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2015 Harley-davidson Touring Flrt Free Wheeler on 2040-motos

US $22,500.00
YearYear:2015 MileageMileage:5 ColorColor: Black
Location:

Tucson, Arizona, United States

Tucson, Arizona, United States
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2015 Harley-Davidson Touring FLRT Free Wheeler, US $22,500.00, image 1

Harley-Davidson Touring photos

2015 Harley-Davidson Touring FLRT Free Wheeler, US $22,500.00, image 2 2015 Harley-Davidson Touring FLRT Free Wheeler, US $22,500.00, image 3 2015 Harley-Davidson Touring FLRT Free Wheeler, US $22,500.00, image 4 2015 Harley-Davidson Touring FLRT Free Wheeler, US $22,500.00, image 5 2015 Harley-Davidson Touring FLRT Free Wheeler, US $22,500.00, image 6 2015 Harley-Davidson Touring FLRT Free Wheeler, US $22,500.00, image 7

Harley-Davidson Touring description

Moto blog

European-Spec 2014 Harley-Davidson Electra Glide Ultra Classic Getting Twin-Cooled Engine

Thu, 22 Aug 2013

Earlier this week, Harley-Davidson revealed its 2014 lineup including the introduction of new precision cooling Twin-Cooled engines with both liquid- and air-cooling. For the U.S., customers can find the new Twin-Cooled engine technology on the Electra Glide Ultra Limited, CVO Limited and the Tri-Glide, but customers in Europe will also find a Twin-Cooled engine mounted on the Electra Glide Ultra Classic. The U.S.

Owner of Tsunami-Tossed Harley-Davidson Found in Japan

Wed, 02 May 2012

Harley-Davidson representatives in Japan have identified the owner of the motorcycle lost in last year’s tsunami but later found on a remote beach in Canada. The 29-year-old owner, Ikuo Yokoyama, lives in Yamamoto, Japan, in Miyagi Prefecture, the region hardest hit by the 2011 Japanese earthquake and tsunami. Yokoyama survived the disaster but lost three family members and is still living in temporary accommodations.

Harley-Davidson Hires ex-GM Engineer Federico

Thu, 08 May 2014

Harley-Davidson has hired a former General Motors engineer and executive, most recently recognized for leading the automaker’s internal investigation of its ignition switch fiasco that resulted in a recall of 2.6 million vehicles. Jim Federico retired from GM on May 5 after working in various roles with the company over nearly four decades, most recently as executive director of global vehicle integration. Federico will join Harley-Davidson on June 2 as vice president of engineering.