Yamaha Road Star tech info
Yamaha Road Star description
Great bike. I wish I was in sunny weather to ride it, however just moved to an area where it rains about 300 days out of the year. Bike has never been laid down or dropped and has a custom paint job of black and DARK purple marble. I do not have to sell the bike however it doesn't make sense to keep it sitting in the garage. Prefer not to trade however, you can make an offer and I will be willing to think about it. If you want more pictures or details will send on request
add ons: muzzy exhaust 2" drop on the rear marble paint pleather snake skin seat last tune up 4 months ago |
Yamaha Road Star for Sale
- 2002 yamaha road star(US $5,000.00)
- 2000 yamaha road star(US $3,800.00)
- 2003 yamaha road star(US $5,900.00)
- 2002 yamaha road star(US $4,400.00)
- 2002 yamaha road star(US $8,900.00)
- 2006 yamaha road star(US $5,300.00)
Moto blog
The perfect classified advert
Fri, 21 Jun 2013Forget “One careful owner, low mileage, full service history” – when it comes to penning classifieds we can all learn from Kyle Miller and Joe Strachila who’ve plundered their marketing genius to come up with the best scooter advert we’ve ever seen. The pair, from Seattle, became an internet sensation last year when they created a hyperbole-packed ad for $700-worth of frankly rubbish 1995 Pontiac Grand-Am. Now they’ve pulled the same trick to get rid of a Y2K Yamaha SH50 (the comically-named ‘Razz’), advertising it on Cragslist as “the fulfilment of your wildest fantasies”.
Unique Sounds of the New Yamaha R1
Tue, 06 Jan 2009When Yamaha announced its new R1 literbike last fall, company reps told us about the tractability assets of its new, MotoGP-derived crossplane crankshaft for the four-cylinder engine. It’s unique in that cylinders fire 90-degrees apart, allegedly enabling better grip during acceleration. A byproduct of this design is an exhaust note that is distinctive in this world of cookie-cutter designs.
Best Helmet Designs from the 2009 MotoGP Season
Thu, 22 Oct 2009Unlike with most athletes, motorcycle racers’ faces remain hidden during competition. Except for promotional events or pre- and post-race interviews, the faces of our racing heroes are shielded under protective helmets with tinted visors. You don’t see the same human emotion in their faces like you can when soccer players score a goal or baseball players hit a home run.
Yamaha Road Star by State
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