Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

200-06 Upper Deck Ss Vincent Lecavalier Hockey Card on 2040-motos

US $28
YearYear:2005 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Mississauga, Ontario, Canada

Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
QR code
200-06 Upper Deck SS Vincent Lecavalier Hockey Card, US $28, image 1

Vincent All photos

200-06 Upper Deck SS Vincent Lecavalier Hockey Card, US $28, image 2 200-06 Upper Deck SS Vincent Lecavalier Hockey Card, US $28, image 3

Vincent All description

Check the scan. The card is in great shape. No wrinkles, creases or pen marks. 
Will mail worldwide except north of Edmonton in Canada and Alaska.$3.00 is for Canadian orders all others Please wait for invoice before payment. 
 Will only accept Paypal 
Will offer shipping discounts on multiple orders. 

Moto blog

Classic Japanese Bikes Highlight Bonhams’ Next Auction

Mon, 07 Oct 2013

Bonhams’ annual fall auction, the Classic Motorcycle Mechanics Show, at Stafford County Showground is scheduled for October 20, 2013. Included in the auction is the above pictured 1974 Kawasaki H1-RW 500cc triple. Expected to sell for approximately $96,000 to $112,000, the Japanese works Grand Prix racer is one of only two machines built by the factory for the French Kawasaki importer SIDEMM for use in the 500cc World Championship. The bikes were ridden during the 1974 season by the French endurance racing specialist Christian Léon and French-Canadian Formula 750 star Yvon Duhamel.

Top 10 Album Covers featuring Motorcycles

Tue, 09 Apr 2013

1 of 11Next Last   Motorcycles and rock ‘n’ roll. Ever since The King threw his leg over his ’56 Harley-Davidson and the Black Rebels rolled into Carbonville, the combination of motorcycles and rock have been as combustible as gas and spark. Early moto-rock lived for the most part on the fringes of pop music, in the pomped-up rockabilly of guys like Eddie Cochran and Gene Vincent.

The New Age Of Custom Motorcycles – Video

Mon, 26 Aug 2013

In a world where modern motorcycles are full of computers, sensors and plastic, there are still those folks who yearn for the days of yore. A time when motorcycles were made of metal and you used a wrench — not a keyboard — to make your bike go faster. Careful and skilled craftsmanship, along with independent thinking, is a mark of pride among these men and their machines, some of whom are featured in the video below by Gestalten.tv.