2021 Toyota Venza Gray, 27K miles for Sale

$37,911
2021 Toyota Venza Gray, 27K miles for Sale

Detailed Information

  • Type: Private

  • Price: $37,911

  • Location: 1881 Bouslog Rd, Burlington, WA

  • Condition: Used

  • Make: Toyota

  • Model: Venza

  • VIN: JTEAAAAH6MJ017201

  • Mileage: 27310

  • Extras: AM/FM Stereo Radio, Air Conditioning, Front Bucket Seats, Keyless Entry, Memory Seats, Power Door Locks, Power Steering, Power Windows, Roof Rack-Luggage Rack, Tilt Steering Wheel, Trip Computer

Toyota Certified, 1 Owner, Clean Carfax!2021 Toyota Venza XLE well equipped with Audio Plus - 8-in Touchscreen, 6 Spkrs, Hands Free Bluetooth Phone/Music, USB Media Port, 3 USB Charge Ports, Sirius XM w/ 3-Month All Access Trial, Android Auto & Apple Car Play Compatible Sof Tex/Fabric-Trimmed Seats Power Driver's Seat with Lumbar Support Heated Front

Certified PreOwned 2021 Toyota Venza XLE, 27,310 miles, Gray

Toyota in Alabama

2023 Yamaha XMAX for SalePOPULAR

2023 Yamaha XMAX for Sale

Yakima, WA
Jan 05, 2024
MAXIMUM SPORT The ultimate Sport Scooter with new Y-Connect smartphone connectivity and a liquid-cooled engine that is both fuel efficient and performance proven. New 2023 Gray MAXIMUM SPORT The ultimate Sport Scooter with new Y-Connect smartphone connectivity and a liquid-cooled engine that is both fuel efficient and performance proven. New 2023 Gray MAXIMUM SPORT The ultimate Sport Scooter with new Y-Connect smartphone connectivity and a liquid-cooled engine that is both fuel efficient and performance proven. New 2023 Gray MAXIMUM SPORT The ultimate Sport Scooter with new Y-Connect smartphone connectivity and a liquid-cooled engine that is both fuel efficient and performance proven. New 2023 Gray MAXIMUM SPORT The ultimate Sport Scooter with new Y-Connect smartphone connectivity and a liquid-cooled engine that is both fuel efficient and performance proven. New 2023 Gray
$6,199
1941 Indian 741 Scout Military for SalePOPULAR

1941 Indian 741 Scout Military for Sale

Seattle, WA
Jan 01, 2024
Rare bike on US soil, which is 1941 indian military scout model 741, motorcycle is in very nice shape for its age, yet it is not sit and ride condition now. Engine fires up, so nothing wrong with it transmission shifts throug out all 3 gears, bike is about 90 % oem, and few aftermarket pieces like: headlightjiffy side standradio shield on distributorspokes( wheels were done and are nice and true with new tires)tool boxchaindamper handlecarb elbowrubber hose to air filter with clampsskid plateexhaustseatrest on the bike is original and came in as 1 motorcycle since 1941 or 43 considering high numbers. i had a bit fun with it and painted it green as You see now but it was spray paint from home depot, so dont consider that being a fresh paint, stars and stickers are vinyl , all done just for good looks, yet i think it looks nice and draws attention even like that. bottom line is this is still a project that needs few things small and bigger like the luggage rack, and lots of tinkering with all small details, but if You know thing or two about old bikes it is a perfect winter project that doesn't need anything major to make it a rider, and a nice one. Used 1941 Rare bike on US soil, which is 1941 indian military scout model 741, motorcycle is in very nice shape for its age, yet it is not sit and ride condition now. Engine fires up, so nothing wrong with it transmission shifts throug out all 3 gears, bike is about 90 % oem, and few aftermarket pieces like: headlightjiffy side standradio shield on distributorspokes( wheels were done and are nice and true with new tires)tool boxchaindamper handlecarb elbowrubber hose to air filter with clampsskid plateexhaustseatrest on the bike is original and came in as 1 motorcycle since 1941 or 43 considering high numbers. i had a bit fun with it and painted it green as You see now but it was spray paint from home depot, so dont consider that being a fresh paint, stars and stickers are vinyl , all done just for good looks, yet i think it looks nice and draws attention even like that. bottom line is this is still a project that needs few things small and bigger like the luggage rack, and lots of tinkering with all small details, but if You know thing or two about old bikes it is a perfect winter project that doesn't need anything major to make it a rider, and a nice one. Used 1941 Rare bike on US soil, which is 1941 indian military scout model 741, motorcycle is in very nice shape for its age, yet it is not sit and ride condition now. Engine fires up, so nothing wrong with it transmission shifts throug out all 3 gears, bike is about 90 % oem, and few aftermarket pieces like: headlightjiffy side standradio shield on distributorspokes( wheels were done and are nice and true with new tires)tool boxchaindamper handlecarb elbowrubber hose to air filter with clampsskid plateexhaustseatrest on the bike is original and came in as 1 motorcycle since 1941 or 43 considering high numbers. i had a bit fun with it and painted it green as You see now but it was spray paint from home depot, so dont consider that being a fresh paint, stars and stickers are vinyl , all done just for good looks, yet i think it looks nice and draws attention even like that. bottom line is this is still a project that needs few things small and bigger like the luggage rack, and lots of tinkering with all small details, but if You know thing or two about old bikes it is a perfect winter project that doesn't need anything major to make it a rider, and a nice one. Used 1941 Rare bike on US soil, which is 1941 indian military scout model 741, motorcycle is in very nice shape for its age, yet it is not sit and ride condition now. Engine fires up, so nothing wrong with it transmission shifts throug out all 3 gears, bike is about 90 % oem, and few aftermarket pieces like: headlightjiffy side standradio shield on distributorspokes( wheels were done and are nice and true with new tires)tool boxchaindamper handlecarb elbowrubber hose to air filter with clampsskid plateexhaustseatrest on the bike is original and came in as 1 motorcycle since 1941 or 43 considering high numbers. i had a bit fun with it and painted it green as You see now but it was spray paint from home depot, so dont consider that being a fresh paint, stars and stickers are vinyl , all done just for good looks, yet i think it looks nice and draws attention even like that. bottom line is this is still a project that needs few things small and bigger like the luggage rack, and lots of tinkering with all small details, but if You know thing or two about old bikes it is a perfect winter project that doesn't need anything major to make it a rider, and a nice one. Used 1941 Rare bike on US soil, which is 1941 indian military scout model 741, motorcycle is in very nice shape for its age, yet it is not sit and ride condition now. Engine fires up, so nothing wrong with it transmission shifts throug out all 3 gears, bike is about 90 % oem, and few aftermarket pieces like: headlightjiffy side standradio shield on distributorspokes( wheels were done and are nice and true with new tires)tool boxchaindamper handlecarb elbowrubber hose to air filter with clampsskid plateexhaustseatrest on the bike is original and came in as 1 motorcycle since 1941 or 43 considering high numbers. i had a bit fun with it and painted it green as You see now but it was spray paint from home depot, so dont consider that being a fresh paint, stars and stickers are vinyl , all done just for good looks, yet i think it looks nice and draws attention even like that. bottom line is this is still a project that needs few things small and bigger like the luggage rack, and lots of tinkering with all small details, but if You know thing or two about old bikes it is a perfect winter project that doesn't need anything major to make it a rider, and a nice one. Used 1941
$6,700
1980 Ducati 900SSD Darmah for SalePOPULAR

1980 Ducati 900SSD Darmah for Sale

Seattle, WA
Jan 01, 2024
1980 Ducati 900SSD “Darmah ”Just completed fully documented restoration by professional engineer, mechanic and ex-racer. One of the rarer Ducatis with only 854 made between 1978 and 1980 according to Ian Falloon. The bike starts instantly, idles perfectly, shifts correctly and pulls like the proverbial freight train. With controversial styling (to some), it is a worthy alternative to the 900SS at less than half the price. I have acquired a lot of respect for this model after seeing the engineering up close and riding it. I also own a 750GT which is a far more civilized ride. The Darmah is narrower, lighter, faster. Riding posture is aggressive with stock clip-ons and rear sets and bubble fairing. Most of the bike is stock except for a few upgrades like suspension, hydraulic clutch, and Tomasselli throttle. I tried to stay true to the original, but built the bike for riding, not for trailering. Too much to list, but here goes: Motor Cases never split to my knowledge. I checked the compression (110/125 PSI horizontal/vertical cylinders), adjusted the valves, soda blasted the motor out of the frame, polished the cases, replaced all oil plugs and replaced the Bosch pickup wiring inside the clutch case. Hydraulic clutch upgrade added (the stock mechanical pull was ridiculously stiff). All new seals and gaskets. Many fasteners replaced with stainless. Fresh oil. Motor does not smoke either on start up or during use. Carbs Airbox removed and crankcase breather filter (KN type) added. Dellorto PHF 32’s cleaned, rebuilt (new slides, jets, gaskets etc. ), tuned and synchronized. New Malossi velocity stacks; also have KN type pod filters. Inferior stock cable and splitter replaced with new Tommaselli throttle with dual cables resulting in good snappy throttle response. Carbs have mostly stock settings, and runs well here at 5,000 feet but does pop a little on throttle closure due to idle jets that are probably a little too lean. Fuel System Tank was in good shape, but was patiently devarnished, descaled, derusted, and NOT coated. One petbird was replaced. Original green fuel hoses are still malleable and were retained. Added new in line fuel filters. Wheels Stock aluminum FPS wheels were professionally repainted (bead blasted, etched, primed, base and clear coated, not powder coated) and rims polished. New wheel bearings, new Avon AM26 roadrunner tires. Brakes Cleaned and rebuilt original twin-bleed valve Brembo calipers. All new brake lines, tubes, banjos, washers, etc. front and rear. Master cylinder flushed but didn ’t need rebuild. New fluid and system bled. Pads are original with lots of life so not replaced. Front 6 bolt disks Blanchard ground (still within their thickness spec) for a flat and true surface. Drive train Replaced chain with standard non O-ring Tsubaki black and gold, 106 links with clip type master link. New stock steel sprockets with standard gearing 15/36. Replaced the case saver with new. Original cush rubbers were in good shape. Countershaft seals were tight and not replaced. Suspension Marzocchi front forks rebuilt with Works springs and spacers per Bevel Heaven ’s specs. Original internals retained. new seals, dust covers and fluid of course. Marzocchi rear pneumatic shocks were sold (not economically rebuildable) and replaced with Works shocks from Bevel Heaven which are much better than the originals. Electrical Battery replaced, and new rubber tray and strap installed. New right hand switch (start and kill switch) added to complement Tommaselli throttle. I added a relay to direct full battery voltage to the coils on starting (well known upgrade – bike starts instantly). All electrical works as it should. New CEV rear signals. I haven ’t added front signals because I prefer the lines of the bike without them. Used 1980 Ducati 900 18,000 miles 1980 Ducati 900SSD “Darmah ”Just completed fully documented restoration by professional engineer, mechanic and ex-racer. One of the rarer Ducatis with only 854 made between 1978 and 1980 according to Ian Falloon. The bike starts instantly, idles perfectly, shifts correctly and pulls like the proverbial freight train. With controversial styling (to some), it is a worthy alternative to the 900SS at less than half the price. I have acquired a lot of respect for this model after seeing the engineering up close and riding it. I also own a 750GT which is a far more civilized ride. The Darmah is narrower, lighter, faster. Riding posture is aggressive with stock clip-ons and rear sets and bubble fairing. Most of the bike is stock except for a few upgrades like suspension, hydraulic clutch, and Tomasselli throttle. I tried to stay true to the original, but built the bike for riding, not for trailering. Too much to list, but here goes: Motor Cases never split to my knowledge. I checked the compression (110/125 PSI horizontal/vertical cylinders), adjusted the valves, soda blasted the motor out of the frame, polished the cases, replaced all oil plugs and replaced the Bosch pickup wiring inside the clutch case. Hydraulic clutch upgrade added (the stock mechanical pull was ridiculously stiff). All new seals and gaskets. Many fasteners replaced with stainless. Fresh oil. Motor does not smoke either on start up or during use. Carbs Airbox removed and crankcase breather filter (KN type) added. Dellorto PHF 32’s cleaned, rebuilt (new slides, jets, gaskets etc. ), tuned and synchronized. New Malossi velocity stacks; also have KN type pod filters. Inferior stock cable and splitter replaced with new Tommaselli throttle with dual cables resulting in good snappy throttle response. Carbs have mostly stock settings, and runs well here at 5,000 feet but does pop a little on throttle closure due to idle jets that are probably a little too lean. Fuel System Tank was in good shape, but was patiently devarnished, descaled, derusted, and NOT coated. One petbird was replaced. Original green fuel hoses are still malleable and were retained. Added new in line fuel filters. Wheels Stock aluminum FPS wheels were professionally repainted (bead blasted, etched, primed, base and clear coated, not powder coated) and rims polished. New wheel bearings, new Avon AM26 roadrunner tires. Brakes Cleaned and rebuilt original twin-bleed valve Brembo calipers. All new brake lines, tubes, banjos, washers, etc. front and rear. Master cylinder flushed but didn ’t need rebuild. New fluid and system bled. Pads are original with lots of life so not replaced. Front 6 bolt disks Blanchard ground (still within their thickness spec) for a flat and true surface. Drive train Replaced chain with standard non O-ring Tsubaki black and gold, 106 links with clip type master link. New stock steel sprockets with standard gearing 15/36. Replaced the case saver with new. Original cush rubbers were in good shape. Countershaft seals were tight and not replaced. Suspension Marzocchi front forks rebuilt with Works springs and spacers per Bevel Heaven ’s specs. Original internals retained. new seals, dust covers and fluid of course. Marzocchi rear pneumatic shocks were sold (not economically rebuildable) and replaced with Works shocks from Bevel Heaven which are much better than the originals. Electrical Battery replaced, and new rubber tray and strap installed. New right hand switch (start and kill switch) added to complement Tommaselli throttle. I added a relay to direct full battery voltage to the coils on starting (well known upgrade – bike starts instantly). All electrical works as it should. New CEV rear signals. I haven ’t added front signals because I prefer the lines of the bike without them. Used 1980 Ducati 900 18,000 miles 1980 Ducati 900SSD “Darmah ”Just completed fully documented restoration by professional engineer, mechanic and ex-racer. One of the rarer Ducatis with only 854 made between 1978 and 1980 according to Ian Falloon. The bike starts instantly, idles perfectly, shifts correctly and pulls like the proverbial freight train. With controversial styling (to some), it is a worthy alternative to the 900SS at less than half the price. I have acquired a lot of respect for this model after seeing the engineering up close and riding it. I also own a 750GT which is a far more civilized ride. The Darmah is narrower, lighter, faster. Riding posture is aggressive with stock clip-ons and rear sets and bubble fairing. Most of the bike is stock except for a few upgrades like suspension, hydraulic clutch, and Tomasselli throttle. I tried to stay true to the original, but built the bike for riding, not for trailering. Too much to list, but here goes: Motor Cases never split to my knowledge. I checked the compression (110/125 PSI horizontal/vertical cylinders), adjusted the valves, soda blasted the motor out of the frame, polished the cases, replaced all oil plugs and replaced the Bosch pickup wiring inside the clutch case. Hydraulic clutch upgrade added (the stock mechanical pull was ridiculously stiff). All new seals and gaskets. Many fasteners replaced with stainless. Fresh oil. Motor does not smoke either on start up or during use. Carbs Airbox removed and crankcase breather filter (KN type) added. Dellorto PHF 32’s cleaned, rebuilt (new slides, jets, gaskets etc. ), tuned and synchronized. New Malossi velocity stacks; also have KN type pod filters. Inferior stock cable and splitter replaced with new Tommaselli throttle with dual cables resulting in good snappy throttle response. Carbs have mostly stock settings, and runs well here at 5,000 feet but does pop a little on throttle closure due to idle jets that are probably a little too lean. Fuel System Tank was in good shape, but was patiently devarnished, descaled, derusted, and NOT coated. One petbird was replaced. Original green fuel hoses are still malleable and were retained. Added new in line fuel filters. Wheels Stock aluminum FPS wheels were professionally repainted (bead blasted, etched, primed, base and clear coated, not powder coated) and rims polished. New wheel bearings, new Avon AM26 roadrunner tires. Brakes Cleaned and rebuilt original twin-bleed valve Brembo calipers. All new brake lines, tubes, banjos, washers, etc. front and rear. Master cylinder flushed but didn ’t need rebuild. New fluid and system bled. Pads are original with lots of life so not replaced. Front 6 bolt disks Blanchard ground (still within their thickness spec) for a flat and true surface. Drive train Replaced chain with standard non O-ring Tsubaki black and gold, 106 links with clip type master link. New stock steel sprockets with standard gearing 15/36. Replaced the case saver with new. Original cush rubbers were in good shape. Countershaft seals were tight and not replaced. Suspension Marzocchi front forks rebuilt with Works springs and spacers per Bevel Heaven ’s specs. Original internals retained. new seals, dust covers and fluid of course. Marzocchi rear pneumatic shocks were sold (not economically rebuildable) and replaced with Works shocks from Bevel Heaven which are much better than the originals. Electrical Battery replaced, and new rubber tray and strap installed. New right hand switch (start and kill switch) added to complement Tommaselli throttle. I added a relay to direct full battery voltage to the coils on starting (well known upgrade – bike starts instantly). All electrical works as it should. New CEV rear signals. I haven ’t added front signals because I prefer the lines of the bike without them. Used 1980 Ducati 900 18,000 miles 1980 Ducati 900SSD “Darmah ”Just completed fully documented restoration by professional engineer, mechanic and ex-racer. One of the rarer Ducatis with only 854 made between 1978 and 1980 according to Ian Falloon. The bike starts instantly, idles perfectly, shifts correctly and pulls like the proverbial freight train. With controversial styling (to some), it is a worthy alternative to the 900SS at less than half the price. I have acquired a lot of respect for this model after seeing the engineering up close and riding it. I also own a 750GT which is a far more civilized ride. The Darmah is narrower, lighter, faster. Riding posture is aggressive with stock clip-ons and rear sets and bubble fairing. Most of the bike is stock except for a few upgrades like suspension, hydraulic clutch, and Tomasselli throttle. I tried to stay true to the original, but built the bike for riding, not for trailering. Too much to list, but here goes: Motor Cases never split to my knowledge. I checked the compression (110/125 PSI horizontal/vertical cylinders), adjusted the valves, soda blasted the motor out of the frame, polished the cases, replaced all oil plugs and replaced the Bosch pickup wiring inside the clutch case. Hydraulic clutch upgrade added (the stock mechanical pull was ridiculously stiff). All new seals and gaskets. Many fasteners replaced with stainless. Fresh oil. Motor does not smoke either on start up or during use. Carbs Airbox removed and crankcase breather filter (KN type) added. Dellorto PHF 32’s cleaned, rebuilt (new slides, jets, gaskets etc. ), tuned and synchronized. New Malossi velocity stacks; also have KN type pod filters. Inferior stock cable and splitter replaced with new Tommaselli throttle with dual cables resulting in good snappy throttle response. Carbs have mostly stock settings, and runs well here at 5,000 feet but does pop a little on throttle closure due to idle jets that are probably a little too lean. Fuel System Tank was in good shape, but was patiently devarnished, descaled, derusted, and NOT coated. One petbird was replaced. Original green fuel hoses are still malleable and were retained. Added new in line fuel filters. Wheels Stock aluminum FPS wheels were professionally repainted (bead blasted, etched, primed, base and clear coated, not powder coated) and rims polished. New wheel bearings, new Avon AM26 roadrunner tires. Brakes Cleaned and rebuilt original twin-bleed valve Brembo calipers. All new brake lines, tubes, banjos, washers, etc. front and rear. Master cylinder flushed but didn ’t need rebuild. New fluid and system bled. Pads are original with lots of life so not replaced. Front 6 bolt disks Blanchard ground (still within their thickness spec) for a flat and true surface. Drive train Replaced chain with standard non O-ring Tsubaki black and gold, 106 links with clip type master link. New stock steel sprockets with standard gearing 15/36. Replaced the case saver with new. Original cush rubbers were in good shape. Countershaft seals were tight and not replaced. Suspension Marzocchi front forks rebuilt with Works springs and spacers per Bevel Heaven ’s specs. Original internals retained. new seals, dust covers and fluid of course. Marzocchi rear pneumatic shocks were sold (not economically rebuildable) and replaced with Works shocks from Bevel Heaven which are much better than the originals. Electrical Battery replaced, and new rubber tray and strap installed. New right hand switch (start and kill switch) added to complement Tommaselli throttle. I added a relay to direct full battery voltage to the coils on starting (well known upgrade – bike starts instantly). All electrical works as it should. New CEV rear signals. I haven ’t added front signals because I prefer the lines of the bike without them. Used 1980 Ducati 900 18,000 miles 1980 Ducati 900SSD “Darmah ”Just completed fully documented restoration by professional engineer, mechanic and ex-racer. One of the rarer Ducatis with only 854 made between 1978 and 1980 according to Ian Falloon. The bike starts instantly, idles perfectly, shifts correctly and pulls like the proverbial freight train. With controversial styling (to some), it is a worthy alternative to the 900SS at less than half the price. I have acquired a lot of respect for this model after seeing the engineering up close and riding it. I also own a 750GT which is a far more civilized ride. The Darmah is narrower, lighter, faster. Riding posture is aggressive with stock clip-ons and rear sets and bubble fairing. Most of the bike is stock except for a few upgrades like suspension, hydraulic clutch, and Tomasselli throttle. I tried to stay true to the original, but built the bike for riding, not for trailering. Too much to list, but here goes: Motor Cases never split to my knowledge. I checked the compression (110/125 PSI horizontal/vertical cylinders), adjusted the valves, soda blasted the motor out of the frame, polished the cases, replaced all oil plugs and replaced the Bosch pickup wiring inside the clutch case. Hydraulic clutch upgrade added (the stock mechanical pull was ridiculously stiff). All new seals and gaskets. Many fasteners replaced with stainless. Fresh oil. Motor does not smoke either on start up or during use. Carbs Airbox removed and crankcase breather filter (KN type) added. Dellorto PHF 32’s cleaned, rebuilt (new slides, jets, gaskets etc. ), tuned and synchronized. New Malossi velocity stacks; also have KN type pod filters. Inferior stock cable and splitter replaced with new Tommaselli throttle with dual cables resulting in good snappy throttle response. Carbs have mostly stock settings, and runs well here at 5,000 feet but does pop a little on throttle closure due to idle jets that are probably a little too lean. Fuel System Tank was in good shape, but was patiently devarnished, descaled, derusted, and NOT coated. One petbird was replaced. Original green fuel hoses are still malleable and were retained. Added new in line fuel filters. Wheels Stock aluminum FPS wheels were professionally repainted (bead blasted, etched, primed, base and clear coated, not powder coated) and rims polished. New wheel bearings, new Avon AM26 roadrunner tires. Brakes Cleaned and rebuilt original twin-bleed valve Brembo calipers. All new brake lines, tubes, banjos, washers, etc. front and rear. Master cylinder flushed but didn ’t need rebuild. New fluid and system bled. Pads are original with lots of life so not replaced. Front 6 bolt disks Blanchard ground (still within their thickness spec) for a flat and true surface. Drive train Replaced chain with standard non O-ring Tsubaki black and gold, 106 links with clip type master link. New stock steel sprockets with standard gearing 15/36. Replaced the case saver with new. Original cush rubbers were in good shape. Countershaft seals were tight and not replaced. Suspension Marzocchi front forks rebuilt with Works springs and spacers per Bevel Heaven ’s specs. Original internals retained. new seals, dust covers and fluid of course. Marzocchi rear pneumatic shocks were sold (not economically rebuildable) and replaced with Works shocks from Bevel Heaven which are much better than the originals. Electrical Battery replaced, and new rubber tray and strap installed. New right hand switch (start and kill switch) added to complement Tommaselli throttle. I added a relay to direct full battery voltage to the coils on starting (well known upgrade – bike starts instantly). All electrical works as it should. New CEV rear signals. I haven ’t added front signals because I prefer the lines of the bike without them. Used 1980 Ducati 900 18,000 miles
$8,600
2004 Honda Goldwing 1800GL Trike for SalePOPULAR

2004 Honda Goldwing 1800GL Trike for Sale

Tacoma, WA
Jan 01, 2024
Low miles, garage kept. Beautiful trike, great buy! Sold, 'AS IS, WHERE IS' No warranties either expressed or implied. Excellent condition and everything works perfect. Needs nothing. Used 2004 16,318 miles Low miles, garage kept. Beautiful trike, great buy! Sold, 'AS IS, WHERE IS' No warranties either expressed or implied. Excellent condition and everything works perfect. Needs nothing. Used 2004 16,318 miles Low miles, garage kept. Beautiful trike, great buy! Sold, 'AS IS, WHERE IS' No warranties either expressed or implied. Excellent condition and everything works perfect. Needs nothing. Used 2004 16,318 miles Low miles, garage kept. Beautiful trike, great buy! Sold, 'AS IS, WHERE IS' No warranties either expressed or implied. Excellent condition and everything works perfect. Needs nothing. Used 2004 16,318 miles Low miles, garage kept. Beautiful trike, great buy! Sold, 'AS IS, WHERE IS' No warranties either expressed or implied. Excellent condition and everything works perfect. Needs nothing. Used 2004 16,318 miles
$9,500
2023 Yamaha Zuma 125 for SalePOPULAR

2023 Yamaha Zuma 125 for Sale

Issaquah, WA
Nov 11, 2023
NEW ZUMA 125 ON SALE! The reimagined, ultra-modern, Zuma 125 is a rugged and fuel efficient scooter with big features in a compact package. New 2023 Yamaha Zuma Black NEW ZUMA 125 ON SALE! The reimagined, ultra-modern, Zuma 125 is a rugged and fuel efficient scooter with big features in a compact package. New 2023 Yamaha Zuma Black NEW ZUMA 125 ON SALE! The reimagined, ultra-modern, Zuma 125 is a rugged and fuel efficient scooter with big features in a compact package. New 2023 Yamaha Zuma Black NEW ZUMA 125 ON SALE! The reimagined, ultra-modern, Zuma 125 is a rugged and fuel efficient scooter with big features in a compact package. New 2023 Yamaha Zuma Black NEW ZUMA 125 ON SALE! The reimagined, ultra-modern, Zuma 125 is a rugged and fuel efficient scooter with big features in a compact package. New 2023 Yamaha Zuma Black
$3,299
2024 Honda ADV160 for SalePOPULAR

2024 Honda ADV160 for Sale

Issaquah, WA
Nov 08, 2023
NEW ADV160 IN STOCK! There’s big news when it comes to the world’s most adventure-oriented scooter—because we’ve given our ADV160 a bigger engine for 2024. More displacement, four valves per cylinder, and our new e SP+ engine configuration (shared with our PCX) mean great fuel economy and plenty of power. But the best parts never change: you New 2024 Honda A Red NEW ADV160 IN STOCK! There’s big news when it comes to the world’s most adventure-oriented scooter—because we’ve given our ADV160 a bigger engine for 2024. More displacement, four valves per cylinder, and our new e SP+ engine configuration (shared with our PCX) mean great fuel economy and plenty of power. But the best parts never change: you New 2024 Honda A Red NEW ADV160 IN STOCK! There’s big news when it comes to the world’s most adventure-oriented scooter—because we’ve given our ADV160 a bigger engine for 2024. More displacement, four valves per cylinder, and our new e SP+ engine configuration (shared with our PCX) mean great fuel economy and plenty of power. But the best parts never change: you New 2024 Honda A Red NEW ADV160 IN STOCK! There’s big news when it comes to the world’s most adventure-oriented scooter—because we’ve given our ADV160 a bigger engine for 2024. More displacement, four valves per cylinder, and our new e SP+ engine configuration (shared with our PCX) mean great fuel economy and plenty of power. But the best parts never change: you New 2024 Honda A Red NEW ADV160 IN STOCK! There’s big news when it comes to the world’s most adventure-oriented scooter—because we’ve given our ADV160 a bigger engine for 2024. More displacement, four valves per cylinder, and our new e SP+ engine configuration (shared with our PCX) mean great fuel economy and plenty of power. But the best parts never change: you New 2024 Honda A Red
$4,499