Key performance
Technical specifications
- Torque
- 150.0 Nm @ 3750 tr/min → 150.1 Nm @ 6930 tr/min
- Frame
- Front suspension system: → en alu coulé sous pression
- Front suspension
- Telescopic Fork → 120
- Rear suspension
- Swing arm (Link suspension) → 117
- Front wheel travel
- 120 mm (4.7 inches) → 43 mm (1.7 inches)
- Rear wheel travel
- 120 mm (4.7 inches) → —
Engine
- Displacement
- 1670 cc
- Power
- 90.0 ch @ 4750 tr/min (64.9 kW)
- Torque
- 150.1 Nm @ 6930 tr/min
- Engine type
- V2, four-stroke
- Cooling
- Air
- Compression ratio
- 8.4:1
- Bore × stroke
- 97.0 x 113.0 mm (3.8 x 4.4 inches)
- Valves/cylinder
- 4
- Fuel system
- Injection
- Valve timing
- Overhead Valves (OHV)
- Lubrication
- Dry sump
- Ignition
- TCI
- Starter
- Electric
Chassis
- Frame
- en alu coulé sous pression
- Gearbox
- 5-speed
- Final drive
- Chain (final drive)
- Clutch
- Wet, multiple-disc
- Front suspension
- 120
- Rear suspension
- 117
- Front wheel travel
- 43 mm (1.7 inches)
Brakes
- Front brakes
- Double disc
- Rear brakes
- Single disc
- Front tyre
- 120/70-ZR17
- Front tyre pressure
- 2.50 bar
- Rear tyre
- 190/50-ZR17
- Rear tyre pressure
- 2.90 bar
Dimensions
- Seat height
- 825.00 mm
- Wheelbase
- 1525.00 mm
- Ground clearance
- 140.00 mm
- Length
- 2185.00 mm
- Width
- 790.00 mm
- Height
- 1160.00 mm
- Fuel capacity
- 15.00 L
- Weight
- 265.00 kg
- Dry weight
- 240.00 kg
- New price
- 13 263 €
Overview
How many concept bikes have truly survived the journey from the drawing board to the tarmac without losing their soul? The Yamaha MT-01, unveiled as a prototype in 1999, is one of those rare machines that delivered on the promise of the dream. When it hit dealerships in 2005, the silhouette had remained virtually untouched. The message was clear: Yamaha didn't flinch. Where other manufacturers water down their concepts to make them palatable, Iwata's engineers chose to unleash the beast as-is, or nearly so. A reworked swingarm, a rear shock repositioned beneath the engine, a few revised mounting details. The rest is raw from the foundry.

The heart of the beast is a 1670 cc V-twin borrowed from the Road Star Warrior. An air-cooled, dry-sump mill with ultra-long-stroke dimensions of 97 x 113 mm and a compression ratio measured at 8.4:1. On the Yamaha MT-01's spec sheet, the numbers speak without shouting: 90 horsepower at 4750 rpm and, above all, 150 Nm of torque. These aren't figures that would make a Kawasaki Z1000 tremble on paper. But paper doesn't convey the vibrations that travel up through the aluminum frame, nor the organic thrust that pins you into the seat from just 2000 rpm. This pushrod twin, fed by fuel injection and fitted with the EXUP system, isn't chasing horsepower. It's chasing thrills. Every twist of the throttle feels like a bass drum strike, deep and powerful, resonating through your chest.
Against the competition of the era, the Yamaha MT-01 plays a peculiar game. The Triumph Rocket III delivers more raw torque. The Ducati Monster S4R offers a sharper chassis. The Z1000 proves more versatile. But none of these machines serve up quite the same cocktail. Yamaha took the recipe for a roadster, grafted on the temperament of a muscled-up cruiser, and wrapped it all in a chassis with sporting ambitions, featuring an inverted fork inherited from the R1 and a die-cast aluminum frame. The result weighs 240 kg dry, 265 kg wet with a tank holding just 15 liters. It's heavy, it's compact, and it plants itself on the road with an authority that the 825 mm seat height makes accessible to most rider builds. Top speed caps out at 210 km/h, confirming that its calling isn't the autobahn but the winding back road taken on torque.
On the used Yamaha MT-01 market, prices stagnated for years before climbing back up among savvy collectors. New, it was listed at around 13,263 euros — a steep price tag for a naked with only five gears. But you don't buy this machine to tick boxes on a comparison chart. You buy it because you want to feel an engine living beneath you, because you prefer character over raw power, because you've understood that motorcycling pleasure isn't measured in horsepower per kilo. Yamaha MT-01 accessories allowed owners to customize the machine, and certain editions like the Blue Falcon added an aesthetic touch that further reinforced the uniqueness of the thing.
The real shortcoming of this machine is comfort. The firm seat, the suspension with limited travel (120 mm front, 117 mm rear), the small tank that demands frequent stops — on long rides, the MT-01 reminds you it was designed for immediate pleasure, not endurance. It's aimed at the rider who's already logged miles, who knows what he's after, and who no longer wants bland compromises. Not a beginner's machine, not a track tool, and even less a tourer. Just a big-hearted naked that fully owns its temperament as a sensitive brute. Yamaha never truly renewed the formula, which gives the MT-01 a singular status in the history of the tuning-fork brand. A sincere mechanical parenthesis, free of marketing calculation, that time is quietly turning into a collector's piece.
Practical info
- La moto est accessible aux permis : A
Reviews & comments
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your opinion!