Harley-davidson Street Rod 750
A Harley-Davidson Street Rod 750 foi lançada em 2017 como uma evolução voltada para o desempenho da Street 750, voltada para ciclistas mais jovens e urbanos com uma posição de pilotagem mais agressiva e um motor com maior rotação. Ele apresentava uma versão de alta potência do motor Revolution X V-Twin com suspensão aprimorada e freios dianteiros maiores, diferenciando-o do Street 750 padrão. O modelo foi descontinuado por volta de 2020, quando a Harley-Davidson reestruturou sua linha, mas continua sendo notável como uma das tentativas da marca de atrair mercados básicos e internacionais.
65 hp
Poder
59 Nm
Torque
223 kg
Peso
175 km/h (estimated; note: real-world results may vary slightly)
Velocidade máxima
4.5 L/100km (approx. 22 km/L, typical real-world average)
Combustível
Nua
Corpo
Video Review
O que os compradores devem saber
Excessive Heat Issues
The Street Rod 750 is notorious for radiating significant heat onto the rider's legs, especially in stop-and-go traffic. This is a top complaint among owners and worth considering if you ride in hot climates or urban settings.
Weak Resale Value
The Street Rod 750 depreciates faster than most Harley-Davidson models due to its positioning as an entry-level bike with limited collector appeal. Buyers can often find used examples at significant discounts, making it a budget-friendly used purchase.
Unique Liquid-Cooled Engine
Unlike most Harleys, the Street Rod 750 features a liquid-cooled Revolution X engine, which improves long-term reliability and reduces heat-related engine wear. This makes it mechanically more modern than traditional air-cooled Harley models.
Gerações e especificações por ano
Lançamento inicial com High Output Revolution X 750 cc V-twin, estilo agressivo, garfos USD e amortecedor traseiro único.
Avaliação do comprador usado
"A flawed but genuinely fun urban Harley worth buying carefully."
$4,500-$7,500 usedThe Street Rod 750 is Harley's attempt at injecting some sportiness into their entry-level lineup, and honestly it mostly works. The liquid-cooled Revolution X engine pulls harder than you'd expect from a 750, especially mid-range, and the slightly more aggressive ergonomics actually make city riding genuinely fun. It's not a cruiser pretending to be sporty — it has real intent. Check the front forks carefully on any used example; they're a known weak point and replacement parts aren't cheap. The brakes are merely adequate at best, and don't even think about pushing it hard without upgrading the rear shock first. Build quality is decent but not exceptional for the badge. Electrics can be temperamental on higher-mileage bikes, so pull the seat and inspect the wiring harness before handing over cash. Parts availability has improved, but independent shops still scratch their heads at these sometimes. Buy one under 15,000 miles with service history and you'll have a genuinely characterful urban bike that turns heads without destroying your wallet.
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Full Specifications
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