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2006 Suzuki Katana 600 on 2040-motos

$2,995
YearYear:2006 MileageMileage:3639 ColorColor: BLUE/WHITE
Location:

Mt. Ephraim, New Jersey

Mt. Ephraim, NJ
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2006 Suzuki Katana 600 , $2,995, image 1

Suzuki Other photos

2006 Suzuki Katana 600 , $2,995, image 2 2006 Suzuki Katana 600 , $2,995, image 3 2006 Suzuki Katana 600 , $2,995, image 4 2006 Suzuki Katana 600 , $2,995, image 5 2006 Suzuki Katana 600 , $2,995, image 6

Suzuki Other tech info

PhonePhone:(866) 602-9880

Suzuki Other description

2006 Suzuki Katana 600, "AS IS" SPECIAL

Moto blog

Doug Polen Joins Motorcycle Hall of Fame Class of 2011

Tue, 24 May 2011

Former AMA and World Superbike Champion Doug Polen has been named to the Motorcycle Hall of Fame class of 2011. “Any fan of motorcycle roadracing will remember Doug’s amazing – and dominating – championship runs on the AMA and World Superbike stages,” says Don Rosene, a member of the American Motorcycle Heritage Foundation Board of Directors. “At a time when the series saw plenty of fast competitors, Doug was clearly the fastest.

BSB 2012; Mystic Mac investigates

Tue, 03 Jan 2012

In my opinion, the smartest move in the BSB off season has to be Michael Laverty moving from Swan Yamaha to HM Plant Honda. With a ban on electronics for 2012, and in particular traction control, WFR's Graham Gowland has already proved to Laverty how competitive an EVO spec Fireblade can be - so I’m tipping both these riders to be bang on the money at the Brands Hatch season opener in April. Unlike BMW, Kawasaki and Yamaha, Honda have deliberately developed their road-going Superbike without electronics to give a user friendly feel with good mechanical traction, so it’ll be interesting to see how the opposition copes with their high-tech trickery stripped off.

MotoGP to Re-Visit Rookie Rule

Tue, 19 Jun 2012

MotoGP organizers are re-opening discussion for the series’ rookie rule which prevents new riders from entering the series with factory teams. Introduced following the 2009 MotoGP season, the rule was designed to give satellite teams the chance to field young up-and-coming talents  they otherwise wouldn’t have been able to sign. The theory was the rule would protect the satellite teams and spread out the talent pool.