Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1991 Kawasaki Kx 250 Mx on 2040-motos

US $600.00
YearYear:1991 MileageMileage:500
Location:

Beaverton, Oregon, US

Beaverton, OR, US
QR code
1991 Kawasaki Kx 250 Mx , US $600.00, image 1

Kawasaki KX photos

1991 Kawasaki Kx 250 Mx , US $600.00, image 2 1991 Kawasaki Kx 250 Mx , US $600.00, image 3

Kawasaki KX tech info

TypeType:Mx PhonePhone:5033071090

Kawasaki KX description

1991 Kawasaki Kx 250, 1991 Kawasaki KX250. Set up for off-roading, accessories include: Gold Series pipe, 12 oz. flywheel weight, skid plate, hand guards, forest service legal silencer (MX silencer included), pipe guard, rear disc guard, new filter. Runs great reliable and fast. $600.00 5033071090

Moto blog

Do WSB bikes need fake headlights?

Mon, 02 Jul 2012

Next year's WSB bikes must carry fake headlight stickers to make them look like their road-going equivalents – and Kawasaki previewed the new look at yesterday's race at Aragon. The idea is to add to WSB's road bike links and to further distinguish the bikes from the latest breed of CRT MotoGP machines. However, it means adding meaningless stickers on a large and potentially valuable acreage of prime sponsorship space on the bike's nose, with much of the rest already taken up by the rider's number; not necessarily a good thing when money is already hard to find in international racing.

Attack Performance, GPTech to Race All Three US MotoGP Rounds in 2013

Fri, 14 Dec 2012

Attack Performance Racing and GPTech made history this year as the first teams to build and enter motorcycles under MotoGP’s Claiming Rule Team rules as a  wild card entry. Both teams will race again, receiving wild card invites to all three U.S. rounds in the 2013 MotoGP season.

Max Biaggi Tests Pirelli Angel GT Tires on an Aircraft Carrier – Video

Tue, 09 Apr 2013

Pirelli sure knows how to make an impression. Is there a more dramatic way to test the stopping ability of Pirelli’s new Angel GT sport touring tire, than on the flight deck of an aircraft carrier? After all, these surfaces are used to the physics of 30,000-pound fighter jets decelerating from 150 mph to a dead stop in a matter of seconds.