Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2009 Yamaha Vstar 650 Cruiser on 2040-motos

US $4,495.00
YearYear:2009 MileageMileage:2 ColorColor: SILVER
Location:

Durham, North Carolina, US

Durham, NC, US
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2009 Yamaha VSTAR 650  Cruiser , US $4,495.00, image 1

Yamaha Other photos

2009 Yamaha VSTAR 650  Cruiser , US $4,495.00, image 2

Yamaha Other tech info

TypeType:Cruiser Stock NumberStock Number:NCU33895 PhonePhone:8884104780

Yamaha Other description

Entry Level Cruiser Vtwin. Excellent condition local owner. Yamaha classic cruiser.

Moto blog

Yamalube Motor Oil Video is Educational, British, and Brainwashing

Tue, 16 Jun 2009

Yamaha Motor Europe have just posted a new video up on Youtube about their Yamalube motor oil and why you should use it on your Yamaha products.  They are pretty damn convincing or very good at brainwashing! The video is pretty educational, explaining how motorcycle engines and car engines are very different, what a motorcycle engine really needs, and why Yamalube is very well suited for the job. Various graphs, charts, shots of scientists making oil, and the accented British narrator have further convinced me that I need to get Yamalube and perhaps even be adding it into my morning bowl of cereal.

Fully Modified Yamaha ATV Giveaway is Easy and Educational!

Wed, 06 May 2009

Our sister site, ATV.com, has started up a contest to give away a Fully Modified Yamaha Raptor 250.  The 3 easy steps are: Signing up for the contest Follow along on ATV.com with the articles on the modified build of the Raptor 250 Take a survey at the end of it all to enter and win. I did some research into the Raptor 250 to see what it’s all about: BASE MSRP is $4,499.00 but the one they are giving away is fully modified AND you get riding gear! You, the readers, gave it 4 1/2 and 5 star ratings in everything.

Air time Kenny Roberts-style

Thu, 25 Nov 2010

I can’t get enough of pictures that capture a specific, hard to define moment; the successful encapsulation of the absolute balls-to-the-wall, life or death commitment that riding a motorbike as fast as possible involves.  We all know. We’ve all been there – even if it’s only a once-in-a-lifetime moment. Maybe (for us mere mortals) it’s that rapidly, yet unexpectedly, tightening left-hand bend with a shitty, mud-covered veneer just at the apex.