Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1974 Yamaha Mx 250 on 2040-motos

US $1,250.00
YearYear:1974 MileageMileage:2000
Location:

ND, US

ND, US
QR code
1974 Yamaha MX 250, US $1,250.00, image 1

Yamaha Other photos

1974 Yamaha MX 250, US $1,250.00, image 2 1974 Yamaha MX 250, US $1,250.00, image 3 1974 Yamaha MX 250, US $1,250.00, image 4 1974 Yamaha MX 250, US $1,250.00, image 5 1974 Yamaha MX 250, US $1,250.00, image 6

Yamaha Other description

For sale is a 1974 Yamaha MX250A. The bike is in excellent shape, runs strong, and has been stored inside. It has an aftermarket plastic kit on it, a period correct Malcolm Smith fuel tank, Skyway Silencer, and vintage (hard to find) Curnutt rear shocks. The top end is also original bore. Everything works and the MX is ready to ride or vintage AHRMA race. 


USA buyers only. 

Moto blog

2015 Yamaha FZ-07 Announced for Canada

Tue, 18 Mar 2014

Yamaha announced it would import the MT-07 to Canada as the 2015 FZ-07. Until now, the twin-cylinder roadster had only been announced for Europe as the MT-07; there is no word the FZ-07 will be offered in the U.S., but the Canadian announcement is a good sign it may be coming soon. Revealed at EICMA, the FZ-07 slots in under the three-cylinder FZ-09 (known as the MT-09 outside of the North America) with a newly-developed liquid-cooled 689cc parallel-Twin engine.

Yamaha U.S. Increasing Club Level Road Racing Contingency

Fri, 21 Feb 2014

The state of road racing in America is hurting, there’s no doubt about that. But at least Yamaha is stepping up to the plate and increasing its contingency program for club level road racers 50% over last year. According to Yamaha, the program is designed to encompass a broad spectrum of road racing series across the U.S., from numerous club-level and regional sprint series events to the AMA Pro Road Racing series, including the addition of the ASRA Team Challenge Endurance Series.

Japan Needs Your Help

Thu, 17 Mar 2011

By now, we’ve all seen pictures and video of the devastation in Japan following the March 11 earthquake and the ensuing tsunamis. Japan, of course, has contributed much to motorcycling, with the Big Four of Honda, Kawasaki, Suzuki and Yamaha, as well as tire manufacturer Bridgestone, helmet companies Arai and Shoei and many other motorcycle industry stalwarts all coming from the Land of the Rising Sun. Jon Bekefy and Greg Hatton, two motorcycle enthusiasts, industry employees  and above all, humanitarians, have set up a fundraising campaign benefiting the Red Cross for relief efforts in Japan.