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2004 Yamaha Roadstar Midnight on 2040-motos

$6,000
YearYear:2004 MileageMileage:1632 ColorColor: Black
Location:

Auburn, Washington

Auburn, WA
QR code
2004 Yamaha Roadstar MIDNIGHT , $6,000, image 1

Yamaha Other photos

2004 Yamaha Roadstar MIDNIGHT , $6,000, image 2 2004 Yamaha Roadstar MIDNIGHT , $6,000, image 3 2004 Yamaha Roadstar MIDNIGHT , $6,000, image 4 2004 Yamaha Roadstar MIDNIGHT , $6,000, image 5 2004 Yamaha Roadstar MIDNIGHT , $6,000, image 6

Yamaha Other tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:(253) 261-7412

Yamaha Other description

2004 Yamaha Roadstar MIDNIGHT, black and chrome, great condition, low mileage , floor boards, new battery and sissy bar. owners manual included $6,000.00 2532617412

Moto blog

Yamaha Donates Star Bolt To True American Heroes Auction Hosted By Kenny Roberts

Tue, 06 May 2014

In support of the Yamaha True American Heroes Weekend–the fundraising event taking place this weekend at Kenny Roberts’ legendary ranch in Modesto, California–Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A., has donated a 2014 Star Bolt to the Benefit Auction that is a featured event during the weekend. The announcement was made by Bob Starr, General Manager of Communications for Yamaha’s Motorsports Group. Our own Kevin Duke made it out to the event in 2012, where he had the chance to ride with some of the sport’s biggest legends.

Villopoto, Roczen Dominate AMA Supercross in Oakland

Mon, 28 Jan 2013

Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Ryan Villopoto dominated the 450SX Class on Saturday night in front of a record crowd in Oakland, CA.   In front of a record crowd of 46,896, Monster Energy Kawasaki’s Ryan Villopoto raced to his second-consecutive AMA Supercross victory, an FIM World Championship, 450SX Class Main Event win at O.co Coliseum in Oakland, CA on Saturday night. Rockstar Energy Racing’s Davi Millsaps finished in second, and Red Bull KTM’s Ryan Dungey followed in third.

John Reynolds: Riding Masterclass

Fri, 17 Dec 2010

When I first started racing about a thousand years ago, my local stomping ground was a place called Three Sisters near Wigan.  It wasn’t glamorous but it was brilliant. An hour from home and with about a million corners crammed into just a km of tarmac. The Three Sisters was a reference to the three coal slag heaps that had once occupied the site before.