Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1998 Harley-davidson Touring 1998 Flhrci Road King Classic 95th Anniversary* on 2040-motos

US $5,961.00
YearYear:1998 MileageMileage:1 ColorColor: Red
Location:

Round Rock, Texas, United States

Round Rock, Texas, United States
QR code
1998 Harley-Davidson Touring 1998 FLHRCI Road King Classic 95th Anniversary*, US $5,961.00, image 1

Harley-Davidson Touring photos

1998 Harley-Davidson Touring 1998 FLHRCI Road King Classic 95th Anniversary*, US $5,961.00, image 2 1998 Harley-Davidson Touring 1998 FLHRCI Road King Classic 95th Anniversary*, US $5,961.00, image 3 1998 Harley-Davidson Touring 1998 FLHRCI Road King Classic 95th Anniversary*, US $5,961.00, image 4 1998 Harley-Davidson Touring 1998 FLHRCI Road King Classic 95th Anniversary*, US $5,961.00, image 5 1998 Harley-Davidson Touring 1998 FLHRCI Road King Classic 95th Anniversary*, US $5,961.00, image 6 1998 Harley-Davidson Touring 1998 FLHRCI Road King Classic 95th Anniversary*, US $5,961.00, image 7

Moto blog

Harley-Davidson Reports Q2 2012 Results

Wed, 01 Aug 2012

Harley-Davidson reported a net income of $247.3 million over the second quarter of 2012, a 29.7% increase from a profit of $190.6 million from the same quarter in 2011. The Motor Company sold 85,714 motorcycles worldwide in the quarter ended June 30, 2012, a 2.7% year-on-year increase from 83,396 units in 2011. U.S.

Harley-Davidson Donated $4.5 Million to Various Causes in 2012

Fri, 15 Feb 2013

Harley-Davidson donated more than $4.5 million to support various charitable groups in 2012. The donations, which include both grants and merchandise, went to several organizations, including those around Harley-Davidson‘s bases in Milwaukee, Wis., York, Pa., and Kansas City, Mo., but also to groups across the nation. The Milwaukee chapter of Habitat for Humanity received a $200,000 grant for its Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative, helping fund housing projects in the Washington Park community.

Motorcycle Stirrups – Yes, They Exist!

Wed, 15 Jan 2014

What do you get when a lifelong horse rider and motorcyclist from Nebraska gets inspired to combine his two loves? Why, motorcycle stirrups, of course! The idea came to Devin Santana, proprietor of Nebraska City Iron Works, one day when he was riding his Harley-Davidson down the road and looked down at his feet.