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  2. Harley-Davidson VRSC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harley-Davidson_VRSC

    The VRSC was introduced in 2001 in a single model called the V-Rod aiming to compete against Japanese and American muscle bikes. The V-Rod's Revolution engine was developed for road use by Porsche Engineering with the aid of a few Harley-Davidson engineers [6] [7] [8] from Harley-Davidson's VR1000 V-twin racing bike engine.

  3. Harley-Davidson XR-750 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harley-Davidson_XR-750

    On August 6, 2015, the daredevil stunt performer Doug Danger [22] at the Sturgis Bike Rally at the Buffalo Chip, broke Knievel's record for most cars jumped on a XR-750 with 22 cars. Knievel attempted this feat of 22 cars in Monroe, Washington on September 1, 1972, and cleared 21 cars but landed on the safety deck covering the 22nd car.

  4. Rupp Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rupp_Industries

    The Rat had a red body and came with a 5 HP Tecumseh engine. The Truk-R had silver metal flake body with a pickup style bed. It came with a larger 8 HP Tecumseh engine. (Rat catalog reference) [citation needed] The Rat used some mini bike parts in its construction, including the turbine style 6" front wheel. Original ad introducing the Rupp Centaur

  5. Rat bike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rat_bike

    Survival bike engineering: this single-sided bike by 'exmoor customs' won "best in show" & "best engineering" at the UK Rat and Survival Bike rally, 2006. The term "survival bike" originated in the British motorcycle press, particularly Back Street Heroes [ 7 ] and the now-defunct AWoL in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

  6. Yamaha RD350 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamaha_RD350

    The stock bike made 39 bhp (29 kW) (32 bhp (24 kW) at the back wheel) at 7500 rpm [1] – very fast for the time. A contemporary of the RD is the Kawasaki H2 750cc Triple that produced 74 hp. The 350 evolved into the more refined and cleaner running RD400C in 1976, the "D" and "E" in 77–78 and the final model, the white 1979 RD400F.

  7. Pocketbike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocketbike

    Minibike race at Lelystad (NL) Ivar training at Wilrijk (B) Jerowe at the Sutton track in Ontario, Canada Pocketbikes are small, two wheeled recreational vehicles approximately one-quarter the size of a regular motorcycles, and are powered by two-stroke internal combustion engines of between 40 and 50 cc. Pocketbikes maintain the look of full-sized sport bikes and are known outside of North ...

  8. Honda RC116 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_RC116

    For their Ultra-Lightweight class (50 cc) Grand Prix race bikes during the 1964, 1965 and 1966 race seasons, Honda re-introduced the 1920s format of cable-actuated caliper rim brakes with shoes/blocks directly acting on the aluminium rim-sides (alloy wheel rim), creating almost a 'consumable' item from the wheels, but dispensing with heavy ...

  9. Honda VFR750R - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_VFR750R

    Joey Dunlop coming down Bray Hill, Isle of Man in the 1992 Senior TT race, on his Honda RC30. While being inspired by the Honda RVF endurance racer (not to be confused with the Honda RVF750 RC45) the VFR750R instead had its engine based on the 1986-7 VFR750F (RC24). The engines are almost identical externally, the only visible differences being ...