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2001 Suzuki Gsxr 750 750 Sportbike on 2040-motos

US $5,395.00
YearYear:2001 MileageMileage:7
Location:

Garner, North Carolina, US

Garner, NC, US
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2001 Suzuki GSXR 750 750 Sportbike , US $5,395.00, image 1

Suzuki GS photos

2001 Suzuki GSXR 750 750 Sportbike , US $5,395.00, image 2 2001 Suzuki GSXR 750 750 Sportbike , US $5,395.00, image 3 2001 Suzuki GSXR 750 750 Sportbike , US $5,395.00, image 4

Suzuki GS tech info

TypeType:Sportbike PhonePhone:8666780720

Suzuki GS description

2001 Suzuki GSXR 750, Black & Red & Silver paint. Tinted windscreen. Chrome wheels!Lowered. NEW Leo Vinci exhaust. NEW LED undertail kit.7K miles.

Moto blog

Motorcyclist’s Neck Cut after Hitting Kite Wire Strung Across Road

Mon, 29 Aug 2011

27-year-old Humayun Kobir is recovering in a Toronto hospital after receiving a serious laceration to his neck after riding into a line of wire strung across an intersection. According to local reports, Kobir felt a sharp pain in his neck after riding through an intersection on his Suzuki GSX-R on Aug. 27, his 27th birthday.

2014 AMA Supercross – Anaheim 3 Results

Mon, 03 Feb 2014

Chad Reed tasted victory for the second time in three weeks at Angel Stadium in Anaheim, Calif., leading all 20 laps and fending off a last-lap challenge from rookie upstart Ken Roczen. Reed, who also won the Jan. 18 round in the second of three Anaheim races, now trails fellow Kawasaki rider Ryan Villopoto by just two points in the 2014 AMA Supercross championship race.

1974: Onboard an MV racer with Phil Read

Fri, 19 Feb 2010

ANOTHER CRACKING BIT of vintage racing footage, this time featuring multiple motorcycle world champion Phil Read on the awesome-sounding MV Agusta 500-4.The footage is from the 1974 movie 'The Iron Horse' made by Frenchman Pierre-William Glenn.Read’s 1974 500cc World Championship victory was the last year a four-stroke won the world title before the advent of the MotoGP class in 2002. Giacomo Agostini won the crown from Yamaha in 1975, followed by Suzuki-mounted Barry Sheene in '76 and '77. The footage is bloody good, considering the camera technology of the day.