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Pages in category "Two-stroke motorcycles" The following 183 pages are in this category, out of 183 total. ... Honda CR series; Honda CR85R; Honda CR250M; Honda ...
1973–1974, 1978-1985 Honda ATC70; first mini ATV; 1970-1978 Honda ATC90 (was US90 from 1970 to 1973) 1979-1985 Honda ATC110; 1984-1987 Honda ATC125M; Honda ATC125R (prototype) 1980 Honda ATC185; 1981-1983 Honda ATC185S; 1981-1987 Honda ATC200 series 1981-1983 Honda ATC200; 1983-1984 Honda ATC200E Big Red; 1984 Honda ATC200ES Big Red; 1984 ...
The Honda CR series was a line of two-stroke off-road motorcycles made by Honda from 1973 to 2007. They are racing motorcycles with countless trophies in the 125, 250 and 500 motocross classes. Marty Smith, Jeremy McGrath, Ricky Carmichael and many other motocross legends dominated racing circuits on Honda CR's. CR's continue competing today ...
Designed to succeed Honda's first two-stroke Grand Prix racer, the NS500 triple, NSR500 debuted in 1984 for the Grand Prix motorcycle racing's 500 cc class. Building on lessons learned from its three-cylinder predecessor, the new 90° V4 used a single crankshaft, making it lighter and more compact than its dual-crankshaft adversaries.
Further, Soichiro Honda had publicly announced that Honda would never build two-stroke-powered motorcycles. The Japan Motorcycle Association introduced a domestic motocross championship from 1967, to which the group of Honda engineers - like their development counterparts at Suzuki and Yamaha - developed lighter weight two-stroke-powered machine.
The Honda NS400R is a street-legal two-stroke sports bike produced by Honda between 1985 and 1987. Adapted from Honda's NS500 Grand Prix motorcycle ridden by "Fast" Freddie Spencer, the NS400R is the company's largest-displacement street-legal two-stroke road bike.
The Honda MVX250F is a Honda motorcycle with a water-cooled two-stroke V3 engine.New Zealand and Switzerland was one of the few countries in the world outside Japan where the MVX 250 was sold brand new through Honda motorcycle dealerships.
The introduction of rules allowing four-stroke machines to enter the class in 2002 effectively put an end to the competitiveness of the two-stroke V2 as even the two-stroke V4 machines quickly became obsolete. Only 22 NSR500v motorcycles were produced by Honda Racing Corporation. There were 20 NSR500v motorcycles produced from 1996 to 2000.