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seen from United States

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seen from United States
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seen from China
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Portishead - Roads (Sultan & Tone Depth Remix)
How can it feel this wrong From this moment How can it feel this wrong
How can it feel this wrong From this moment How can it feel this wrong
How can it feel (How can it feel) (How can it feel) (How can it feel) (How can it feel) (How can it feel) This wrong
This wrong
What a sexy bike #tattoos #ink #tanktop #bmw #rr1000 #black (at Van Der Stel Pretoria)
BadAss M6 Grandcoupe and an RR
BMW for life
My cousin Richies bike out in Florida repping that NY to the fullest!!! #honda #cbr #rr1000 .. U dont wanna fuck wit that!!!
This is one of just three racing RR1000s produced by Erik Buell before the road version was released in the late 80s. The story starts with the Harley Owners Group, which asked Buell to make a chassis for a race bike using the Harley-Davidson XR engine: the rise in engine capacity from 750 to 1000cc for AMA BoTT racing had made the XR750 uncompetitive against most European high-performance motorcycles. So Buell designed an XR1000-powered bike with racing in mind. It appeared in 1986 and was known as “Lucifer’s Hammer II”, or more formally, the RR1000.