing photos

1986 Honda Gold Wing 1200 , $2,195, image 2 1986 Honda Gold Wing 1200 , $2,195, image 3

Honda Gold Wing tech info

TypeType:Touring

Honda Gold Wing description

1986 Honda Gold Wing 1200, Well maintained (have service records) Gold Wing 1200 Aspencade runs great and has 122,454 miles. Fully serviced 500 miles ago and new O Rings and Seals in the cooling system January 2013. New (Elite-3) tires (1,100 miles on rear & 4,000 on front; last set of tires ran 20,000 + miles before wearing out), new battery (@122,400 miles), new rear shocks (not air shocks 1,100 miles ago). Equipped with driving lights, driver's back rest, highway boards, luggage rack, AM/FM radio, intercom system, and non working CB. Any questions call Ron at 520-483-5517 $2,195.00

Moto blog

Honda to Introduce Larger “New Concept” Models for North America

Fri, 21 Sep 2012

Honda announced it is following up on its NC700 series with a new large-sized model, with sales expected to begin in North America in 2013. Honda first announced plans for its NC700 models in at the 2010 EICMA show with a concept it called the “New Mid“, so it really shouldn’t be a surprise Honda would follow it up with a “New Large” series. The new models were announced in a presentation by Honda Chief Executive Officer Takanobu Ito alongside plans to develop a new MotoGP-derived sportbike.

2012 Honda NSF250R Race Bike Coming to America

Wed, 03 Aug 2011

American Honda announced it is bringing the new 2012 HRC NSF250R Moto3-spec race bike to the U.S. Though it was developed primarily for competition in the Moto3 World Championship, the 249cc Honda NSF250R will be legal for some racing classes in the U.S. including in USGPRU and WERA.

San Francisco Motor Cops Can Chase You Up Stairs + Video

Thu, 13 Mar 2014

Let’s get one thing out of the way: trying to evade the police is dumb. One way or another you’re going to lose. And if you’re thinking of evading a San Francisco motor cop, or a law enforcement officer trained by them, by heading off the beaten path or up a flight of stairs, think again.