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By the late 1990s, the major motorcycle companies in Vietnam included one Taiwanese transnational corporate (VMEP, a subsidiary of Taiwan's Sanyang Motors) and three Japanese transnational corporates (Suzuki, Honda, and Yamaha). [8] These four brands have remained as the key players in Vietnam's motorcycle industry till today. [9]
The Honda Winner is an underbone motorcycle from the Japanese manufacturer Honda. It was launched in April 2016 in Vietnam. [6] It was also launched in May 2016 in Indonesia as the Supra GTR. [1] In June 2016, the bike was launched in Malaysia as the RS150R. [2]
Honda RS 150/Honda RSX/Honda Winner X The Honda Wave , also marketed as the Honda NF series (codename), Honda Innova in Europe, and Honda Supra in Indonesia, is a series of motorcycles manufactured by Honda that debuted in 1995 with an underbone design, having separate cosmetic plastic body panels over a structural steel tube chassis.
Founded in Taipei, Taiwan in 1954 by Huang Chi-Chun and Chang Kuo An, SYM currently has three major production facilities in Taiwan, mainland China, and Vietnam. SYM manufactures and sells scooters, motorcycles and ATVs under the Sanyang Motor [SYM] brand, while it also manufactures automobiles and mini-trucks under the Hyundai brand.
The Honda City is a fairly popular car in Vietnam. Honda Vietnam is a joint venture of Honda and the Vietnam Engine and Agricultural Machinery Corporation (VEAM). It is the top selling motorcycle brand in Vietnam, and operates three motorcycle factories and one car factory in Vietnam. [14]
The following is a list of motorcycle manufacturers worldwide, sorted by extant/extinct status and by country. These are producers whose motorcycles are available to the public, including both street legal as well as racetrack-only or off-road-only motorcycles .
Honda Nova Sonic RS The Honda Sonic is a 125 cc , later 150 cc underbone motorcycle designed for the Southeast Asian market by Honda . It is the part of the Nova series of sports oriented underbone motorbikes produced since the mid-1990s.
2008-2013 Honda Big Red 700, Honda's first Side-by-Side; 2015–present Honda Pioneer 500; 2021–present Honda Pioneer 520; 2013–present Honda Pioneer 700;