The following is a list ofmotorcycles ,scooters andmopeds produced by theYamaha Motor Company .
First and last bike [ edit ] Yamaha YA-1 YA-1 built August 1954, produced January 1955. The first bike manufactured by Yamaha was actually a copy of the German DKW RT 125; it had anair-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] YDS-3 (1964) 246 cc, two-stroke,parallel-twin , it used the world's first oil injection lubrication system in a 2-stroke engine.[ 2] DT-1 (1968) Yamaha's first true off-road motorcycle.[ 1] XS-1 (1970) Yamaha's first four-stroke engine motorcycle (650 cc twin).[ 3] YZ Monocross (1975) First production motocross bike with a single rear shock.[ 3] YZ400F (1998) First mass-produced four-stroke motocross motorcycle.[ 3] Step-throughs, scooters, maxi-scooters (Two- and four-stroke)[ edit ] Modified Yamaha BW 125 in Colombia Some of thesestep-throughs and scooters are made for Southeast Asian markets, where they are known asunderbones .
Lagenda series (Asia)LC50 (Asia) MJ50 (Asia) V50M (U.K, Europe and Asia)C3 50cc (U.S.) Lexam (Vietnam)Nouvo (Asia)Mio (Asia)Sirius (Asia) X-1 (Asia)X-1R (Thailand)Chappy Acruzo (Vietnam) Active 50 cc (Japan) Aerox R 50 cc (E.U.) Aerox TY race replica 50 cc (E.U.) Belle 80 cc (Thailand) Belle 100 cc (Thailand) Belle R (Thailand) Beluga BJ 50 cc (Japan) Box'n 50 cc (Japan) BW's NBA 50 cc (E.U.) BW's 50 cc (E.U.) BWs Naked 50 cc (E.U.) BW's 12 inch 50 cc (E.U.) BW's Next Generation 50 cc (E.U.) BW's 125 cc (Taiwan) Champ Champ CX 50 cc (Japan) Champ RS 50 cc (Japan) Cute 50 cc (Japan) Cuxi (Taiwan) EZ115 (Malaysia) F1ZR/ss two (Asia) Fazzio (Asia) Fiore/Jog Ciao (Asia/Taiwan) Finn/Jupiter Finn/Crypton S (Asia/E.U.) Giggle 50 cc (E.U.) Grand Filano/Nozza Grande (Asia) Janus (Vietnam) Jog 50 cc (Japan) JogR 50 cc (E.U.) JogRR 50 cc (E.U.) JogRR MotoGP 50 cc (E.U.) Jog Deluxe 50 cc (Japan) Jog ZR 50 cc (Japan) Jog Poche 50 cc (Japan) Jog 125 cc (Taiwan/Japan) JR120 (Thailand) Latte/D'elight (Vietnam/E.U.) Limi (Taiwan) Mint 50 cc Neo's 50 cc (E.U.) Neo's 4-Stroke 50 cc (E.U.) Nozza/Filano/D'elight (Asia/E.U.) Passol 50 cc (Asia) Passola 50 cc (Asia) PG-1 (Asia) QBIX (Asia) Salient/Riva 50 cc Slider Naked 50 cc (E.U.) Speed MX (Thailand) Tiara (Thailand) Tiara S (Thailand) Try 50 cc (Japan) Why 50 cc (E.U.) Vino 125 (U.S.)Vino Classic 50 cc (U.S.) Ray ZR 125 (E.U.) Rex 50 cc (E.U.) RS Neo 125 cc (Taiwan) Zest 50 cc (E.U.) Zuma 50 cc (U.S.)Vox 50 cc (Japan) Vino 50 cc (Japan) Molte Vino 50 cc (Japan) Vinoora (Taiwan) U7E RX-Z 135 Y125Z (Asia)T-150/Exciter 150/Jupiter MX/Y15ZR (Asia)T-155/Exciter 155/Jupiter MX King/Y16ZR (Asia)Jupiter MX/135LC/Spark 135/Sniper (Asia)Zuma 125 (U.S.)ZR120 (Thailand) Maxi-scooters (four-stroke)[ edit ] Large scooters with more than 125 cc, and a large chassis and protection from the elements.
One of the smallest of Yamaha's maxi-scooters: Majesty 125 Axis Grand 100 cc (Japan) Axis Z 125 cc (Taiwan/Japan) Aerox / NVX 125 / 155 cc / ABS (Thailand/Indonesia/Philippines/Malaysia/Vietnam/India) Augur 155 cc (Taiwan) Cygnus / Riva 180 cc CygnusX 125 cc (E.U./Japan) CygnusX SR 125 cc (Japan) Cygnus Gryphus 125 cc (Taiwan/Japan) Fluo / FreeGo 125 cc (Brazil/Asia) Force / X-Force 155 cc (Taiwan/Japan) Gear 125 cc (Asia) Iron Max 125 Iron Max 250 Iron Max 300 Iron Max 400 Iron Max 530 LEXi (Indonesia)[ 12] LEXi LX 155 (Indonesia)[ 13] Majesty 125 cc (E.U.) Vity 125 cc (E.U.) X-City 125 cc (E.U.)BLACK X-MAX 125 cc (E.U.) X-MAX 125 cc (E.U.) X-City 250 cc (E.U.)BLACK X-MAX 250 cc (E.U.) X-MAX 250 cc (E.U.) Maxam 250 cc (Japan) Morphous 250 (CP250VL) (U.S.) Majesty 125 cc Majesty 250 cc (Japan) YP400 Majesty / ABS (E.U./U.S.)MW-Vision MWC-4 Neo / Soul / Ego Avantiz / GT 125 cc (Brazil/Asia) NMAX 125 cc / ABSNMAX 155 cc VVA / ABSNMAX Neo 155 cc / ABS (Indonesia)NMAX "Turbo" 155 cc VVA / ABS / YECVT (Indonesia)SMAX 155 cc (U.S.) Xenter 125 (E.U.) XMAX 300 cc / ABSXMAX 400 cc / ABS (E.U.)Grand Majesty 400 cc (Japan) TMAX / ABS (E.U./U.S.)TMAX Tech 560 BLACK TMAX / ABS (E.U.) Tricity 125 Tricity 125 ABS Tricity 155 (Philippines) Tricity 155 ABS Tricity 250 Tricity 300 Tricity 400 TTX / X-Ride (Asia) 150 MX King (Indonesia) 3CT Motorcycles (racing)[ edit ] A 2007 Yamaha YZ250F motocross ridden atPhillip Island Former WorldEnduro ChampionStefan Merriman on a Yamaha Trail bike (road oriented)[ edit ] Trail bike (dirt oriented)[ edit ] IT125 IT175 IT200 IT250 IT250H IT400 IT425 IT465 IT490 WR200 WR250 WR500 YZ125X YZ250X TY50 TY80 TY125 TY175 TY200 TY250 TY350 Yamaha PW50 bike for beginner children Yamaha PW80 bike for slightly bigger children GT80 LT100MX MX100 MX125 MX175 MX250 MX360 MX400 YZ50 YZ60 YZ65 YZ80 YZ85 YZ100 YZ125 YZ125X YZ175 YZ250 YZ250X YZ360 YZ400 YZ465 YZ490 YZM500 RT100 RT180 SC500 WR250 WR500 Tilting three-wheeled motor scooter [ edit ] Electric motorcycles and scooters [ edit ] E-01 EMF Frog Mest Eccy EC-02 EC-05 NEO's Passol Passol-L Pocke[ 14] Seated Electric Scooter[ 14] Concept/prototype motorcycles[ edit ] A Yamaha FC-me Concept 3CT DEINONYCHUS EKIDS E02 EVINO FC-me Gen-Ryu GL750 Hybride HV-X HV-01 Luxair MAXAM 3000 Morpho Morpho II MT-05 MWT-9 OR2T OV-23XV PED1 PES1 YZF-R25 VOX XS-V1 Sakura[ 15] XT250X XV 950 BOLT (Café Racer) Tesseract Yamaha YE01 R25 Concept RZ201 Rotary Ténéré 700 World Raid 01GEN 525 XTY – Prototype trial 1200 Venture
^a b c d e f "Yamaha Motorcycles" .^ "Yamaha Sports YDS-3" .240 Landmarks of the Japanese Automotive Industry . Society of Automotive Engineers of Japan, Inc. Retrieved10 August 2013 .The Yamaha Autolube system employed a plunger pump as a method for allowing minute amounts of oil to spread over the lubricated surfaces of each engine part. ^a b c http://www.yamaha-motor.com/corporate/historytimeline.aspx Archived 2016-06-16 at theWayback Machine , Yamaha website timeline, accessed October 2, 2011^ last UK unrestrictedmoped , and last moped required to havepedals (1977) ^ built August 1954, produced January 1955. The first bike manufactured by Yamaha; it had anair-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. ^ 1969 250 parallel twin based on the Daytona Racing engine of same time. Street scrambler. ^ (1965) single cylinder 80 cc two-stroke ^ released in the U.S. in 1982, the XJ650RJ Seca is essentially the same as the XJ650 sold in Europe, but with emissions options that meetU.S. Environmental Protection Agency guidelines ^ Smith, Robert (July–August 2007)."1982 Yamaha XJ650RJ Seca" . Motorcycle Classics. Retrieved2009-08-11 . ^ "New 125cc Scooter Enters Premium Class in Growing Market" . Yamaha Global News Center. RetrievedNovember 27, 2024 .^ "Starting The Year, Yamaha LEXi 155 Gets A Positive Response In East Java" . VOI. RetrievedNovember 27, 2024 .^a b Yamaha's folding seated electric scooter , Treehugger.com, May 17, 2005, retrieved2009-09-07 ^ Paul Crowe (2007-10-16),Yamaha XS-V1 Sakura for Tokyo Motor Show , The Kneeslider, retrieved2009-09-07
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