Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

Yamaha : Road Star 2003 Yamaha Road Star Silverado 1600cc on 2040-motos

$5,100
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:76
Location:

Hahira, Georgia

Hahira, GA
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Yamaha Road Star description

2003 Yamaha Road Star Silverado 1600cc in good condition with lots of extras. - K & N open air filter. - Vance & Hines Long Shot pipes as well as the stock pipes. - Mustang Seats as well as the stock seats. - Batwing fairing with a recently installed 200w Pioneer Cd system with USB port. Along with 4 Kicker 5-1/4in speakers. - Trunk box that locks for plenty of storage as well as the leather saddle bags on the side. 76,700mis on this bike with all of the maintenance records. If interested, call Dwayne Joyner at 229-560-XXXX.

Moto blog

Donington Park and the Roman rebel.

Thu, 31 Mar 2011

We know the sun always shines on the righteous and that’s exactly what happened last weekend at Donington Park. Yes its good honest people back in charge of the Derbyshire circuit so we saw summer sunshine for Friday’s free practice and also for WSB race two on Sunday. The circuit is better than ever with a new Esses section in place, and while the paddock remains unchanged, work has already started that will see gradual revamp over the year ahead.

2014 AMA Supercross Season Wrap-Up

Mon, 05 May 2014

With the AMA Supercross season now over, the American Motorcyclist Association congratulates the three riders who claimed AMA No. 1 plates during the 2014 AMA Supercross season — Ryan Villopoto, 450SX champion; Justin Bogle, 250SX East champion; and Jason Anderson, 250SX West champion. Ryan Villopoto, from Seattle, Wash., locked up his fourth straight AMA Supercross premier class title in the series’ penultimate round, clinching at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.

Think You’re a Smooth Rider? Yamaha’s SmartRiding App Will Prove It

Fri, 04 Oct 2013

Yamaha has released a new app that records and evaluates riding habits. The free Yamaha SmartRiding app (available now in the App store) uses the Apple devices sensors to measure basic telemetry to evaluate how smoothly you handle curves. The app requires the device to be firmly fixed to the motorcycle in either a vertical or horizontal arrangement (the app is compatible with iPhones, iPods and iPads, though I’m not sure how many people will mount a tablet to their motorcycle).