
Jordan 125 Legacy
Years: 2010 – 2013
Across the 1990s–2000s, the Jordan name surfaced on limited-run American customs that favored rideable geometry over show-only drama. These bikes typically combined proven American V-twin powertrains with hand-shaped tanks and fenders, neatly loomed wiring, and braking packages selected for real roads. Customers commissioned ergonomics—bar height, peg position, saddle contour—so the finished machine fit like a tailored jacket. Paintwork and metal finishing were deep but durable, respecting that many owners planned to rack up miles. Without a single corporate lineage, Jordan-badged builds shared a philosophy: draw the stance you love, then make it handle—proper trail figures, rigid mount points, and heat management. Historically, the badge represents the mature phase of the custom boom when craftsmanship and repeatable serviceability mattered as much as silhouette. These are the bikes that still feel sorted a decade later because the builders sweated alignment, hardware quality, and documentation—quiet virtues that turn art into a motorcycle you look forward to riding.