Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1972 Honda Mini Trail 50 - Runs Great on 2040-motos

US $255.00
YearYear:1972 MileageMileage:100000 ColorColor: Gold
Location:

Austin, Texas, US

Austin, Texas, US
QR code
1972 Honda Mini Trail 50 - Runs Great, US $255.00, image 1

Honda Other photos

1972 Honda Mini Trail 50 - Runs Great, US $255.00, image 2 1972 Honda Mini Trail 50 - Runs Great, US $255.00, image 3 1972 Honda Mini Trail 50 - Runs Great, US $255.00, image 4 1972 Honda Mini Trail 50 - Runs Great, US $255.00, image 5 1972 Honda Mini Trail 50 - Runs Great, US $255.00, image 6 1972 Honda Mini Trail 50 - Runs Great, US $255.00, image 7

Honda Other tech info

Engine Size (cc)Engine Size (cc):50 WarrantyWarranty:Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty For Sale ByFor Sale By:Private Seller

Honda Other description

Engine runs great and starts on first or second kick and purrs like a sewing machine.  No Smoke.  Top engine rebuilt 10 hours ago or so by a Small Engine shop specializing in vintage bikes.
No title but will provide a bill of sale.  Local pickup only or I'll help load it on a carrier of your choosing, expense and logistics.

$250 deposit required within 48 hours.

Please don't ask me stupid questions like what is my reserve price.  I will ignore your messages.

Moto blog

The New Fastest Electric Motorcycle Lap, With John McGuinness + Video

Fri, 06 Jun 2014

Earlier this week, John McGuinness won the single-lap TT Zero electric motorcycle race at the Isle of Man TT aboard his Mugen Shinden San. In the process, the 21-time TT winner smashed the old lap record of 109.675 mph, setting an average speed of 117.366 mph from a standing start. To put that in perspective, McGuinness’ teammate, Bruce Anstey, aboard a sister Mugen, set the outright lap record earlier this week aboard his Honda CBR1000RR superbike of over 132 mph.

NEW: Yoshimura ends cans for Honda CB1000R

Wed, 10 Feb 2010

LEGENDARY JAPANESE tuning house Yoshimura has designed a series of slip-on performance end cans for Honda’s naked CB1000R.The brand new EEC-approved cans bolt straight onto the bike's exiting pipework and feature a stainless steel end cone and integral lower Yoshimura logoed cat-converter heat shield. Even with the dB-Killer baffle in place peak power is improved, as is mid-range torque with further performance gains available if the baffle is removed.A full race mid-pipe, extracting yet more power is on the way and will be available later in the year. The Yoshimura CB1000R Slip-On, including the supplied heat shield, is over 4kgs lighter than the OE item, the Carbon sleeve, even more so at just 4.65kg.Part Number/Sleeve Type/Weight/RRP including VAT1A0-480-5B50         Stainless Steel           2.61kg                       £712.711A0-480-5B80          Titanium                    2.45kg                        £770.181A0-480-5B80B         Titan Blue                 2.45kg                        £850.651A0-480-5B90          Carbon                      2.35kg                        £896.631A0-480-5B20          Metal Magic               2.61kg                        £793.17         Noise Output (decibels)Standard end can: 94dB    @ 5,000rpmYoshimura EEC Slip-On:  94.5dB @ 5,000rpm(with db-killer in place)

Report: Dorna to Replace Superstock Classes with More Stock-Inspired WSBK and New 250cc Class

Mon, 07 Jan 2013

The coming World Superbike racing season may be the last to feature Superstock classes as series promoter Dorna tries to differentiate its WSBK and MotoGP properties. According to Italian outlet Motosprint, Dorna plans to rewrite the World Superbike and Supersport class rulebooks for the 2014 season to make the race bikes closer to their respective production models. This would create further separation between WSBK and MotoGP, with Superbike racing moving closer to its production-based roots while prototypes racing in the GP series.