Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

160cc 58.5mm Big Bore Cylinder Forged Piston - Yamaha Bws Zuma Cygnus-x Yw125 on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Seminole, Florida, United States

Seminole, Florida, United States
Condition:New Country/Region of Manufacture:Taiwan

You are bidding on a New Cylinder , Piston, Gaskets along with Piston Pin and cir clips. This is 

for a YAMAHA BWS ZUMA X-Over CYGNUS YW125 it Brings it up to a 160cc all 

new. Samurai 58.5mm Big Bore Cylinder Kit for the Yamaha Zuma 125. Upgrades 

your engine to 160cc


  • Bore: 58.5mm
  • Overall Height (cylinder): 93mm
*Professional installation is recommended. Some modification may be required.
Sold as is no returns

169-213


Scooter Parts for Sale

Nissan plots BladeGlider production (2014)

Fri, 03 Jan 2014

By Ben Pulman Motor Industry 03 January 2014 10:30 Last month we brought you spyshots of Nissan’s new Almera hatchback; this week it’s the altogether more enticing news that bosses at the Japanese car giant hope to put the wacky BladeGlider concept car into production. The ‘swept wing’ BladeGlider is inspired by Nissan’s ZEOD RC, the company’s entry into the 2014 Le Mans 24-hours, and it seems production of the crazy concept is a possibility. ‘It’s in our mid-term plan,’ Nissan chief planning officer Andy Palmer revealed to CAR.

Chrysler Delta arriving at UK dealers – Chrysler Ypsilon arrives September

Fri, 26 Aug 2011

Chrysler Delta - now arriving in UK dealers There’s a long history of Lancia in the UK being associated with grief. So much so that Lancia left the UK market altogether in 1994. But now it’s on the way back, although you wouldn’t know it from the badges on the cars which herald that return – the Chrysler Delta and the Chrysler Ypsilon.

Kia Optima 2011 revealed

Fri, 02 Apr 2010

The 2011 Kia Optima will replace the Kia Magentis in the UK A week or two ago we reported on the first info on the 2011 Kia Magentis we expected to see at the New York Motor Show this week. But because we thought that Kia would change the name before bringing it to the UK and Europe, we headed that story up with both the Optima and Magentis moniker. But not this time.