Japanese sport bikes aren't the only motorcycles allowed to use bright green. This custom Harley-Davidson 750 Street used a white, black, and "toxic green" color scheme to perfection for the HD Custom Kings competition. It was built by Gruene Harley-Davidson in New Braunfels, Texas.
As the motorcycle industry, like the auto industry, continues to be flooded with every single niche type vehicle, the street Scrambler is definitely having a moment.
To ICON's Jonathan Ward, the Willys Jeep "exemplified the values of longevity, simplicity, and durability. They're really, I often say, the mechanical equivalent to a really good pair of flip flops." So, ICON took the flip flops and flipped it into a sick resto-mod named the CJ3B, aka "The Dog."
For these t-shirts that look like ugly Christmas sweaters, you can pick your favorite kind of Mustang, everything from the S550 to the Fox to the classic.
The post Mustang Holiday Shirts Give You All the Ugly, None of the Itch appeared first on The Mustang Source.
The B Team. It sounds like the title of a Jackass parody of the A Team or a reflective think-piece about how I wasn't good enough to make Varsity in high school basketball (or JV, for that matter).
The FXR Super Glide II was a special bike that was built at a very important time in Harley-Davidson's history. Reportedly considered an "engineer's bike" among people at the company, the FXR came at time when Harley-Davidson's reputation was recovering.
You're going to want to kiss Russ McLean once you learn what role he had in the Corvette's history.