Yamaha Motorcycle Show 2001 - 2002
The 2001 International Bike Show, Manhattan
December 30, 2001

Yamaha's history goes back over a hundred years to 1887 when Torakusu Yamaha founded the company, which began producing reed organs. The Yamaha Corporation in Japan (then Nippon Gakki Co., Ltd.) has grown to become the world's largest manufacturer of a full line of musical instruments, and a leading producer of audio/visual products, semiconductors and other computer related products, sporting goods, home appliances and furniture, specialty metals, machine tools, and industrial robots.
The Yamaha Motor Corporation, Ltd., begun on July 1, 1955, is the second largest manufacturer of motorcycles in the world. In 1954 production of the first motorcycles began, a simple 125cc single-cylinder two-stroke. It was a copy of the German DKW design, which the British BSA Company had also copied in the post-war era and manufactured as the Bantam.
The first Yamaha, the YAI, known to Japanese enthusiasts as Akatombo, the "Red Dragonfly", established a reputation as a well-built and reliable machine. Racing successes helped boost its popularity and a second machine, the 175cc YCI was soon in production.
The first Yamaha-designed motorcycle was the twin-cylinder YDI produced in 1957. The racing version, producing 20bhp, won the Mount Asama race that year. Production was still modest at 15,811 motorcycle, far less than Honda or Suzuki.
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