Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The following year would bring the FXB Sturgis, an all-black Low Rider with primary and secondary belt drives, and the FXWG Wide Glide, a Low Rider with wide forks and a flame pattern painted on the tank. [10] In 1983, the Low Rider was converted from chain drive to belt drive and given the designation FXSB, at which point the FXB was discontinued.
Wide Glide FXWG FXDWG FXDWGI 96.7 cu in (1,584 cc) (2007–2011) | 103 cu in (1,690 cc) (2012–2017) 1980–1986, 1993–2016 Extended 41 mm forks, a 21" front wheel, and forward foot controls. Sturgis FXB 82 cu in (1,340 cc) 1980–1982, 1991 First production Harley-Davidson with a belt final drive and a belt primary drive.
The V2 engine introduced in 1948, colloquially called Panhead, was available as E, EL, F, FL depending on size and compression 2019 Harley Davidson FLHT. Harley-Davidson FL is a model designation used for Harley-Davidson motorcycles since 1941, when F referred to the new large capacity 74 cui (1200cc) variant of the V-2 Overhead valve engine (″Knucklehead″) that was introduced in 1936 as ...
1985–1994 A4LD—C3 with overdrive; 1989–1998 E4OD—C6 with overdrive; 1999–2004 4R100—Replaces the E4OD transmission; 1995–2001 4R44E—Electronically controlled A4LD, light-duty; 1995–1997 4R55E—Electronically controlled A4LD, heavy-duty
The Kawasaki GPZ1000RX (Ninja 1000R, model designation ZXT00A) was a motorcycle made by Kawasaki from 1986 to 1988. It had a 997 cc (60.8 cu in) four-cylinder, 16-valve, twin cam engine.
The Suzuki XN85, released in early 1983, was a turbocharged motorcycle designed as a sports bike.The name came from the claim that it produced 85 bhp, although rear wheel measurements were in the low 70s.
The Generation 3 refers to the generation of stock cars used in NASCAR from 1981 to 1991, and it was used in the Busch Series at it's modern beginning in 1982. In this generation, NASCAR downsized the cars to better resemble cars on the showroom floor (with wheelbase at 110 inches), and body panels were still purchased through the manufacturers.
The Gibson Explorer is a type of electric guitar model by Gibson guitars, released in 1958. The Explorer offered a radical, "futuristic" body design, much like its siblings: the Flying V, which was released the same year, and the Moderne, which was designed in 1957 but not released until 1982.