Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2006 Yamaha Fjr1300ae Sportbike on 2040-motos

US $8,230.00
YearYear:2006 MileageMileage:17 ColorColor: Cerulean Silver
Location:

Pompano Beach, Florida, US

Pompano Beach, FL, US
QR code
2006 Yamaha FJR1300AE  Sportbike , US $8,230.00, image 1

Yamaha FJR photos

2006 Yamaha FJR1300AE  Sportbike , US $8,230.00, image 2 2006 Yamaha FJR1300AE  Sportbike , US $8,230.00, image 3 2006 Yamaha FJR1300AE  Sportbike , US $8,230.00, image 4 2006 Yamaha FJR1300AE  Sportbike , US $8,230.00, image 5 2006 Yamaha FJR1300AE  Sportbike , US $8,230.00, image 6 2006 Yamaha FJR1300AE  Sportbike , US $8,230.00, image 7

Yamaha FJR tech info

TypeType:Sportbike Stock NumberStock Number:000014 PhonePhone:8666494051

Yamaha FJR description

2006 Yamaha FJR1300AE, Great looking sport touring bike with the option of a fully automatic transmission !! - SUPERSPORT TOURING PERFECTION! In addition to all the refinements for 2006, this FJR shifts with the touch of a finger, thanks to the all new electric-shift five-speed transmission. Super Sport touring has never been so smooth.

Moto blog

Colin Edwards Joins Forward Racing CRT Squad for 2012

Fri, 02 Sep 2011

Colin Edwards will join the Forward Racing team to compete in the 2012 MotoGP season as a Claiming Rule Team entry. Edwards, known as a good development rider and an even better quote machine, is the first rider to officially sign on with a CRT. Forward Racing may be more familiar to some race fans by its former name, Hayate Racing, the outfit that ran the Kawasaki ZX-RR with Marco Melandri in 2009 after Kawasaki pulled out of MotoGP racing.

One man who didn't want to be watching the Sachsenring MotoGP

Mon, 15 Jul 2013

Jorge Lorenzo posted this picture on his Twitter feed on Sunday. Yamaha's No.1 rider had to watch Sunday's MotoGP from his apartment. Despite Crutchlow reckoning Sunday's race result would have been the same even with Pedrosa and Lorenzo on the grid, I reckon Lorenzo would have had something to say about that.

Max Biaggi loses the plot . . and very nearly his teeth !

Tue, 29 Mar 2011

I’ve just got back from Donington Park and the second round of the World Superbike championship. The racing was exciting, going off without a hitch, and the weather was unseasonably kind, but the meeting will be remembered by those in the fairly close knit WSB paddock for reasons other than the temperature or the race results. It’ll be remembered by most, especially those who witnessed it, as the meeting where Max Biaggi finally lost his already feeble grip on reality.