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2000 Harley-davidson Dyna Low Rider on 2040-motos

$13,000
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2000 Harley-Davidson Dyna Low Rider, $13,000, image 1

Harley-Davidson Dyna description

2000 Harley Davidson Dyna Low Rider - FXDL/I. Thunderheader exhaust, Screaming Eagle Air Cleaner Kit (29440-99), Dynojet Thunderslide carb kit, rear lowered 1' using stock shocks from one FXDL, front lowered 1' using H-D Profile Low Front Suspension (54611-95A), White Brothers Easy Boy Clutch, and kept in mint condition. Click contact link below for more details. Engine Description: View The Rest Of This Seller's Inventory: http://www.specialtyauto.net (opens in new window)

Moto blog

Nationwide Insurance ‘Tis the Season Contest

Wed, 10 Dec 2008

When the holiday spirit strikes do you include your motorcycle or scooter in the merriment? Whether you decorate your tree while drinking Eggnog from your Harley-Davidson beer stein or get gussied up like old Saint Nick to ride your crotch rocket, Nationwide Insurance wants to know about it. Or maybe you have participated in a holiday themed ride or parade.

Harley-Davidson Confirms 500cc Model on the Way, Says Electric Harleys Not That Far-Fetched

Mon, 02 Sep 2013

It’s only been a couple of weeks since Harley-Davidson broke new ground by unveiling new “Twin-Cooled” liquid precision-cooling engine technology its new Project Rushmore suite of customer-driven refinements, but the Motor Company appears to have even more ambitious plans in the works. Speaking at Harley-Davidson’s 110th anniversary celebrations, Chief Operating Officer Matthew Levatich confirmed the company is producing a new 500cc model and opened the possibility of an electric Harley-Davidson somewhere down the line. We’ve previously written about Harley-Davidson’s plans to introduce a new 500cc V-Twin model for the Indian market.

Zero Motorcycles Named to Made in USA Foundation Hall of Fame

Tue, 03 Jul 2012

The Made in the USA Foundation has named Zero Motorcycles to its 2012 Hall of Fame class, recognizing the electric motorcycle manufacturer’s commitment to American manufacturing. Zero Motorcycles, founded in 2006 in Santa Cruz, Calif., by former NASA engineer Neal Saiki, becomes the second motorcycle manufacturer named to the Foundation’s Hall of Fame. Harley-Davidson was inducted in 2011.