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2005 Suzuki Gsxr750 750 on 2040-motos

$2,800
YearYear:2005 MileageMileage:0
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2005 Suzuki GSXR750 750 , $2,800, image 1

Suzuki GS photos

2005 Suzuki GSXR750 750 , $2,800, image 2 2005 Suzuki GSXR750 750 , $2,800, image 3 2005 Suzuki GSXR750 750 , $2,800, image 4 2005 Suzuki GSXR750 750 , $2,800, image 5 2005 Suzuki GSXR750 750 , $2,800, image 6 2005 Suzuki GSXR750 750 , $2,800, image 7

Suzuki GS tech info

TypeType:Sportbike PhonePhone:(877) 234-9645

Suzuki GS description

CLEAR TITLE SEE PICTURES AND VIDEOS OF ALL THE BIKES STILL LEFT ON SALE RIGHT NOW GO TO RACERSEDGE411. COM ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________ CBR600RR GSXR 600 750 GSXR600 R6 ZX7 ZX7R ZX6 ZX6R NINJA

Moto blog

Hopkins Breaks Hand in Testing Crash – Yes, THAT Hand

Mon, 13 Feb 2012

Crescent Fixi Suzuki racer John Hopkins has broken a bone in his right hand during the first day of testing at Australia’s Phillip Island circuit. The injury was to the same hand Hopkins injured last season that eventually led to the amputation of the tip of his ring finger. Hopkins high-sided entering a corner riding a 2011-spec Suzuki GSX-R1000 (the 2012 superbike was not yet ready).

Suzuki to Close Spanish Motorcycle Factory

Tue, 06 Nov 2012

The digital ink is still wet on news of American Suzuki declaring bankruptcy and shutting down its car business to focus on powersports and marine products, and now there’s more bad news for the Japanese manufacturer. Suzuki announced it will close its motorcycle factory in Gijón, Spain, in March, 2013, shutting the company’s sole European production plant. The factory has been producing motorcycles and scooters for Suzuki since 1984, with the manufacturer taking 100% ownership of the factory.

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.