Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2009 Yamaha Fjr 1300a Sport Touring on 2040-motos

US $11,000.00
YearYear:2009 MileageMileage:9
Location:

North Canton, Ohio, US

North Canton, OH, US
QR code
2009 Yamaha Fjr 1300A Sport Touring , US $11,000.00, image 1

Yamaha FJR photos

2009 Yamaha Fjr 1300A Sport Touring , US $11,000.00, image 2 2009 Yamaha Fjr 1300A Sport Touring , US $11,000.00, image 3 2009 Yamaha Fjr 1300A Sport Touring , US $11,000.00, image 4

Yamaha FJR tech info

TypeType:Sport Touring PhonePhone:3309048620

Yamaha FJR description

2009 Yamaha Fjr 1300A, Garage kept, great condition. Many extras including bar risers, heated grips, vista cruise control, national cycle windscreen, 3 euro power plugs,standard power plug, Givi 52 liter top case with backrest,electric windscreen. Very smooth, fast and comfortable. Average 45 mpg. Good front tire, fair rear tire. $11,000.00 3309048620

Moto blog

Yamaha to Cut Motorcycle Production in 2009

Thu, 26 Feb 2009

With mounting inventories coupled with a drop in demand, Yamaha will be cutting its motorcycle production in Japan by 24 percent this year or to about 260,000 total units; one newspaper reported this would be a 40-year low for the manufacture. Yamaha plans to cut production for motorcycles and other products by 30 percent in the Americas, 20 percent in Europe but will maintain production levels in Asia where demand has not dropped off. The company is forecasting its group sales to fall 22 percent with an operating loss of about $300 million.

AMA Supercross: 2012 Las Vegas Results

Mon, 07 May 2012

Ryan Dungey scored his fourth win of the season but it was not enough to take second place in the points race behind champion Ryan Villopoto. That honor went to JGRMX Yamaha‘s Davi Millsaps who placed second to Dungey in the season-ending race at Sam Boyd Stadium in Las Vegas. Dungey took the holeshot and led every lap to take the win for Red Bull KTM.

This Is How You Ride A 125cc Two-Stroke + Video

Fri, 09 May 2014

It’s too bad two-stroke motorcycles are quickly declining. The lightweight and hard-hitting machines are a blast to ride. They’re all but gone from the street scene (thanks emission laws), but thankfully you can still find some on the dirt side.