- Source: Type 97 motorcycle
The Type 97 motorcycle, or Rikuo, was a copy of a Harley-Davidson motorcycle produced with a sidecar from 1935 in Japan under license from Harley-Davidson by the Sankyo Company (later Rikuo Nainen Company). Some 18,000 of the machines were used by the Imperial Japanese forces during World War II. A variation was also manufactured without a side car, called the Type 93.
In the years after World War I, Harley-Davidson's US sales declined while dozens of US motorcycle brands went under, primarily as a result of the decline in the price of the Ford Model T car, triggering a national shift from motorcycles to cars for cheap transportation. Harley-Davidson sought to make up the lost sales abroad and was selling 2,000 units per year in Japan by the middle of the 1920s. In 1932 Harley-Davidson licensed Sankyo Trading Company to build complete motorcycles in Japan, under the name Rikuo, which meant King of the Road.
See also
Kurogane Type 95
List of motorcycles of the 1940s
List of motorcycles of the 1950s
References
External links
Rikuo Type 97 Vladivostok Oldtimers Museum photos
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kuala Lumpur
- Mesin V-twin
- Ducati Desmosedici
- Type 97 motorcycle
- Type 97
- Kurogane Type 95
- List of motorcycles of the 1940s
- List of motorcycles of the 1930s
- List of Japanese military equipment of World War II
- Splendor (motorcycle)
- Rikuo Motorcycle
- Auto rickshaw
- Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance