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  2. 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]

  3. Kurogane Type 95 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurogane_Type_95

    The prototype was the result, using a Japanese-built internal combustion engine. Mass-production began in 1936. At the time, military operations in Mainland China and Southeast Asia, a mass-produced military vehicle equipped with Japan's first four-wheel drive mechanism, increased mobility in the area's rough terrain.

  4. Honda CB750 and CR750 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_CB750_and_CR750

    The Honda CB750 is an air-cooled, transverse, in-line-four-cylinder-engine motorcycle made by Honda over several generations for year models 1969–2008 with an upright, or standard, riding posture. It is often called the original Universal Japanese Motorcycle (UJM) and also is regarded as the first motorcycle to be called a "superbike". [6] [7 ...

  5. Kawasaki Z1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kawasaki_Z1

    The Kawasaki Z1 is a four-cylinder, air-cooled, double-overhead camshaft, carbureted, chain-drive motorcycle introduced in 1972 by Kawasaki.Following the introduction of Honda's CB750 in 1968, the Z1 helped popularize the in-line, across-the-frame four-cylinder, [9] a format that became known as the Universal Japanese Motorcycle or UJM.

  6. Kawasaki Motors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kawasaki_Motors

    Kawasaki dealership in Japan. Kawasaki Motors, Ltd. (カワサキモータース株式会社, Kawasaki Mōtāsu Kabushikigaisha) is a Japanese mobility manufacturer that produces motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles, utility vehicles, watercraft, outboard motors, and other electric products.

  7. Kawasaki A7 Avenger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kawasaki_A7_Avenger

    Kawasaki is the last of the big four Japanese manufacturers to start making motorcycles. In 1960, it bought a share in the Meguro motorcycle company that since the 1930s had made four-stroke singles up to 500 cc and later twins up to 650 cc for the Japanese and south-east Asian markets.

  8. Honda D-Type - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_D-Type

    [8]: 120 [19]: 70 Honda would address these issues with his next motorcycle, the E-Type, which was unveiled in 1951. [11]: 73 Honda did not export motorcycles from Japan until 1952, when the Type-F Cub was introduced to Taiwan. [3]: 217 [23] Any bikes that made it out of Japan prior to that did so by the efforts of individual owners.

  9. 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.