Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1998 Honda Valkyrie on 2040-motos

US $17000
YearYear:1998 MileageMileage:12
Location:

Matthews, North Carolina, United States

Matthews, North Carolina, United States
QR code
1998 Honda Valkyrie, US $17000, image 1

Honda Valkyrie photos

1998 Honda Valkyrie, US $17000, image 2 1998 Honda Valkyrie, US $17000, image 3 1998 Honda Valkyrie, US $17000, image 4 1998 Honda Valkyrie, US $17000, image 5 1998 Honda Valkyrie, US $17000, image 6 1998 Honda Valkyrie, US $17000, image 7

Honda Valkyrie tech info

Engine Size (cc)Engine Size (cc):1,500 WarrantyWarranty:Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty TypeType:Touring For Sale ByFor Sale By:Dealer

Honda Valkyrie description

Very nice bike. Original 12000 mi. Runs good. V-6 engine 1500cc. Salvage Rebuilt title due to a very minor damage (see pics). 704-733-8413

Moto blog

Very, very, very fast Honda C90!

Fri, 26 Nov 2010

Takegawa are a company based on Osaka, Japan. They make so many hop-up parts for small Honda engines that it's possible to build a brand new, complete engine from their catalogue using no Honda parts at all. Four valve heads, double overhead camshaft kits, stroker cranks, big bore Nikasil barrels, slipper pistons, dry clutches, huge carbs and close ratio gear kits are all available.

Is this Valentino Rossi's missing NSR500?

Thu, 15 Apr 2010

CHECK THIS: the poster of this video on YouTube is asking if the machine in the clip is an ex-Valentino Rossi Honda NSR500 GP racer. Although, the bike looks the part, we doubt it's a 'missing' Valentino two-stroker. We weren't even aware the nine-time world champ had lost one!

MSF Begins Year-long Real World Motorcycle Safety Study

Fri, 26 Aug 2011

The Motorcycle Safety Foundation has started what it calls the first-ever naturalistic study of motorcycling, with 100 motorcycles equipped with data logging equipment to record real-world riding situations over the course of a year. The information will valuable data that will help shape the MSF’s rider education and rider training program and other safety initiatives. “Our priority with this research is to observe the participants on a day-to-day basis,” says Dr.