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2012 Yamaha V-max Cruiser on 2040-motos

US $19,890.00
YearYear:2012 MileageMileage:0
Location:

Kalamazoo, Michigan, US

Kalamazoo, MI, US
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2012 Yamaha V-Max  Cruiser , US $19,890.00, image 1

Yamaha Other photos

2012 Yamaha V-Max  Cruiser , US $19,890.00, image 2 2012 Yamaha V-Max  Cruiser , US $19,890.00, image 3

Yamaha Other tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:8886614995

Yamaha Other description

2012 Yamaha V-Max, The ultimate muscle bike.The VMAX is the ultimate marriage of brawn and brains, and is the groundbreaking result of its evolutionary journey. The unique features of this iconic beast are richly blended with advanced sportbike technology and forward-thinking style. It all adds up to a machine with immense performance and visual power. The VMAX truly is in a class by itself.

Moto blog

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.

Last Year’s Surprise Podium Finisher Katsuyuki Nakasuga to Wild Card at Japanese GP

Fri, 23 Aug 2013

Katsuyuki Nakasuga, the surprise podium finisher at last year’s MotoGP finale in Valencia, will have the chance to catch lightning in a bottle once again, after being granted a wild card entry to the 2013 Japanese Grand Prix at Motegi. Nakasuga shocked the racing world with a second-place finish at the Valencian Grand Prix last November as an injury replacement for then-Yamaha factory rider Ben Spies. Nakasuga made the cagey decision to run slick tires in the wet race.

US Motorcycle Thefts Down 6% in 2011

Tue, 09 Oct 2012

Americans reported 46,667 motorcycle thefts in 2011, a 6% decrease from 49,791 stolen motorcycles in 2010, reports the National Insurance Crime Bureau. Despite the drop in reported thefts, the non-profit organization representing nearly 1100 property and casualty insurance companies says the theft rate still averages out to one motorcycle stolen every 11 minutes in the U.S. The numbers were published in the NICB’s 2011 ForeCAST Report which examined theft reports as well as recoveries.