Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1998 Yamaha Xvs 650 V-star Custom Standard on 2040-motos

US $1,999.00
YearYear:1998 MileageMileage:44 ColorColor: Black
Location:

Hiram, Georgia, US

Hiram, GA, US
QR code
1998 Yamaha XVS 650 V-STAR CUSTOM  Standard , US $1,999.00, image 1

Yamaha Other photos

1998 Yamaha XVS 650 V-STAR CUSTOM  Standard , US $1,999.00, image 2 1998 Yamaha XVS 650 V-STAR CUSTOM  Standard , US $1,999.00, image 3 1998 Yamaha XVS 650 V-STAR CUSTOM  Standard , US $1,999.00, image 4

Yamaha Other tech info

TypeType:Standard PhonePhone:8665951796

Yamaha Other description

1998 Yamaha XVS 650 V-STAR CUSTOM, 1998 YAMAHA V-STAR 650 THAT RUNS AND LOOKS GREAT, A COMFORTABLE CRUISER WITH AFTERMARKET EXHAUST AND CRASH BARS

Moto blog

Lorenzo Leads Sepang Test Day 1; Spies Fourth on 1000cc Yamaha M1

Tue, 31 Jan 2012

Yamaha‘s Jorge Lorenzo topped all riders with a top lap time of 2:01.657 on the first day of pre-season MotoGP testing at Malaysia’s Sepang circuit. With reigning World Champion Casey Stoner ailing and unable to ride, Lorenzo produced the top time as the only racer to lap Sepang in under 2 minutes 2 seconds. Riding the 1000cc Yamaha YZR-M1, Lorenzo topped second-ranked Dani Pedrosa and his Honda RC213V by 0.343 seconds.

Colin Edwards Announces Retirement At End Of Season

Thu, 10 Apr 2014

Colin Edwards has announced he will retire at the conclusion of the 2014 MotoGP season. The announcement came during the pre-event press conference ahead of this weekend’s Austin MotoGP race — Edwards’ home round. The two-time World Superbike champion cited a lack of progress from winter testing as one reason for the decision.

45,367 Motorcycle Thefts Reported in US in 2013

Tue, 10 Jun 2014

Americans reported 45,367 stolen motorcycles in 2013, down 1.5% from 2012, reports the National Insurance Crime Bureau‘s latest Motorcycle Theft and Recovery Report. According to the NICB motorcycle thefts have been on the decline every year since 2007 when 65,678 motorcycles were reported stolen, though the overall trend appears to be leveling off. Japanese motorcycles continue to be the most popular target for thieves.