Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

Toronto Trolley Slide: Ttc Witt 2766 Vincent Loop (1964 Original) on 2040-motos

US $100
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada

Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada
QR code
TORONTO TROLLEY SLIDE: TTC WITT 2766 VINCENT LOOP (1964 ORIGINAL), US $100, image 1

Vincent All photos

TORONTO TROLLEY SLIDE: TTC WITT 2766 VINCENT LOOP (1964 ORIGINAL), US $100, image 2 TORONTO TROLLEY SLIDE: TTC WITT 2766 VINCENT LOOP (1964 ORIGINAL), US $100, image 3

Vincent All description

HERE'S AN ORIGINAL EKTACHROME 35mm SLIDE UP FOR BID.  TTC 2766 IS SHOWN AT VINCENT LOOP ON NOV 7, 1964 DURING A FAN TRIP.  THIS ONE IS NOT QUITE SHARP.  THE TINT IS OFF BUT CAN BE CORRECTED AS SHOWN.  GOOD LUCK BIDDING!


 PLEASE WAIT FOR INVOICE!

SHIPPING & HANDLING

CANADIAN S&H  $1.30

U.S. S&H SLIDES $1.75

INTERNATIONAL S&H SLIDES $3.25

 ALL ACCOUNTS MUST BE SETTLED BY PAYPAL ONLY. 

MOST ORDERS SETTLED BY 11 P.M. ET ARE IN THE MAIL BOX BEFORE 9 A.M. THE NEXT BUSINESS DAY

PLEASE NOTE THAT THE WATERMARK IS NOT ON THE ACTUAL SLIDE.

 

Moto blog

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.

Video: 180bhp N2O injected Vincent

Tue, 21 Feb 2012

The Greek God Epithemeus - the name of this three-wheeled, 180bhp Vincent record breaker - was the brother of Prometheus. Epithemeus (meaning afterthought) was the creator of many dangerous, ill thought-out beasts. Unlike his dilligent brother, Epithemeus was a bit of a f**kwit who threw everything at his powerful new animal creations with little thought of the consequences. A perfect name, then.

The World Endurance Championship Starts This Weekend

Wed, 23 Apr 2014

Endurance racing is perhaps the ultimate test of both man and machine. In the past, teams would pace themselves in order to rest both elements enough to make a final push at the end. These days, however, motorcycles are more reliable than ever, and riders train like triathletes.