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The Yamaha YD 100 is a light motorcycle manufactured by the Dawood Yamaha Ltd. of Pakistan. Introduced in 2003, It comes as a naked frame, and has a single-cylinder, air-cooled, four-stroke engine, which displaces 102 cc (6.2 cu in). It is a very popular learner motorbike in Pakistan. [1]
Atlas Honda has Pakistan's largest in-house manufacturing capability at its Karachi and Sheikhupura plants, [10] which include an R&D wing and tool making facilities through CAD/CAM. The annual assembly production capacity of AHL is 1.35 million units, with 150,000 units from the Karachi plant and 1.2 million units from the Sheikhupura plant.
United Auto Industries (Pvt) Ltd. came into existence in 1999 by introducing economical 4-stroke motorcycles and Auto rickshaws with the brand name of UNITED. [citation needed] United Auto is now engaged in manufacturing of loaders, scooters, rickshaws and bikes in Pakistan. It has a joint venture with a Chinese automaker to produce these two ...
Yamaha has unveiled a self-riding electric motorbike that features no handlebars or other standard controls.. The Yamaha Motoroid 2 is the next generation of the firm’s Motoroid concept bike ...
The Honda CG125 or Honda CG is a commuter motorcycle made by Honda of Japan. It was in production from 1976 to 2008 in Japan and has been in production since 1992 in Pakistan. The CG was originally manufactured in Japan, but the source for the European market was eventually moved to Brazil in 1985, and to Pakistan and Turkey in 1992 for the W ...
DYL Motorcycles was founded in 1976 as Dawood Yamaha Limited as a joint venture between members of the Dawood family and Yamaha Motor Company. In 2008, the company re branded itself to DYL Motorcycles and introduced products including the YD-70 Dhoom, an upgrade from the YB-100 Royale which had been produced in Pakistan for the last thirty years. [3]
The first generation Cultus was sold in Pakistan as Suzuki Khyber, by Pak Suzuki assembly line, and produced between 1989 and 2000, only in GA trim level. It was equipped with a four-stroke engine based on G10A platform matted to a five-speed manual gearbox. Production was ended in 2000, replaced by second generation Cultus.
The CT100 was rebooted in 2015 featuring the same body styling, albeit featuring new graphics and alloy wheels and an upgraded engine complying with the BS3 emission standards. This variant was now available with self-start feature and comes in six colours. The Ride Control Switch offered in the previous generation was scrapped in this model.