List of Yamaha motorcycles
List of motorcycles manufactured by Yamaha Motor Company
-
This transport-related list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
First bikes
- YA-1 built August 1954, produced January 1955. The first bike manufactured by Yamaha; it had an air-cooled, two-stroke, single cylinder 125 cc engine[1]
- YC-1 (1956) was the second bike manufactured by Yamaha; it was a 175 cc single cylinder two-stroke.[1]
- YD-1 (1957) Yamaha began production of its first 250 cc, two-stroke twin, the YD1.[1]
- MF-1 (1958) 50 cc, two-stroke, single cylinder, step through street bike[1]
- DT-1 (1968) Yamaha's first true off-road motorcycle.[1]
- XS-1 (1970) Yamaha's first four-stroke engine motorcycle (650 cc twin).[2]
- Yamaha YZ Monocross (1975) First production motocross bike with a single rear shock.[2]
- Yamaha YZ400F (1998) First mass produced four-stroke motocross motorcycle.[2]
Road bikes
Two-stroke
Four-stroke
Step-throughs, scooters, maxi-scooters (Two- and four-stroke)
Some of these step-throughs and scooters are made for Southeast Asian markets, where they are known as underbones.
- Lagenda series (Asia)
- Yamaha LC50 (Asia)
- Yamaha MJ50 (Asia)
- Yamaha V90 (Asia)
- Yamaha C3 50cc (U.S.)
- Yamaha Lexam (Vietnam)
- Yamaha Nouvo (Asia)
- Yamaha Mio (Asia)
- Yamaha Sirius (Asia)
- Yamaha V-IXION (Asia)
- Yamaha X-1 (Asia)
- Yamaha X-1R (Thailand)
- Chappy
- Yamaha Aerox R 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Aerox TY race replica 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Beluga
- Yamaha BJ 50 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha BW's NBA 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha BW's 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha BWs Naked 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha BW's 12 inch 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha BW's Next Generation 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Force one/ss
- Yamaha F1ZR/ss two (asia)
- Yamaha Giggle 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha JogR 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha JogRR 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha JogRR MotoGP 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Jog Deluxe 50 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha Jog ZR 50 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha Jog Poche 50 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha Neo's 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Neo's 4-Stroke 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Slider Naked 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Why 50 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Vino Classic 50 cc (U.S.)
- Yamaha Zuma 50 cc (U.S.)
- Yamaha Vox 50 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha Vino 50 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha Molte Vino 50 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha U7E
- Yamaha RX-Z 135
- Y125Z (Asia)
- Vino 125 (U.S.)
- Zuma 125 (U.S.)
- Y135LC|Y135LC/Spark 135/Sniper (Asia)
Maxi-scooters (four-stroke)
Large scooters with more than 125 cc, and a large chassis and protection from the elements, are very popular in the E.U., Japan, and the US.
- Yamaha Axis Grand 100 cc(Japan)
- Yamaha CygnusX 125 cc (E.U./Japan)
- Yamaha CygnusX SR 125 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha Majesty 125 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Vity 125 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha X-City 125 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha BLACK X-MAX 125 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha X-MAX 125 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha X-City 250 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha BLACK X-MAX 250 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha X-MAX 250 cc (E.U.)
- Yamaha Maxam 250 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha Morphous 250 (CP250VL) (U.S.)
- Yamaha Majesty 125 cc
- Yamaha Majesty 250 cc (Japan)
- YP400 Majesty / ABS (E.U./U.S.)
- Yamaha Grand Majesty 400 cc (Japan)
- Yamaha TMAX / ABS (E.U./U.S.)
- Yamaha BLACK TMAX / ABS (E.U.)
Motorcycles (racing)
- YZR-M1
- YZR500
- TZ250
- TZ125
- TD1
- TZ350
- TZ500
- TZ700
- TZ750
- OW-01
- OW48R
- RD56
- RD48
- YZE750T
- YZE850T
Off-road bikes
Trail bike (road oriented)
Two-stroke
- TDR250
- CT175
- DT50
- Yamaha dt 80
- DT100
- DT125
- DT175
- DT200
- DT250
- DT360
- DT400
- L5
Four-stroke
Trail bike (dirt oriented)
Two-stroke
- AT1 / AT2 / AT3
- CT1 / CT2 / CT3
- DT1 / DT2 / DT3
- JT1 / JT2
- RT1 / RT2 / RT3
- LT2
Four-stroke
Enduro
Two-stroke
- IT125
- IT175
- IT200
- IT250
- IT400
- IT425
- IT465
- IT490
Four-stroke
Two-stroke
- PW50
- YZ50
- GT80
- PW80
- YZ80
- YZ85
- MX100
- RT100
- MX125
- YZ125
- MX175
- YZ175
- RT180
- MX250
- YZ250
- MX360
- YZ360
- MX400
- YZ400
- YZ465
- YZ490
- SC500
Four-stroke
Electric motorcycles and scooters
- Yamaha Frog
- Yamaha Mest
- Yamaha Eccy
- Yamaha Passol
- Yamaha EC-02
- Yamaha Passol-L
- Yamaha Pocke[4]
- Yamaha Seated Electric Scooter[4]
Concept/prototype motorcycles
- Yamaha DEINONYCHUS
- Yamaha FC-me
- Yamaha Gen-Ryu
- Yamaha HV-01
- Yamaha MAXAM 3000
- Morpho
- Yamaha Morpho II
- VOX
- Yamaha XS-V1 Sakura[5]
- Yamaha XT250X
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i http://www.starmotorcycles.com/star/company/historyhome/home.aspx
- ^ a b c http://www.yamaha-motor.com/corporate/historytimeline.aspx, Yamaha website timeline, accessed October 2, 2011
- ^ Robert Smith (July/August 2007). "1982 Yamaha XJ650RJ Seca". Motorcycle Classics. http://www.motorcycleclassics.com/motorcycle-reviews/2007-07-01/1982-yamaha-xj650rj-seca.aspx. Retrieved 2009-08-11.
- ^ a b Yamaha's folding seated electric scooter, Treehugger.com, May 17, 2005, http://www.treehugger.com/files/2005/05/yamaha_divide_e.php, retrieved 2009-09-07
- ^ Paul Crowe (2007-10-16), Yamaha XS-V1 Sakura for Tokyo Motor Show, The Kneeslider, http://thekneeslider.com/archives/2007/10/16/yamaha-xs-v1-sakura-for-tokyo-motor-show/, retrieved 2009-09-07
Notes
- ^ last UK unrestricted moped, and last moped required to have pedals (1977)
- ^ built August 1954, produced January 1955. The first bike manufactured by Yamaha; it had an air-cooled, two-stroke, single cylinder 125 cc engine.
- ^ (1956) was the second bike manufactured by Yamaha; it was a 175 cc single cylinder two-stroke.
- ^ (1957) Yamaha began production of its first 250 cc, two-stroke twin, the YD1.
- ^ (1965) single cylinder 80 cc two-stroke)
|
Type |
1950s |
1960s |
1970s |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
0 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
0 |
50 |
|
Yamaha MF-1 |
|
|
|
|
FS-1E |
125 |
|
Yamaha YA-1 |
|
|
|
|
YA-2 |
|
|
|
|
Yamaha YA-3 |
|
|
|
|
YA-125 SB |
|
|
175 |
|
Yamaha YC-1 |
|
|
250 |
|
Yamaha YD-1 |
|
|
|
Yamaha YD-2 |
|
|
|
Yamaha YDS-1 |
|
|
|
Yamaha YD-3 |
|
|
250 Trail |
|
|
Yamaha DT-1 |
260 |
|
Yamaha YE-1 |
|
|
347 |
|
|
YR-5 |
350 |
|
|
Yamaha YR-1 |
|
|
Yamaha YR-3 |
351 |
|
|
RT360 |
653 |
|
|
XS-1 |