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  2. List of Suzuki motorcycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Suzuki_motorcycles

    Suzuki DL/V-Strom series: Dual-sport: DL/V-Strom 250: 248: Dual-sport: 2020 Suzuki DL250: ... Motorcycle Automatic RC 100 JetCooled 100 Motorcycle Automatic RC 110 ...

  3. Suzuki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki

    Suzuki Motorcycle India, Private Limited (SMIL) is the wholly owned Indian subsidiary of Suzuki, Japan. The company has a manufacturing plant at Gurgaon, Haryana having the annual capacity of 5,40,000 units. [220]

  4. Suzuki GSX-R series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki_GSX-R_series

    The first GSX-R of 1984 was a breakthrough model and the closest that any Japanese manufacturer had yet come to building a "race bike with lights". Throughout the 1970s the big four Japanese manufacturers had built bikes with a similar architecture: steel double loop frames, air-cooled inline fours with either SOHC or DOHC configurations.

  5. Suzuki Hayabusa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki_Hayabusa

    Suzuki was the first to put the motorcycle's engine in a car, with two concept cars in 2001, the Suzuki GSX-R/4 roadster and the Formula Hayabusa, an open wheel race car "designed for a new Japanese one-make competition series."

  6. Suzuki GSX series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki_GSX_series

    The GS was Suzuki's version of what was and is referred to as a Universal Japanese Motorcycle, so common was this 4-cylinder four-stroke configuration amongst the Japanese manufacturers at the time. The 63 bhp air-cooled, twin-cam, in-line four cylinder, GS750 road bike set the pattern for the GS/GSX range until the birth of the first of the ...

  7. Suzuki TU250 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzuki_TU250

    The Suzuki TU250— marketed also as the TU250X, ST250 and ST250 E-Type — is a single-cylinder, air-cooled lightweight street bike manufactured by Suzuki across two generations from 1994 to 2019. The TU has a single overhead cam (SOHC), unsleeved , four-stroke engine with chain-drive, a standard riding posture and styling resembling the ...

  8. Osamu Suzuki, who led Japanese automaker into India, dies at 94

    www.aol.com/osamu-suzuki-led-japanese-automaker...

    Osamu Suzuki, an ingenious penny pincher who led Japan’s Suzuki Motor for more than four decades and played a key role in turning India into a flourishing auto market, has died aged 94.

  9. Japanese Big Four - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_Big_Four

    The Japanese Big Four are the large motorcycle manufacturing companies of Japan: [1] [2] [3] Honda, which produces motorcycles since 1946 [4] [5] [6] Suzuki, which produces motorcycles since 1952 [7] Kawasaki, which produces motorcycles since 1954 [8] Yamaha, which produces motorcycles since 1955 [9]