Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

Suzuki Suzuki Gsx-r600 Yoshimura Ltd Edition Sportbike on 2040-motos

US $13,999.00
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:0
Location:

San Diego, California, US

San Diego, CA, US
QR code
 Suzuki Suzuki Gsx-R600 Yoshimura Ltd Edition  Sportbike , US $13,999.00, image 1

Suzuki Other photos

 Suzuki Suzuki Gsx-R600 Yoshimura Ltd Edition  Sportbike , US $13,999.00, image 2

Suzuki Other tech info

TypeType:Sportbike PhonePhone:8667154515

Suzuki Other description

Suzuki Suzuki Gsx-R600 Yoshimura Ltd Edition, The Suzuki GSX-R600 absolutely dominated its class in 2011. It won the AMA Pro Daytona SportBike Championship and the overall AMA Pro SuperSport Championship, proving once again that it's a class-leading sport bike worthy f its race-winning GSX-R heritage.

Moto blog

Inside Look at the 2011 Suzuki GSX-R600 [video]

Thu, 23 Dec 2010

Suzuki boasts that the GSX-R600 has long been America’s top selling sportbike, so when it undergoes a major overhaul everybody takes notice. For 2011 the GSX-R600 underwent a plethora of big changes, all of which resulted in a weight loss of about 20 pounds. Helping this middleweight supersport shed pounds is a new frame, a 41mm Show Big Piston Fork, radially mounted Brembo monoblock brake calipers, as well as smaller axles and wheel hubs.

Suzuki Requests Invite to Official 2013 MotoGP Tests

Tue, 11 Dec 2012

When Suzuki pulled out of MotoGP racing a year ago, the manufacturer said it hoped to return by the 2014 season. In the time since suspending its MotoGP program, Suzuki has been showing signs it is on track for a 2014 return. Work on Suzuki’s 1000cc MotoGP project is apparently proceeding as planned, with the manufacturer reportedly ready to join official testing during the upcoming season.

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.