2010 Honda Sabre (vt1300cs) on 2040-motos
Honda Other tech info


Honda Other description
2010 Honda Sabre (VT1300CS), $3k in extras!!! - Bad to the bone. What happens when you take the wicked, stripped-down styling cues of our Fury chopper and throw in a large dose of pro-street dragster? Well, you’re looking at it: the all-new Honda Sabre. And trust us, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. Start with the beefy, Fury-derived 1,312 cubic centimeter liquid-cooled, 52-degree V-twin, featuring Programmed Fuel Injection (PGM-FI) and performance as muscular as it is seamless. Smooth, maintenance-free shaft final drive merely makes it that much better. And then, of course, there’s the look—short, sporty fenders, all-black frame, and a raked-out fork that screams, "You want some of this?" Make room, Main Street. The all-new Honda Sabre is here.
Honda Other for Sale
2013 honda interstate abs ($12,814)
2010 honda sabre (vt1300cs) ($8,999)
2011 honda interstate ($12,549)
2012 honda stateline (vt1300cr) ($12,150)
2011 honda vt1300 stateline ($9,999)
2013 honda vfr1200f dct (US $)
Moto blog
Honda UNI-CUB: For People Who Enjoy Riding on Moving Trash Cans
Tue, 15 May 2012Remember the Honda U3-X? Unveiled in 2009, the U3-X was Honda‘s personal mobility device concept, essentially a self-balancing electronic unicycle that can move in any direction by simply leaning. Honda has created an updated version it calls the UNI-CUB.
New MotoGP Rules for ECU and Factory Status for 2014
Fri, 26 Jul 2013The Grand Prix Commission released new rules for the 2014 MotoGP season regarding the standard electronic control unit and what constitutes “factory status” for manufacturers. Starting in 2014, the official MotoGP ECU including internal datalogger from Magneti Marelli will become mandatory. Factory teams will be allowed to program their own ECU software while privateers will be required to run the standard software.
MotoGP Lifts Rookie Rule, Caps Factory Prototype Entries and Adjusts Other Regulations
Fri, 29 Jun 2012As 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.
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