Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1972 Yamaha 200 Electric on 2040-motos

$1,500
YearYear:1972 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Brooksville, Florida

Brooksville, FL
QR code
1972 Yamaha 200 Electric , $1,500, image 1

Yamaha Other photos

1972 Yamaha 200 Electric , $1,500, image 2

Yamaha Other tech info

TypeType:Classic / Vintage PhonePhone:(813) 833-0189

Yamaha Other description

1972 Yamaha 200 Electric , 1972 Yamaha 200 with Electric Start. 2 Stroke Engine. Starts right up, runs good. Contact Greg at 813-833-0189 $1,500.00 8138330189

Moto blog

Yamaha TTX 115i Adventure Scooter Concept Unveiled in Thailand

Wed, 28 Mar 2012

The trendiest segment in the industry at the moment is the adventure touring motorcycle. Spearheaded by the top-selling BMW R1200GS, the segment has seen a flood of imitators such as the Triumph Tiger Explorer, Yamaha Super Ténéré and the Honda Crosstourer. A recent report from the Motorcycle Industry Council found that scooter sales are also on the rise in the U.S., spurred on by soaring gas prices.

Stoner explains the tank slapper

Mon, 03 Oct 2011

Casey Stoner looked all set to win at Motegi, after translating his pole position into an early race-lead. But coming over the crest on the back straight his bike momentarily lost control in a tank slapper. Regaining composure the championship leader was forced to pump his brakes to get the pads back in place, with the rear-wheel bouncing in the air he ran out of time and space to make the 90 degree right hander and was forced to run into the gravel.

Yamaha Files Trademark Application for FJ-09

Mon, 03 Mar 2014

Yamaha‘s next three-cylinder motorcycle may be a sport-tourer, if a recently-filed trademark application is any indication. The Tuning Fork brand filed a trademark application with the United States Patent and Trademark Office for the name “FJ-09” as it applies to “Motorcycles, scooters, three-wheeled scooters and structural parts for all the aforesaid goods.” Following Yamaha’s usual naming conventions, the signs indicate the trademark will be for a new sport-touring model using the same Triple as the FZ-09. Yamaha has made it clear it plans to introduce more three-cylinder engines following the FZ-09 (or MT-09, as it is known in Europe.) Previously-filed trademark applications for the YZF-R3 and R3 names raised speculation the next triple would be a sportbike, but as per Yamaha’s usual naming convention, the “3″ in R3 is likelier to refer to the engine displacement rather than the number of cylinders.