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Yamaha Outboards
Coastal Marine Center offers a full line of all Yamaha Outboards
including the Four Stroke Series, HPDI Series, V Max Series, and
Two Stroke Series.
Paving the Road to Yamaha Motor Corporation, USA
"I want to carry out trial manufacture of motorcycle engines."
It was from these words spoken by Genichi Kawakami (Yamaha Motor's
first president) in 1953, that today's Yamaha Motor Company was
born.
Genichi Kawakami was the first son of Kaichi Kawakami, the third-generation
president of Nippon Gakki (musical instruments and electronics;
presently Yamaha Corporation). Genichi studied and graduated from
Takachiho Higher Commercial School in March of 1934. In July of
1937, he was the second Kawakami to join the Nippon Gakki Company.
He quickly rose to positions of manager of the company's Tenryu
Factory Company (musical instruments) and then Senior General
Manager, before assuming the position of fourth-generation President
in 1950 at the young age of 38.
In 1953, Genichi was looking for a way to make use of idle machining
equipment that had previously been used to make aircraft propellers.
Looking back on the founding of Yamaha Motor Company, Genichi
had this to say. "While the company was performing well and
had some financial leeway, I felt the need to look for our next
area of business. So, I did some research." He explored producing
many products, including sewing machines, auto parts, scooters,
three-wheeled utility vehicles, and…motorcycles. Market
and competitive factors led him to focus on the motorcycle market.
Genichi actually visited the United States many times during this
period.
When asked about this decision, he said, "I had my research
division chief and other managers visit leading motorcycle factories
around the country. They came back and told me there was still
plenty of opportunity, even if we were entering the market late.
I didn't want to be completely unprepared in this unfamiliar business
so we toured to German factories before setting out to build our
first 125cc bike. I joined in this tour around Europe during which
my chief engineers learned how to build motorbikes. We did as
much research as possible to insure that we could build a bike
as good as any out there. Once we had that confidence, we started
going."
The first Yamaha motorcycle... the YA-1.
"If you are going to make it, make it the very best there
is." With these words as their motto, the development team
poured all their energies into building the first prototype, and
ten months later in August of 1954 the first model was complete.
It was the Yamaha YA-1. The bike was powered by an air-cooled,
2-stroke, single cylinder 125cc engine. Once finished, it was
put through an unprecedented 10,000 km endurance test to ensure
that its quality was top-class. This was destined to be the first
crystallization of what has now become a long tradition of Yamaha
creativity and an inexhaustible spirit of challenge.
Then, in January of 1955 the Hamakita Factory of Nippon Gakki
was built and production began on the YA-1. With confidence in
the new direction that Genichi was taking, Yamaha Motor Co., Ltd.
was founded on July 1, 1955. Staffed by 274 enthusiastic employees,
the new motorcycle manufacturer built about 200 units per month.
That same year, Yamaha entered its new YA-1 in the two biggest
race events in Japan. They were the 3rd Mt. Fuji Ascent Race and
the 1st Asama Highlands Race. In these debut races Yamaha won
the 125cc class. And, the following year the YA-1 won again in
both the Light and Ultra-light classes of the Asama Highlands
Race.
By 1956, a second model was ready for production. This was the
YC1, a 175cc single cylinder two-stroke. In 1957 Yamaha began
production of its first 250cc, two-stroke twin, the YD1.
Based on Genichi's firm belief that a product isn't a product
until it can hold it's own around the world, in 1958 Yamaha became
the first Japanese maker to venture into the international race
arena. The result was an impressive 6th place in the Catalina
Grand Prix race in the USA. News of this achievement won immediate
recognition for the high level of Yamaha technology not only in
Japan but among American race fans, as well. This was only the
start, however.
Yamaha took quick action using the momentum gained in the USA
and began marketing their motorcycles through an independent distributor
in California. In 1958, Cooper Motors began selling the YD-1 250
and the MF-1 (50cc, two-stroke, single cylinder, step through
street bike). Then in 1960, Yamaha International Corporation began
selling motorcycles in the USA through dealers.
With the overseas experiences under his belt, in 1960, Genichi
then turned his attention to the Marine industry and the production
of the first Yamaha boats and outboard motors. This was the beginning
of an aggressive expansion into new fields utilizing the new engines
and FRP (fiberglass reinforced plastic) technologies. The first
watercraft model was the CAT-21, followed by the RUN-13 and the
P-7 123cc outboard motor.
In 1963, Yamaha demonstrated its focus on cutting-edge, technological
innovations by developing the Autolube System. This landmark solution
was a separate oil injection system for two-stroke models, eliminating
the inconvenience of pre-mixing fuel and oil.
Yamaha was building a strong reputation as a superior manufacturer
which was reflected in its first project carried out in the new
Iwata, Japan Plant, built in 1966. (The YMC headquarters was moved
to Iwata in 1972.) Toyota and Yamaha teamed up to produce the
highly regarded Toyota 2000 GT sports car. This very limited edition
vehicle, still admired for its performance and craftsmanship,
created a sensation among enthusiast in Japan and abroad.
Genichi said, "I believe that the most important thing when
building a product is to always keep in mind the standpoint of
the people who will use it." An example of the commitment
to "walking in the customers' shoes" was the move in
1966 by Yamaha to continue its expansion. Overseas motorcycle
manufacturing was established in Thailand and Mexico. In 1968,
the globalization continued with Brazil and the Netherlands. With
manufacturing bases, distributors and R&D operations in a
market, Yamaha could be involved in grassroots efforts to build
products that truly met the needs of each market by respecting
and valuing the distinct national sensibilities and customs of
each country.
By the late 1960s, Yamaha had quality products that had proven
themselves in the global marketplace based on superior performance
and innovation. Distribution and product diversity were on the
right track. But Genichi knew that beyond quality, success would
demand more. He had this view on the power of original ideas.
"In the future, a company's future will hinge on ideas over
and above quality. Products that have no character, nothing unique
about them, will not sell no matter how well made or affordable…and
that would spell doom for any company."
He also knew that forward vision, walking hand in hand with original
ideas, would create an opportunity for the company and its customers
that could mean years of happiness and memorable experiences.
Genichi said, "In the business world today, so many people
are obsessed with figures. They become fixated on the numbers
of the minute and without them are too afraid to do any real work.
But in fact, every situation is in flux from moment to moment,
developing with a natural flow. Unless one reads that flow, it
is impossible to start out in a new field of business."
A real-world illustration of this belief is the Yamaha DT-1. The
world's first true off-road motorcycle debuted in 1968 to create
an entirely new genre we know today as trail bikes. The DT-1 made
a huge impact on motorcycling in the USA because it was truly
dirt worthy. Yamaha definitely "read the flow" when
it produced
the 250cc, single cylinder, 2-stroke, Enduro that put Yamaha On/Off-Road
motorcycles on the map in the USA. The DT-1 exemplified the power
of original ideas, forward vision, and quick action coupled with
keeping in mind the customers' desires.
In years to come Yamaha continued to grow (and continues to this
day). Diversity increased with the addition of products including
snowmobiles, race kart engines, generators, scooters, ATVs, personal
watercraft and more.
Genichi Kawakami set the stage for Yamaha Motor Company's success
with his vision and philosophies. Total honesty towards the customer
and making products that hold their own enables the company that
serves people in thirty-three countries, to provide an improved
lifestyle through exceptional quality, high performance products.
Yamaha Motor Corporation, USA Cypress, California
Genichi Kawakami's history with Yamaha was long and rich. He saw
the new corporate headquarters in Cypress, California and the
25th Anniversary of Yamaha become a reality in 1980. He also watched
bike #20 million roll off the assembly line in 1982. Genichi passed
away on May 25, 2002 yet his vision lives on through the people
and products of Yamaha, throughout the world.
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