Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2012 Honda Crf250xlc Dirt Bike on 2040-motos

US $7,410.00
YearYear:2012 MileageMileage:1 ColorColor: RED
Location:

CONROE, Texas, US

CONROE, TX, US
QR code
2012 Honda CRF250XLC  Dirt Bike , US $7,410.00, image 1

Honda CRF photos

2012 Honda CRF250XLC  Dirt Bike , US $7,410.00, image 2 2012 Honda CRF250XLC  Dirt Bike , US $7,410.00, image 3 2012 Honda CRF250XLC  Dirt Bike , US $7,410.00, image 4 2012 Honda CRF250XLC  Dirt Bike , US $7,410.00, image 5 2012 Honda CRF250XLC  Dirt Bike , US $7,410.00, image 6 2012 Honda CRF250XLC  Dirt Bike , US $7,410.00, image 7

Honda CRF tech info

TypeType:Dirt Bike Stock NumberStock Number:HM0182 PhonePhone:8558780482

Honda CRF description

2012 HONDA CRF250XLC,

Moto blog

WSBK: 2012 Magny-Cours Results – Championship Decided by Half a Point

Tue, 09 Oct 2012

You would think carrying a 30.5 point lead into the final round of the 2012 World Superbike Championship would be a safe enough margin to win the title. Aprilia‘s Max Biaggi made it interesting, inexplicably crashing out of the first race at the finale in Magny-C0urs before scoring a fifth place finish in Race Two to give him a 0.5 point margin over Kawasaki‘s Tom Sykes to win the title. The 358 to 357.5 point difference is the narrowest finish ever in WSBK.

Moriwaki MD250 - the stink wheel eradicator

Tue, 31 Aug 2010

This beautiful motorcycle is the Moriwaki MD250 road racer, the replacement for 125cc two-strokes in MotoGP come 2012. The alloy beam chassis houses Honda’s diminutive CRF250X uni-cam motor, normally seen wearing long travel suspension and knobbly tyres. The quick revving liquid cooled four-stroke motor offers electric-start convenience and a maintenance schedule that most two-stroke racers can only dream of.

A Different Bike Magazine

Thu, 12 Feb 2009

Motorcycle Retro is a pet project of former Motorcyclist editor Mitch Boehm, launching as Motorcyclist Retro in early 2008 under the Source Interlink media umbrella. It featured a contemporary look at motorcycles of the 1960s through the 1980s. However, the circulation numbers of MR didn’t meet the expectations of the media conglomerate, and they cancelled production of the magazine after just two issues.