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2012 Honda Fury (vt1300cx) on 2040-motos

$11,897
YearYear:2012 MileageMileage:0 ColorColor: Ultra Blue Metallic
Location:

El Cajon, California

El Cajon, CA
QR code

Honda Fury tech info

TypeType:Custom PhonePhone:(888) 283-0063

Honda Fury description

2012 Honda Fury (VT1300CX), Motoworld of El Cajon - It all starts here! - Furious. Honda’s radical Fury is a chopper like no other. Not only is it easily the most distinctive custom we’ve ever built, but it’s comparable to one-off custom-house choppers costing ten times as much—except that it probably works and rides twice as well. Long, lean and mean, stretching nearly six feet from axle to axle, this machine is a real head-turner. And once you settle into the saddle, turn the key and fire up that big 1,312 cc V-twin, you’ll know this is the bike you’ve been dreaming about.

Moto blog

The Motoped: What Happens When A Mountain Bike And Pit Bike Mate – Video

Fri, 02 Aug 2013

The picture above is not photoshopped. What you’re looking at is called a Motoped. Technically a motorized bicycle, the Motoped uses a custom made frame and swingarm and bolts to a Honda XR50 (or Chinese knockoff) engine.

Repsol Honda Signs Marquez and Pedrosa for 2013 MotoGP Season

Thu, 12 Jul 2012

Honda Racing Corporation announced it has signed rising Spanish talent Marc Marquez to a two-year contract on its factory team. He will race alongside Dani Pedrosa who signed a two-year contract extension with Honda to race in the 2013 MotoGP Championship. Marquez currently leads the Moto2 Championship by 43 points for the Catalunya Caixa Repsol team after finishing second in the series in 2011.

Magneti Marelli to Supply Electronics System to MotoGP Teams

Wed, 26 Sep 2012

It’s no secret that promoter Dorna Motorsports has been trying to push a standardized electronics control unit for teams in the MotoGP World Championship. The lack of a top-tier electronics package has been one of the biggest challenges faced by MotoGP’s claiming rule teams, and a spec ECU would narrow the gap between the CRT bikes and the factory prototypes. The manufacturers competing in the series, Honda, Ducati and Yamaha, understandably are resistant to the idea considering the effort they’ve put in to develop their electronics systems.