Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2011 Yamaha Road Star S 1700 on 2040-motos

$8,995
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Corvallis, Oregon

Corvallis, OR
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Yamaha Road Star tech info

VINVIN:JYAVP28E0BA004166

Yamaha Road Star description

2011 Yamaha Road Star S Cobra ExhaustCondition: UsedRetail Price: $9,995.00Selling Price: $8,995.00Inventory number: 24026yr: 2011Make: YamahaModel: Road Star SVIN: JYAVP28E0BA004166Color: BlackMileage: 15,241 CALL OR TEXT AARON if interested or to find out the rest of my inventoryFINANCING AVAILABLE OAC! TRADES WELCOMED AND I WILL DELIVER ANYWHERE FOR NO ADDITIONAL COST!! South Pacific Auto Sales - 5040 Pacific Blvd. SW Albany, OR 97321CALL OR TEXT AARON @ TODAY!DL #3926southpac3

Moto blog

You want a nice little car, you do.

Wed, 08 Sep 2010

We ran a couple of stories last week - both, coincidentally, about new Kawasakis. One was the first peek of the new ZX10R – hot stuff you’d imagine – the other, the new W800 retro parallel twin. I suppose it shouldn’t have shocked us, which story was most popular in terms of hits but it really does mark a seismic shifts in British biking attitudes that the W800 story doubled the hits of the ZX10 piece.

MotoGP to Standardize ECU Software in 2016 Season

Tue, 18 Mar 2014

MotoGP‘s Grand Prix Commission announced the series will adopt a standardized Engine Control Unit hardware and software programming for all entries starting with the 2016 season. At the moment, all teams are required to use a standard ECU hardware supplied by Magneti Marelli. Teams competing under the Factory option are allowed to use their own proprietary software programming while Open option participants must use standardized software.

Yamalube Motor Oil Video is Educational, British, and Brainwashing

Tue, 16 Jun 2009

Yamaha Motor Europe have just posted a new video up on Youtube about their Yamalube motor oil and why you should use it on your Yamaha products.  They are pretty damn convincing or very good at brainwashing! The video is pretty educational, explaining how motorcycle engines and car engines are very different, what a motorcycle engine really needs, and why Yamalube is very well suited for the job. Various graphs, charts, shots of scientists making oil, and the accented British narrator have further convinced me that I need to get Yamalube and perhaps even be adding it into my morning bowl of cereal.