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2013 Aprilia Shvr 750 Standard on 2040-motos

US $9,499.00
YearYear:2013 MileageMileage:1 ColorColor: GLAM WHT
Location:

Matthews, North Carolina, US

Matthews, NC, US
QR code
2013 Aprilia SHVR 750  Standard , US $9,499.00, image 1

Aprilia Other tech info

TypeType:Standard Stock NumberStock Number:000511 PhonePhone:8886949464

Aprilia Other description

2013 APRILIA SHVR 750,

Moto blog

Get Your Face on the Aprilia RSV4 Factory WSBK Race Livery

Fri, 04 Jul 2014

Aprilia is giving its race fans the chance to show their support by putting their faces and words of inspiration on the livery of its RSV4 Factory World Superbike racer. Simply visit Aprilia Racing’s official website, BeARacer.com, select either Marco Melandri or Sylvain Guintoli and leave a comment on what you think it means to “Be A Racer”. Ahead of each round, Melandri and Guintoli will select their favorite submissions and have the fan’s picture and comment printed onto the fairing of their RSV4 Factory WSBK racebike.

Aprilia unveils RSV4 R FW-GP sportbike with technical solutions from the world of MotoGP

Wed, 07 Dec 2016

On the New Year’s Eve, the company from Noale announced the launch of a new customer program for its racing division and removed the cover from four different variants of the RSV4 “sport liter” at once. At the same time, if the first three, in fact, are machines “cut down” to meet the technical regulations of the competition (two superstocks with different degrees of “roasting” RSV4 R FW-SSTK1 and RSV4 R FW-SSTK2, as well as a superbike RSV4 R-FW SBK), then the fourth , RSV4 R FW-GP, is something special. The new Aprilia is actually created on the basis of a road bike, with an implanted engine from the RS-GP 15 grand prix car.

Aprilia USA Creates Video Honoring Space Shuttle Program [Video]

Wed, 20 Jul 2011

Aprilia released a video tribute to the NASA Space Shuttle Program a day in advance of the program’s final mission. On July 8, 2011, Space Shuttle Atlantis lifted off from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 11:29 a.m. EDT, ushering in the end of a “30-year program of exploration, which launched great observatories, built an International Space Station, and taught us how humans can live, work and thrive in space,” says a brief description on NASA’s website of the final flight.