Ad
related to: the most coolest motorcycle ever in the world book
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Around the World on a Motorcycle: 1928 to 1936 [3] [4] Zoltán Sulkowsky, Gyula Bartha: 1937 1928-1936 A Ride In The Sun [5] [6] Peggy Iris Thomas 1954 1950-1952 Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: Robert M. Pirsig: 1974 Fictionalized Jupiter's Travels: Ted Simon: 1979 1973-1977 Two Wheels To Adventure: Alaska to Argentina by Motorcycle ...
Emilio Scotto (Buenos Aires, September 27, 1954) [1] [2] is an Argentine adventurer, photojournalist, and writer. As of 2009 he holds the Guinness record for the world's longest motorcycle ride, spanning 10 years, 214 countries [3] and a total distance of 457,000 miles (735,000 km).
The First Seven-Continent Motorcycle [49] Nick Sanders: June 1997: Triumph: Circumnavigating 32,070 km (19,930 mi) Record for circumnavigating the Earth on a motorcycle in 31 days and 20 hours. [50] Travelogue: Fastest Man Around the World. Jūgatsu Toi: 1997–2002: Honda XRV750 Africa Twin, Honda NX650: North America, Australia, Africa, South ...
In 1984, the Kawasaki company vaulted the motorcycle world into a brave new era with the production of the Ninja, and the GPz900 started it all. It was the first of the modern sportbikes. It was ...
Book review of Carl Stearns Clancy: First Motorcyclist to Ride Around the World at Roadrunner Motorcycle Touring & Travel magazine, July 1, 2010 "Clancy Centenary Ride to Visit the National Motorcycle Museum June 12-13, 2013" , Rider , June 12, 2013, archived from the original on December 21, 2013
The MTT Y2K Turbine Motorcycle, also known as the Y2K Turbine Superbike, is an American motorcycle powered by a turboshaft engine, made by Marine Turbine Technologies since 2000. The bikes are not mass-produced in continuous series; each unique bike is hand made to order after receiving the buyer's specifications. [ 1 ]
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Also, his "At Large" column "Silver Wing for a Silver Eagle", from the April, 1989 Cycle World, was selected for inclusion in The Devil Can Ride: The World's Best Motorcycle Writing, (Lee Klancher, ed.), p. 260. [12] At the publisher's request, Thompson also authorized Urban Moto Magazine to reprint some of his Cycle World "At Large" columns. [13]