30-Year Arcs / Sport / Yamaha Thundercat Lineage
Yamaha Japan

Yamaha YZF600R Thundercat. The friendly road 600 that outlived the R6.

Yamaha launched the YZF600R Thundercat in 1996 alongside the YZF1000R Thunderace — same naming convention, same EXUP technology, but a 599cc inline-four. Carb-fed, 100bhp, comfortable upright-ish ergonomics that R6 buyers found too soft. Yamaha kept it in production until 2007 — 11 years of overlap with the R6 — for road riders who didn't want the R6's track-focused riding position. Cult bike.

1996
Thundercat launch year
2006
Still in production · 10 yrs in
2016
Killed 2007 · 9 yrs gone
2026
No Thundercat · R6 track-only
Continual audits are underway to verify local pricing for every bike in every market. Apologies for any gaps you see while this is in progress.
1996 Thundercat · launch year

YZF600R Thundercat

599cc liquid-cooled DOHC inline-four, EXUP equipped
Carb-fed, more upright than R6, sport-tourer-leaning

599cc liquid-cooled DOHC inline-four (carbs · EXUP)
100bhp
66
189
810
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesAnalogue dialsEXUP exhaust valveDeltabox alloy frame
Known issues
  • Thundercat — EXUP servo failure carry-over — all years
  • Carb sync drift, choke cable seizure — all years
  • Reg/rec failure (Yamaha pattern) — all years
  • Cam chain tensioner rattle — high-mile bikes
$6,499
$13,000
$1.5–3k
2006 Thundercat · still selling, 10 yrs in

YZF600R Thundercat (final years)

Same 599cc engine — Yamaha kept it in production alongside the R6
Sport-touring buyers preferred the friendlier ergos

599cc liquid-cooled DOHC inline-four (carbs · EXUP)
100bhp
66
189
810
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesAnalogue dialsEXUP exhaust valveDeltabox alloy frame
Known issues
  • Thundercat — late-production 'parts bin' build quality dip — 2003-07
  • Reg/rec carry-over (Yamaha pattern) — all years
  • Otherwise mature, no major mechanical recalls
$6,800
$11,400
$1.8–3.2k
2016 Killed 2007 · 9 yrs gone
No bike for this era

No Thundercat

YZF-R6 was Yamaha's only 600 sportsbike from 2008 onwards
The road-friendly 600 four-cylinder slot is now empty

STATUS · GONE
GONE
$10,499
2026 No 600 four · 19 yrs gone
No bike for this era

No Thundercat

YZF-R6 (track-only since 2020 in EU) was the last Yamaha 600 four
Modern 600 four-cylinder sportsbikes are essentially extinct

STATUS · GONE
GONE
YZF-R7 $9,310
// 30-Year Delta

What actually changed.

From Thundercat to R6 · Yamaha's split-personality 600 strategy
The 600cc inline-four sportsbike Effectively extinct In 1996 every Japanese factory had a 600cc inline-four sportsbike: Honda CBR600F (carbed), Yamaha YZF600R Thundercat, Suzuki GSX-R600, Kawasaki ZX-6R. By 2026 they are essentially gone — Yamaha R6 is track-only, Honda CBR600RR is grey-import only, GSX-R600 killed, ZX-6R limited to specific markets. Replaced by parallel-twin supersports (Aprilia RS660, Yamaha R7, Triumph Daytona 660).
Why R6 didn't kill it sooner Different riders The 1999 YZF-R6 was track-focused — high redline (15,500rpm), aggressive ergonomics, narrow powerband. The Thundercat had broader torque, more upright ergos, comfortable for distance. R6 buyers were trackday/canyon riders; Thundercat buyers were commuters and tourers. Yamaha kept both for 9 years because the customer bases didn't overlap.
Why it ended 2007 Euro 3 emissions Euro 3 came in for new motorcycles 2006 and Yamaha didn't fund the carb-to-FI conversion + emissions update for the Thundercat. The R6 had already been EFI for years. Cheaper to drop the Thundercat than to keep it compliant. Same fate as Honda's CBR600F (parallel killed 2006).
Real cost trajectory −40% real $6,499 Thundercat in 1996 ($13,000 today) → R7 (closest 2026 successor) at $9,310. Significantly cheaper in real terms. Used market in 2026: Thundercat $1.5-3k for clean low-mile. Cheapest 100bhp inline-four Yamaha you can buy.
Rider aids count (1996 → 2026) 0 → 4 Thundercat had nothing — analogue dials, no ABS, no FI, no electronics. R7 (2026 closest replacement) has ABS, fuel injection, optional quickshifter, LCD dash. R6 (track-only) has full IMU electronics. Modern entry-level supersport is far more capable but less character.
Cheapest way in $1.5k A clean Thundercat from 1996-2002. 100bhp inline-four, EXUP, comfortable enough for distance, fast enough for trackdays. The cheapest path to a competent 600cc Japanese sportsbike. Pay attention to EXUP servo (cables seize), reg/rec, choke cable, and front-end condition. Properly undervalued in 2026.
vs CBR600F (1995-2006) used Similar money Honda CBR600F (1995-2006) used market: $1.5-3k for clean. YZF600R Thundercat: $1.5-3k. Same money for similar bikes — both are 600cc inline-four sportsbikes with EXUP-style mid-range tricks, both bombproof if maintained. Honda has slightly stronger parts supply and dealer network for older bikes.
// Sources

Where these numbers come from

Every figure on this page is from a published manufacturer spec sheet or a reputable review publication. No press junkets, no opinions in the spec data. Inflation calculated using US BLS CPI tool.

1996 YZF600R Thundercat Manufacturer specs · MCN archive · Cycle World road test
2006 Thundercat (final years) Manufacturer press · MCN · Cycle World archive
2026 YZF-R7 (closest replacement) Yamaha US 2026 spec sheet · MCN · Cycle World archive