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2003 Suzuki Mc on 2040-motos

US $5,800.00
YearYear:2003 MileageMileage:36 ColorColor: Black
Location:

Rosamond, California, United States

Rosamond, California, United States
QR code
2003 Suzuki MC, US $5,800.00, image 1

Suzuki MC photos

2003 Suzuki MC, US $5,800.00, image 2 2003 Suzuki MC, US $5,800.00, image 3 2003 Suzuki MC, US $5,800.00, image 4 2003 Suzuki MC, US $5,800.00, image 5 2003 Suzuki MC, US $5,800.00, image 6 2003 Suzuki MC, US $5,800.00, image 7

Suzuki MC tech info

For Sale ByFor Sale By:Private Seller TypeType:Sport Bike

Suzuki MC description

Suzuki TL1000 - 2003 - Black

I'm selling my fuel injected TL1000 is really good condition it has yoshimura full race twin exhaust

clean title everything works perfectly and it has a full rebuild motor and a full fresh paint job with yellow words.

Moto blog

2013 AMA Supercross Salt Lake City Race Report

Mon, 29 Apr 2013

Monster Energy Kawasaki racer Ryan Villopoto demonstrated once again he is a the top of his sport, clinching his third-consecutive AMA Supercross championship. Villopoto cemented his title with a win in front of 43,149 fans at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Utah, his ninth main event victory of the season and 33rd in his career. Though he led every lap, Villopoto didn’t have as easy a time in Salt Lake City as he has had in some races this season.

2014 AMA Supercross – Anaheim 2 Results

Mon, 20 Jan 2014

Chad Reed earned his first AMA Supercross win in nearly two years with a hard-fought battle in the second round of three rounds at Angel Stadium in Anaheim, Calif. The win was the 42nd career victory for the TwoTwo Motorsports Kawasaki rider, but the first since Jan. 21, 2012, in Los Angeles.

MotoGP to Re-Visit Rookie Rule

Tue, 19 Jun 2012

MotoGP organizers are re-opening discussion for the series’ rookie rule which prevents new riders from entering the series with factory teams. Introduced following the 2009 MotoGP season, the rule was designed to give satellite teams the chance to field young up-and-coming talents  they otherwise wouldn’t have been able to sign. The theory was the rule would protect the satellite teams and spread out the talent pool.