Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Harley-Davidson Baja 100 was a small displacement off-road motorcycle made for Harley-Davidson in Italy by Aermacchi, which was 50% owned by Harley-Davidson at the time. It was one of Harley-Davidson's attempts to enter the small displacement off-road motorcycle market. It was built in Aermacchi's Varese, Italy factory.
The Italian branch of the brand was named 'Aermacchi-Harley-Davidson' and the first bike was a variation of the 'Ala Verde' suitably modified for the American market. This was also the year that the Chimera ceased production. The remaining motorcycle holdings were sold in 1974 to AMF-Harley-Davidson, with motorcycles continuing to be made at ...
Model Aermacchi Harley-Davidson motorcycle Engine 275 cc Years 1975 Notes single from Sprint 15 cu in (250 cc) OHC single 1961–1968 Sold in "C" and "H" versions. M-50, M-50 Sport 3.1 cu in (50 cc) two-stroke single 1965–1966 (M-50) 1966 (M-50 Sport) Urban commuter bikes.
1971 Aermacchi Harley-Davidson Turismo Veloce. In 1960, Harley-Davidson consolidated the Model 165 and Hummer lines into the Super-10, introduced the Topper scooter, [49] and bought fifty percent of Aermacchi's motorcycle division. [49] [50] Importation of Aermacchi's 250 cc horizontal single began the following year.
In 2008, Harley-Davidson bought MV Agusta Motor, the parent company of Cagiva, thereby regaining some control of its old Aermacchi factory. In October 2009, Harley-Davidson informed that it would put Cagiva up for sale. In the August of the following year, Cagiva was bought back by the son of the founder and former owner Claudio Castiglioni.
The Harley-Davidson RR350, also known as the Harley-Davidson 350RR, was a racing motorcycle, designed, developed, and built by Harley-Davidson, conforming to the 350cc class regulations of the Grand Prix motorcycle racing world championship, between 1974 and 1976.
The following is a list of motorcycle manufacturers worldwide, sorted by extant/extinct status and by country. These are producers whose motorcycles are available to the public, including both street legal as well as racetrack-only or off-road-only motorcycles.
The Harley-Davidson Sportster is a line of motorcycles produced continuously since 1957 by Harley-Davidson. Sportster models are designated in Harley-Davidson's product code by beginning with "XL". In 1952, the predecessors to the Sportster, the Model K Sport and Sport Solo motorcycles, were introduced.