1980
Can-Am MX6 400 - Specifications & Review

Article Complete Info
| Articleid | 273147 |
|---|---|
| Category | Cross-motocross |
| Make | Can-Am |
| Model | MX6 400 |
| Year | 1980 |
Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels
| Frontsuspension | Marzocchi Air Fork |
|---|---|
| Rearsuspension | S and W or Ohlins Twin Shocks |
Engine & Transmission
| Borexstroke | 84.0 x 72.0 mm (3.3 x 2.8 inches) |
|---|---|
| Compression | 11.9:1 |
| Coolingsystem | Air |
| Displacement | 406.00 ccm (24.77 cubic inches) |
| Enginedetails | Single cylinder, two-stroke |
| Fuelsystem | Carburettor. Mikuni VM 38 |
| Gearbox | 5-speed |
| Ignition | Bosch CDI |
| Lubricationsystem | Premix 20:1 |
| Maxrpm | 8500 |
| Power | 43.00 HP (31.4 kW)) @ 6500 RPM |
| Transmissiontypefinaldrive | Chain |
Other Specifications
| Coloroptions | Orange |
|---|
About Can-Am
Country of Origin:
Canada
Founder:
Bombardier (BRP); legacy of Joseph-Armand Bombardier
Best Known For:
1970s MX/enduro race bikes; modern Spyder/Ryker three-wheelers and ATVs/UTVs
Company History
Can-Am began in the early 1970s as the motorcycle arm of Bombardier, leveraging Canadian engineering to create fiercely competitive two-stroke motocross and enduro machines. Tuned with European expertise and raced hard in North America and overseas, those early Can-Ams collected championships and cult status, proving that a snowmobile maker could out-hustle traditional bike brands in the dirt. As corporate priorities shifted, motorcycle production waned, but the Can-Am name later returned under BRP with a new mission: redefine powersports with three-wheeled roadsters. The Spyder and Ryker platforms offered stability, ABS/traction safety nets, and car-like ease that brought non-motorcyclists into open-air motoring. Parallel growth in ATVs and side-by-sides put Can-Am back into the off-road conversation at scale, competing directly with American and Japanese rivals. The throughline is confidence and accessibility—machines that extend the season, the terrain, or the rider base. Historically, Can-Am’s arc demonstrates corporate agility: pivot from two-stroke race weapons to sophisticated, electronically managed trikes without losing the brand’s appetite for fun. In the 1970s it asked dirt riders to imagine a Canadian upstart on the podium; today it invites highway travelers and trail workers to experience wind and utility with three contact patches. The brand’s enduring contribution is expanding who counts as a ‘rider,’ using engineering to lower barriers rather than raise them.
