2009 Yamaha Yzf on 2040-motos
Yamaha YZF tech info
Yamaha YZF description
This is a wonderful and amazing bike with only 7768 miles. It is in
great condition and runs smooth. It has a new back tire and has had all
the routine maintenance performed.
The bike comes with a helmet, orange safety vest, mesh safety vest, leather jacket, gloves, and bike cover. The left headlight needs to be replaced, it has a small crack. I have owned the bike for four years and have had no mechanical issues. |
Yamaha YZF for Sale
- 1998 yamaha yzf(US $13052)
- 2005 yamaha yzf(US $2,700.00)
- 2016 yamaha yzf(US $4,499.00)
- 2012 yamaha yzf(US $5,499.00)
- 2015 yamaha yzf(US $5,000.00)
- 2011 yamaha yzf(US $7,499.00)
Moto blog
Air time Kenny Roberts-style
Thu, 25 Nov 2010I can’t get enough of pictures that capture a specific, hard to define moment; the successful encapsulation of the absolute balls-to-the-wall, life or death commitment that riding a motorbike as fast as possible involves. We all know. We’ve all been there – even if it’s only a once-in-a-lifetime moment. Maybe (for us mere mortals) it’s that rapidly, yet unexpectedly, tightening left-hand bend with a shitty, mud-covered veneer just at the apex.
AMA Pro Racing Announces Basic Twins Flat Track Class for 2014 Season
Fri, 12 Apr 2013AMA Pro Racing announced a new class for Flat Track racing designed to provide a new stepping stone for up-and-coming Pro-licensed racers, replacing the Pro Singles class in 2014. The new class, to be called Basic Twins, is more or less a revival of the Basic Expert Twins division that ran during the 2007 and 2008 seasons, but dropped when the Pro Singles class was introduced for 2009. The new class will give young racers a chance to showcase their skills on Twins, easing their transition to eventually enter the Grand National Expert Twins class.
Yamaha Pro Am madness, the best one make championship ever?
Sat, 18 Dec 2010I’m biased of course, but the best one make road race championship has to be the Yamaha RD 350LC Pro Am series. Back in the days when manufacturers had spare cash (1980 to be precise), Mitsui Yamaha organised this televised championship at major British race meetings to promote the recently launched, and now iconic, Yamaha RD350LC. Twenty four riders (twelve established and twelve rookies) were chosen by a panel of experts then given a completely free season of racing with a very generous prize fund thrown in.
Yamaha YZF by State
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