It's called yamaha vega here in Philippines. My uncle has one, carburated type, spoked wheels, with rear sets (not rcb) and aftermarket rear disc brake.
Yes. MY loves that Lagenda, especially the older 110Z Burung Hantu model. It is powerful (at the time, if you want 110cc motor, you had to get Super Sports with hand clutch). These days, if you dont want hand clutch, 135LC should be it.
I also own this bike. In Vietnam it is called Jupiter Fi. This bike is very durable and fuel efficient. If you have the opportunity, you can come to Vietnam and experience more motorbikes
greetings from greece ! here it is also among the favorite and top selling semi-automatics ! the carburetted version was sold between 2004-07 and was called crypton - r 115 with stunning reliability and quality ! they are still in the business on the greek roads! the fuel injected version is called crypton s 115 and is sold here since 2018 with top quality also , good performance and fuel economy .
@@SmallBikeStuff Truth is ,there is a really vibrant small bike scene here with lots of underbone (kapchai) tuning , drag racing. Really good stuff ,despite the fact that in recent years scooters are selling way better than underbones here .
@@unfathomed1133 Glad to hear it's still going strong! I really hope I can make it there one day while underbone bikes are still popular. Do you own and ride one?
@@SmallBikeStuff Currently no , i don't ride one unfortunately.. I had the kawasaki kaze-r 115 a couple of years ago, which was an amazing little machine, but was forced to sell it.. I'm looking to buy one again right now given the fuel economy for daily use
Well back when the honda cub EX5 was on sale, Honda dominated the market, know for their toughness and reliability. After they stoped production of the Ex5 carburettor and introduced the injection model by then problems with honda arose in respect to spare parts being less prominent for newer bikes and them being more expensive. nowadays yamaha have better reliability, spareparts are plentiful,cheap and the modification scene fresh with aftermarket parts of all kind.
@@SmallBikeStuff overall this bike the lagenda name have been retired by yamaha malaysia and replaced with the ez115 fi for about a year by now, with less fans as theres no owl eye headlights anymore.
Here in indonesia we have the opposite issue since yamaha spareparts are more expensive lol But the new hondas here have very terrible build quality, with brittle plastic and thin frames prone to rusting. The thai and malay built ones are a lot better in quality in terms of the body parts. (The engines are still reliable though).
I own a 2017 Yamaha Lagenda 115 Fi and has 28,000 km on the odometer. Yes I can confirm this bike uses oil filter and it’s located on the right of the bike engine. Fuel consumption is great and I have zero repair in 7 years of ownership. Even the spark plug is unchanged. These small cc bikes used to have spokes a decade or 2 ago and were fitted with inner air rubber tube in the tyres but became tubeless when alloy rims were introduced. I think only expensive big bike like current BMW GS 1200/1250 uses tubeless and spoke wheels. I think the reason why Yamaha is the most popular bike in Malaysia is because Valentino Rossi races for Yamaha in Moto GP and won many World Championships. Just look at the number of 46 stickers on helmets, bikes, paint job on bikes and even Rossi’s painted signature on the bike’s petrol tank and Yamaha is the preferred choice. Yamaha Semakin Dihadapan can be found on Rossi bike.
I'm a proud owner of Lagenda 110z. Been passed from my mother, to my brother, then me. It's been serving my family for 15th year now. Still able to run on highway with 100 km/h no problem. So sad that the bike has been discontinued.
If you want to know which is the most reliable, fuel efficient and dependable bike, take a trip to the Malaysia Singapore Causeway early morning or late evening where you can see thousands upon thousands of small bikes crossing daily. The number 1 bike choice is the Yamaha LC135. The bikes have to undergo start stop traffic jams up to one and a half hours at the causeway alone. A lesser brand new bike will not last a year of this. Ask me how I know. Thanks for the review.
Very good point. I made a video about bikes parked in Singapore over a year ago and in the comments Singaporean people are roasting me because all the bikes had come over the border from Malaysia. 😂 ua-cam.com/video/Tt871sgopug/v-deo.htmlsi=AfbCkxVONlPJJ_WM
Great review mate, bought a 2011 yamaha sirius when i was working in vietnam {2019-2020} that was 114cc had heaps of under seat storage like the honda futura 12... think i paid $500 nzd for it ...had the rear rim replaced respoked cost me 250000 dong with new spokes rim and wheel bearings great bike took me all over south vietnam ended up giving it to one of our local workers when covid happend
Thats awesome! Sounds like you had some awesome times in Vietnam. I still look back at my two years in South East Asia with a great fondness - even a decade later.
cheap moped bike as a regular malaysian bike user Yamaha and Honda is the choice and its only in asian market but the traffic is going to be heavier in malaysia thanks for this small bike hope for ev bike for a incoming year that a lot of thing have to change for a inviroment and chaos traffic in city
I thought the LC135 was overpriced being RM10k+/- and it would not sell well considering you can get Honda RS150 for cheaper RM8-10k. But I am seeing more and more on the road everyday so I guess I am wrong. I underestimated people's love for Yamaha and automatic clutch bikes
I heard that too and found it interesting - I do wonder if it's due to lack of basic maintenance. Because I have a 10 year old Honda with fuel injection and it's still reliably working with no issues at all. Even when I modified the engine and made the fuel pump work harder than in stock form, still no problems. Maybe just a difference between Thai and Malaysian Honda's - Mine is Thai.
The Yamahas are cool. And I do enjoy my Exciter 155, but I am ready to sell it and buy another Honda, because nothing just compares. Probably gonna be another Grom, Unless Honda Thailand comes out with a 150cc undertone. I can only hope.
Yamaha is a bit overprice in malaysia. Different bike shop has different price. Some people would rather buy bikes far away from home as the price difference can be quite obvious. 😊
motor kayag gini, udah ngga laku kalau di indonesia.. sekarang trend nya matic.. motor bebek kayag gini udah gak jamannya lagi..beda sama di malaysia.. padahal enak pakai motor kayag gini.. bensinnya lebih hemat..
It's called yamaha vega here in Philippines.
My uncle has one, carburated type, spoked wheels, with rear sets (not rcb) and aftermarket rear disc brake.
Yes. MY loves that Lagenda, especially the older 110Z Burung Hantu model. It is powerful (at the time, if you want 110cc motor, you had to get Super Sports with hand clutch). These days, if you dont want hand clutch, 135LC should be it.
Last journey one of my friends had a 110 and this time 2 friends had a 115. They worked well!
I also own this bike. In Vietnam it is called Jupiter Fi. This bike is very durable and fuel efficient. If you have the opportunity, you can come to Vietnam and experience more motorbikes
It’s a great bike! I have been to Vietnam last time in February 2020. It’s a cool country!
greetings from greece ! here it is also among the favorite and top selling semi-automatics ! the carburetted version was sold between 2004-07 and was called crypton - r 115 with stunning reliability and quality ! they are still in the business on the greek roads! the fuel injected version is called crypton s 115 and is sold here since 2018 with top quality also , good performance and fuel economy .
I really to visit greece! One of the only good Small Bike countries in that part of the world.
@@SmallBikeStuff Truth is ,there is a really vibrant small bike scene here with lots of underbone (kapchai) tuning , drag racing. Really good stuff ,despite the fact that in recent years scooters are selling way better than underbones here .
@@unfathomed1133 Glad to hear it's still going strong! I really hope I can make it there one day while underbone bikes are still popular. Do you own and ride one?
@@SmallBikeStuff Currently no , i don't ride one unfortunately.. I had the kawasaki kaze-r 115 a couple of years ago, which was an amazing little machine, but was forced to sell it.. I'm looking to buy one again right now given the fuel economy for daily use
Thanks Callum, it was a great bike for the trip - I realy enjoyed riding it.
Well back when the honda cub EX5 was on sale, Honda dominated the market, know for their toughness and reliability. After they stoped production of the Ex5 carburettor and introduced the injection model by then problems with honda arose in respect to spare parts being less prominent for newer bikes and them being more expensive. nowadays yamaha have better reliability, spareparts are plentiful,cheap and the modification scene fresh with aftermarket parts of all kind.
Great summary! Thank you for the comment. Hopefully more people can learn about this Yamaha!
@@SmallBikeStuff overall this bike the lagenda name have been retired by yamaha malaysia and replaced with the ez115 fi for about a year by now, with less fans as theres no owl eye headlights anymore.
Here in indonesia we have the opposite issue since yamaha spareparts are more expensive lol
But the new hondas here have very terrible build quality, with brittle plastic and thin frames prone to rusting.
The thai and malay built ones are a lot better in quality in terms of the body parts. (The engines are still reliable though).
I own a 2017 Yamaha Lagenda 115 Fi and has 28,000 km on the odometer. Yes I can confirm this bike uses oil filter and it’s located on the right of the bike engine. Fuel consumption is great and I have zero repair in 7 years of ownership. Even the spark plug is unchanged. These small cc bikes used to have spokes a decade or 2 ago and were fitted with inner air rubber tube in the tyres but became tubeless when alloy rims were introduced. I think only expensive big bike like current BMW GS 1200/1250 uses tubeless and spoke wheels. I think the reason why Yamaha is the most popular bike in Malaysia is because Valentino Rossi races for Yamaha in Moto GP and won many World Championships. Just look at the number of 46 stickers on helmets, bikes, paint job on bikes and even Rossi’s painted signature on the bike’s petrol tank and Yamaha is the preferred choice. Yamaha Semakin Dihadapan can be found on Rossi bike.
Interesting stuff! Thats a good theory for the Yamaha stuff, it would make sense. I do love all the 46 bikes around, it's quite cool to see.
I'm a proud owner of Lagenda 110z. Been passed from my mother, to my brother, then me. It's been serving my family for 15th year now. Still able to run on highway with 100 km/h no problem. So sad that the bike has been discontinued.
Thats so awesome. Wow. A really long time in your family. I hope you keep the bike for a long time.
@@SmallBikeStuff the bike probably have more sentimental value than it worth
If you want to know which is the most reliable, fuel efficient and dependable bike, take a trip to the Malaysia Singapore Causeway early morning or late evening where you can see thousands upon thousands of small bikes crossing daily. The number 1 bike choice is the Yamaha LC135.
The bikes have to undergo start stop traffic jams up to one and a half hours at the causeway alone. A lesser brand new bike will not last a year of this. Ask me how I know.
Thanks for the review.
Very good point. I made a video about bikes parked in Singapore over a year ago and in the comments Singaporean people are roasting me because all the bikes had come over the border from Malaysia. 😂 ua-cam.com/video/Tt871sgopug/v-deo.htmlsi=AfbCkxVONlPJJ_WM
Yes yamaha design is superb
Great review mate, bought a 2011 yamaha sirius when i was working in vietnam {2019-2020} that was 114cc had heaps of under seat storage like the honda futura 12... think i paid $500 nzd for it ...had the rear rim replaced respoked cost me 250000 dong with new spokes rim and wheel bearings great bike took me all over south vietnam ended up giving it to one of our local workers when covid happend
Thats awesome! Sounds like you had some awesome times in Vietnam. I still look back at my two years in South East Asia with a great fondness - even a decade later.
Malaysia all rounder is Honda EX5. Semua golongan pakai.
Lasak,mudah jaga, kos rendah.
Love the EX5!
cheap moped bike
as a regular malaysian bike user Yamaha and Honda is the choice and its only in asian market but the traffic is going to be heavier in malaysia thanks for this small bike hope for ev bike for a incoming year that a lot of thing have to change for a inviroment and chaos traffic in city
Thanks so much for watching!
hello bro..plz review malaysian bike Modenas Dinamik 120..the only one two stroke bike malaysian..
I would love to film one. I didn’t find one to film this time. But I love the Dinamik it’s a great model.
I thought the LC135 was overpriced being
RM10k+/- and it would not sell well considering you can get Honda RS150 for cheaper RM8-10k. But I am seeing more and more on the road everyday so I guess I am wrong. I underestimated people's love for Yamaha and automatic clutch bikes
The FI honda has been notorious with reliability issues so malaysians opt for yamaha's nowadays
I heard that too and found it interesting - I do wonder if it's due to lack of basic maintenance. Because I have a 10 year old Honda with fuel injection and it's still reliably working with no issues at all. Even when I modified the engine and made the fuel pump work harder than in stock form, still no problems. Maybe just a difference between Thai and Malaysian Honda's - Mine is Thai.
I was just in Malaysia recently and they were everywhere! So popular.
wow 2019... before covid things happen... old good days...
Sure was!
The Yamahas are cool. And I do enjoy my Exciter 155, but I am ready to sell it and buy another Honda, because nothing just compares. Probably gonna be another Grom, Unless Honda Thailand comes out with a 150cc undertone. I can only hope.
Honda does make it tough when you've been spoiled for choice!
@@SmallBikeStuff I'm just a Honda F-Boy
Malaysia's favourite bike is yamaha lc135
greece's also!! crypton-x 135 has been the best selling semi- automatic bike for many many years ..
Y15 are better
Yamaha is a bit overprice in malaysia. Different bike shop has different price. Some people would rather buy bikes far away from home as the price difference can be quite obvious. 😊
Interesting. I understand - I would travel for a good deal too.
Sir , you should try yamaha lc135 spec 68 jetrod 6
I would love to try a modified LC135 - next time I come to Malaysia I hope I can ride more bikes.
Review the yamaha 125zr or the rxz... they are quite famous especially in the younger rider
I wish I had both of those bikes in my personal collection. The coolest Yamaha models!
Welcome to yaya-land...where mr H, plays 2nd fiddle, though a strong 2nd fiddle by the way😅
😂 thanks for watching!
try find Modenas Xcite 130cc ..old bike but ... rare oil tank ..
I have just googled it now - cool bike!
Still using yamaha RXZ...
Awesome you are lucky to have one!
Try honda ex5 and yamaha lc135.
Great bikes! I have LC135 in some of my older videos.
You coming to Pattaya anytime soon?
Not on the list sorry mate! Will definitely be back in Thailand soon enough - keep an eye out. I always make a few posts before I head away.
River?
It was in Thailand.
Come see cub pirx
You can see all race cub bikes
Haha I follow on Facebook and I often watch the live races!
@@SmallBikeStuff 4-5 May race will be held at Johor.. Litar Lumba Tangkak . Come visit us race on moped.. 😁
Happened to check the PG-1?
Yes but it's a bit underpowered.
Isn’t that the same as Finn, just a different name?
@@markspash178 engine wise - yes. But the Finn has a much different look to it if you get up close
yamaha is more quiet, I think.
Depends on the exhaust and the bore though
motor kayag gini, udah ngga laku kalau di indonesia.. sekarang trend nya matic.. motor bebek kayag gini udah gak jamannya lagi..beda sama di malaysia.. padahal enak pakai motor kayag gini.. bensinnya lebih hemat..
Very interesting. I think it's the same trend in many countries. Younger people prefer automatic scooters.
It's Jupiter Z in Indonesia
Great model!