Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2010 Yamaha Road Star Silverado Cruiser on 2040-motos

US $0.00
YearYear:2010 MileageMileage:7 ColorColor: WHITE
Location:

El Paso, Texas, US

El Paso, TX, US
QR code
2010 Yamaha Road Star Silverado  Cruiser , US $0.00, image 1

Yamaha Road Star photos

2010 Yamaha Road Star Silverado  Cruiser , US $0.00, image 2 2010 Yamaha Road Star Silverado  Cruiser , US $0.00, image 3 2010 Yamaha Road Star Silverado  Cruiser , US $0.00, image 4

Yamaha Road Star tech info

TypeType:Cruiser Stock NumberStock Number:Y1020 PhonePhone:8664511847

Yamaha Road Star description

2010 Yamaha Road Star Silverado,

Moto blog

Yamaha Customer Information Leaked – Personal Data for 607 Japanese Customers Compromised

Wed, 23 Nov 2011

Yamaha has confirmed the personal information of 607 customers in Japan was leaked to a third party. According to Yamaha, personal information for recall and product improvement measures was leaked byYamaha Motorcycle Sales Japan Co., the manufacturer’s domestic group company. The information including names, mailing addresses, vehicle names and VIN, and dealership information for 607 customer accounts in the Aichi, Fukuoka and Kagoshima prefectures were received by an anonymous third party via fax on Nov.

$8,000 Custom ATV up for Grabs at ATV.com

Thu, 02 Jul 2009

Our sister site, ATV.com, is ready to give away the Yamaha Raptor ATV they’ve been customizing over the last few weeks. They took a base Yamaha Raptor 250 valued at $4,499.00 and modified it into an $8,000 beast!  Why they just don’t keep it in the office to use for coffee runs is beyond me. They’ve slapped on new air filters, mufflers, new alloy wheels, new tires, front bumper and grab bar, skid plates, nerf bars, new grips, new seat cover, new plastics, and more!

2024 Yamaha Tracer 9 GT+ Review

Thu, 17 Aug 2023

Riding 950 miles across three states in two days highlights this Tracer’s capabilities Photography by Joseph Augustin New motorcycle model introductions follow a well-worn path: travel to the event location, eat nice meals, get briefed on the bike of the moment, ride a route designed to highlight the bike’s strengths, take photos/video, eat more good food, return home, and write up a review. After 27 years in this industry, I still get a cheap thrill about throwing a leg over a new motorcycle before it is available to the general public. However, what really gets me going is when I have a chance to log more than just the couple of hundred miles typically covered in an intro and spend some real time on the road with said bike.