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2020 Indian Motorcycle® Chieftain® Dark Horse® on 2040-motos

US $22,999.00
YearYear:2020 MileageMileage:0 ColorColor: Tan
Location:

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2020 Indian Motorcycle® Chieftain® Dark Horse®, US $22,999.00, image 1

Indian Chieftain® photos

2020 Indian Motorcycle® Chieftain® Dark Horse®, US $22,999.00, image 2 2020 Indian Motorcycle® Chieftain® Dark Horse®, US $22,999.00, image 3 2020 Indian Motorcycle® Chieftain® Dark Horse®, US $22,999.00, image 4 2020 Indian Motorcycle® Chieftain® Dark Horse®, US $22,999.00, image 5 2020 Indian Motorcycle® Chieftain® Dark Horse®, US $22,999.00, image 6 2020 Indian Motorcycle® Chieftain® Dark Horse®, US $22,999.00, image 7

Indian Chieftain® tech info

WarrantyWarranty:Unspecified For Sale ByFor Sale By:Dealer

Indian Chieftain® description

Moto blog

Two Recall Campaigns for 2009-2011 Indian Motorcycles

Mon, 11 Jul 2011

Polaris issued two separate recalls for 2009-2011 Indian motorcycles, one for a problem with the headlight and another with the kickstand. According to documents released by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the kickstands on 2009-2011 Indian motorcycles may not fold up and to the rear if the motorcycle is moving forward with the stand deployed. As a result, the kickstand fails to meet Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No.

Indian Announces Removal of Brake Throttle Override

Sat, 02 Aug 2014

Today, Indian Motorcycle Product Director, Gary Gray, told us that, because of feedback from journalists and the riding public, effective immediately, the Brake Throttle Override (BTO) system developed to prevent unintended acceleration in its ride-by-wire throttle system will not be installed on any of the 2015 Indian models. Additionally, owners of a current Indian who wish to have the BTO disabled on their motorcycle can simply take it to an Indian dealer to have its ECU flashed with the new software. Although the BTO has been present on all Indian models since their release last year, we first noticed its effects on a group ride at the Roadmaster’s introduction.

Indian Pursuit and Indian Guardian Trademarks

Wed, 20 May 2020

New models could be offshoots of the Indian Challenger Indian has filed trademark applications for two potential model names: “Indian Pursuit” and “Indian Guardian“. The two trademark applications, initially filed with the USPTO and then with the Australian intellectual property office, were registered for use on “Motorcycles and structural parts therefor.” As usual, the trademark applications don’t offer many details leaving us to speculate on what the names will be used for. The Indian Pursuit sounds like a police vehicle, and Guardian has a similar vibe to it.