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Yamaha Tracer 900; Manufacturer: Yamaha Motor Company: Also called: Yamaha FJ-09 (North America) Yamaha MT-09 Tracer (Japan, South America, Australia, New Zealand) Parent company: Yamaha Corporation: Production: 2015-present: Class: Sport touring: Engine: 847.2–890.2 cc (51.70–54.32 cu in) liquid-cooled 4-stroke 12-valve DOHC inline-three ...
The Yamaha MT-09 is a street motorcycle of the MT series with an 847–890 cc (51.7–54.3 cu in) liquid-cooled four-stroke 12-valve DOHC inline-three engine with crossplane crankshaft [1] [9] and a lightweight cast alloy frame. [5]
In 2019 Yamaha briefly announced a GT version of the Tracer 700, similar to the larger Yamaha Tracer 900 one. It included side cases and a few other touring features, but the market availability of this variant is unknown as it was removed from the Yamaha official sites in all the countries, the only references are motorcycle magazine reviews [2] and some Yamaha dealers in Europe.
Yamaha TZ125; 80 cc class (1984–1989) Derbi 80; HuVo-Casal 80; Krauser 80; Zündapp 80; 50 cc class (1962–1983) Bultaco TSS 50; Derbi 50; Ducson 50 ...
Yamaha MotoGP Racing or Yamaha Factory Racing is the official Italian-Japanese factory team of Yamaha in MotoGP. [1] History. The team was founded in 1999 following ...
Race Engine Technology organizes the annual ‘Race Engine of the Year’ Awards, whereby around 50 practicing competition engine professionals from around the globe vote on the outstanding engines of the year.
The use of the Roehr-VanTech kits created such notables as the 1969 VanTech Hodaka 90cc, the Yamaha-VanTech Project II, created as a project bike by Modern Cycle in April 1970 from a Yamaha 125cc engine. The bike was supplied with Van Tech Springer forks which were noted as having an impressive degree of adjustment. [19]
The Yamaha YZR-M1 is an inline-four motorcycle specifically developed by Yamaha Motor Company to race in the current MotoGP series. [1] It succeeded the 500 cc (31 cu in) YZR500 by the 2002 season and was originally developed with a 990 cc (60 cu in) engine. Since then, the YZR-M1 has been continuously developed into several iterations through ...