Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1993 Suzuki Rmx 250 Complete Parts Bike Vintage Mx Motocross W/title on 2040-parts.com

US $500.00
Location:

New River, Arizona, US

New River, Arizona, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Country of Manufacture:Japan

1993 Suzuki RMX 250

Core Rebuilder parts bike

 

 

This bike is complete.

Since this bike has a title, I bought to restore and make a street legal 2-stroke dual sport out of it, but I have too many projects already.  

Motor does turn. COUNT ON A COMPLETE REBUILD and resto. 

PICK UP IS PREFERRED but I can ship bike anywhere in the lower 48 USA for between $300-$600.

International Buyers; TITLED. Figure around $1750.00 USD to get this bike to anywhere in the world at a port destination near you. Email me for details or feel free to call me Az-Mike  623-465-0636

Paypal deposit of $250 only. Balance due in cash, check, or wire transfer.

PLEASE LOOK AT PHOTOS CLOSELY AND ASK ANY QUESTIONS BEFORE BIDDING. Thanks--Az-Mike 623-465-0636

Will work on almost all of your VMX AHRMA AVDRA vintage dirt flat track speedway enduro trials bikes moto x moto-x japanese plastic  japan asia

2013 Fiat 500e: Electric 500 revealed ahead of L.A. debut

Fri, 16 Nov 2012

The Fiat 500e – the electric version of the 500 – has been revealed ahead of a debut at the Los Angeles Auto Show. On sale in U.S. 2013.

Chrysler Sebring

Mon, 26 Jun 2006

Chrysler has shown pictures of the 2007 Sebring, a mid-sized sedan that will enter production in America later this year. New from the ground up, the dynamic exterior borrows cues from the Crossfire in the front three-quarter, while a part-masked C-pillar helps accentuate the Sebring's arched cab, eschewing the 'chopped' look of the larger 300C. The urbane interior features an IP with a broad panel theme, reminding slightly of the Mercedes-Benz CLS/> It will be available from launch with the option of two V6 engines and, unusually, a new four-cylinder motor that produces 172PS from 2.4 liters.

Malcontent growing over lack of roads policing

Thu, 07 Aug 2014

MOTORISTS are not just frustrated by the lack of police presence on Britain’s roads – they now believe there is little chance of law-breakers being caught and prosecuted. The RAC Report on Motoring 2014 reveals many motorists in 21st century Britain think there is little risk of being caught breaking the law at the wheel. Two in five drivers (40%) believe anyone committing common offences such as texting at the wheel of either a moving or stationary vehicle, aggressive driving, tailgating, middle lane hogging on the motorway or undertaking would more than likely get away with it.