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Kawasaki Motors

Kawasaki Motors, Ltd. (カワサキモータース株式会社, Kawasaki Mōtāsu Kabushikigaisha) is a Japanese mobility manufacturer that produces motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles, utility vehicles, watercraft, outboard motors, and other electric products. It derives its origins from Kawasaki Aircraft Industries, a subsidiary of Kawasaki Heavy Industries, and is rooted in the motorcycle, boat, and engine businesses. In 1953, they began manufacturing engines for motorcycles and have since produced products such as the Mach and Ninja series in motorcycles and the Jet Ski, which has become a generic term for personal watercraft. Until 2021, it was a division of Kawasaki Heavy Industries, known as the Kawasaki Aerospace Company (川策重工業汎用機カンパニー) and later the Kawasaki Motorcycle & Engine Company (川崎重工業モーターサイクル&エンジンカンパニー). In 2021, it was separated as Kawasaki Motors, Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of Kawasaki Heavy Industries.

Kawasaki Motors, Ltd.
Native name
カワサキモータース株式会社
Kawasaki Mōtāsu Kabushikigaisha
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryAutomotive
PredecessorKawasaki Heavy Industries Motorcycle & Engine Company
FoundedFebruary 12, 2021; 3 years ago (2021-02-12)[1]
Headquarters1-1, Kawasaki-cho, Akashi, ,
Japan
Key people
Hiroshi Ito[2] (President)
ProductsMotorcycles, ATVs, utility vehicles, personal watercraft, general-purpose petrol engines
ParentKawasaki Heavy Industries
SubsidiariesAutopolis Co., Ltd.
Websitewww.global-kawasaki-motors.com
Kawasaki dealership in Japan

Motorcycles edit

 
2006 Kawasaki Ninja ZX-10R

Kawasaki's Aircraft Company began the development of a motorcycle engine in 1949. The development was completed in 1952 and mass production started in 1953.[3] The engine was an air-cooled, 148 cc, OHV, four-stroke single cylinder with a maximum power of 4 PS (2.9 kW; 3.9 hp) at 4,000 rpm. In 1954, the first complete Kawasaki Motorcycle was produced under the name of Meihatsu, a subsidiary of Kawasaki Aircraft. In 1960, Kawasaki completed construction of a factory dedicated exclusively to motorcycle production and bought Meguro Motorcycles.

All-terrain vehicles and utility vehicles edit

 
Kawasaki KVF650 4x4 in Switzerland

Kawasaki's first ATV was the three-wheeled KLT200, which debuted in 1981. Its first four-wheel ATV, the Bayou 185, was introduced in 1985 and in 1989, its first model with four-wheel-drive, the Bayou 300 4x4. Today, Kawasaki's ATV line-up includes a wide range of recreational and utility ATVs.

Kawasaki's MULE (Multi-Use Light Equipment) utility vehicle combines an ATV with a pick-up truck. The first MULE was produced in 1988. Kawasaki now calls their utility vehicles "side-by-side" vehicles.

Watercraft edit

 
Kawasaki Jet Ski

In 1973, Kawasaki introduced a limited production of stand-up models as designed by the recognized inventor of jet skis, Clayton Jacobson II.[4] In 1976, Kawasaki then began mass production of the JS400-A. JS400s came with 400 cc two-stroke engines and hulls based upon the previous limited release models. It became the harbinger of the success Jet-Skis would see in the market up through the 1990s. In 1986 Kawasaki broadened the world of Jet Skis by introducing a two-person model with lean-in "sport" style handling and a 650 cc engine, dubbed the Kawasaki X2. Then in 1989, they introduced their first two-passenger "sit-down" model, the Tandem Sport (TS) with a step-through seating area.

In 2003, Kawasaki celebrated the Jet Ski brand by releasing a special 30th anniversary edition of its current stand-up model, the SX-R, which has seen a revival of interest in stand-up jetskiing. The X-2 has also been updated, based on the SX-R platform and re-released in Japan. Kawasaki continues to produce three models of sit-downs, including many four-stroke models. The four stroke engines have come on since the late 1990s; with the help of superchargers and the like the engines can output up to 300 horsepower (220 kW) as seen in the Kawasaki Ultra 300x.

Jet Ski is the brand name of personal watercraft manufactured by Kawasaki. The name, however, has become a genericized trademark for any type of personal watercraft.

Racing edit

 
2007 Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR
 
Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR
 
Norio NAKAYAMA in Kawasaki dealership

Kawasaki's traditional racing colour is green. Many Kawasaki racing teams are called Team Green. The "Monster Energy Kawasaki Team Green™" provides a support program developing amateur motocross racers.[5]

Grand Prix, MotoGP edit

Kawasaki's first title was with Dave Simmonds in 1969 when they won the 125 cc World Championship. Kawasaki dominated the 250 cc and 350 cc grand prix classes from 1978 to 1982 winning four titles in each category.

With the introduction of the four-stroke engines into MotoGP in 2002, Kawasaki decided to take part in the new MotoGP World Championship. Kawasaki entered the championship in 2003 with 250 cc Grand Prix racer Harald Eckl's Team Eckl.

In 2003, the Kawasaki Racing Team was formed after Kawasaki had developed their new 990cc ZX-RR bike throughout 2002 and raced it in the last three races of the 2002 MotoGP season. The racing activities were managed by Harald Eckl's team based in Germany. It was not until 2004 that Kawasaki had two riders - Alex Hofmann and Shinya Nakano, who raced for the entire season. Nakano placed 3rd in Japan that year achieving Kawasaki's first podium finish in MotoGP.[6]

In 2007, Kawasaki split from Harald Eckl because of Eckl's involvement with a competitor's MotoGP activities, which forced Kawasaki to terminate the relationship immediately.[7] Kawasaki formed Kawasaki Motors Racing, a European subsidiary of Kawasaki Heavy Industries responsible for managing the racing activities of the MotoGP team and any other motorcycle racing activities Kawasaki may enter in the future. For the first time since Kawasaki returned to the premier class of motorcycle racing, the team became a complete ‘in house’ factory team.

On January 9, 2009, Kawasaki announced it had decided to "... suspend its MotoGP racing activities from 2009 season onward and reallocate management resources more efficiently". The company stated that it will continue racing activities using mass-produced motorcycles as well as supporting general race oriented consumers.

Superbike edit

Kawasaki's involvement in the World Superbike Championship started in 1990 with the USA-based Team Muzzy Kawasaki, which managed the superbike activities until 1996. Between 1997 and 2002, Kawasaki gave factory backing to the Harald Eckl's team, based in Germany, while Muzzy focused on the AMA Superbike domestic series. From 2003 to 2008, only privateer teams like Bertocchi and PSG-1 entered the world championship, with small factory support. In 2009, Kawasaki officially returned to SBK with Paul Bird Motorsport, but after three seasons, in 2012, Kawasaki switched the factory support to the Spanish-based Provec Racing team.

Kawasaki has won several superbike racing championships. They won the rider's Superbike World Championship in 1993 with Scott Russell, two decades later in 2013 with Tom Sykes, and six times consecutively in 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020 with Jonathan Rea. The manufacturer has also claimed nine AMA Superbike Championships with riders such as Reg Pridmore, Eddie Lawson, Wayne Rainey, Scott Russell, and Doug Chandler. During the 1990s, they also dominated the Endurance World Championship.

Year Champion
1981   Jean Lafond
  Raymond Roche
1982   Jean-Claude Chemarin
  Jacques Cornu
1991   Alex Vieira
1992   Terry Rymer
  Carl Fogarty
1993   Doug Toland
1994   Adrien Morillas
1996   Bryan Morrison

Supertwin edit

Kawasaki machinery has been pivotal in the development of Supertwin racing.[8] The racing machines are developed from the Kawasaki 650cc parallel twin commuter bike (ER6-n or ER6-f).[9] The machines are then transformed through development into an 85 bhp race bike with top end speeds in excess of 150 mph.[10]

The KMR Kawasaki Racing Team[11] are one of the leading race teams in the category, whose team members include Ryan Farquhar and Jeremy McWilliams.[12]

Year Champion
2012   Ryan Farquhar
2013   James Hillier
2014   Dean Harrison
2015   Ivan Lintin

[13]

Isle of Man TT edit

Kawasaki has enjoyed numerous successes at the Isle of Man TT Races. The marque has notched up a total of 34 victories which include 3 victories in the Sidecar TT.[14] Notable achievements include Mick Grant's 1975 outright lap record of 109.82 mph (176.74 km/h), finally beating the previous record set by Mike Hailwood and which had stood since 1967.[15]

Motocross edit

Riders on Kawasaki motorcycles won races in the British Motocross Championship, Motocross des Nations, AMA Supercross Championship, Sidecarcross and Supermoto.

Championship wins:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Kawasaki Motors Corporate Info". 14 April 2024. Retrieved 14 April 2024.
  2. ^ "Company profile". Retrieved 6 January 2024.
  3. ^ "Kawasaki history".
  4. ^ Action, Johnny; Adams, Tania; Packer, Matt (2006). Origin of Everyday Things. Sterling Publishing. pp. 124. ISBN 1-4027-4302-5.
  5. ^ kawasaki.com: Team Green Racing, retrieved 8 September 2012
  6. ^ Kawasaki Racing Team 2014-02-02 at the Wayback Machine highrevs.net. Retrieved on 2009-05-10
  7. ^ "Kawasaki: A new beginning in 2007". kawasaki-motogp.com. 29 November 2006. Retrieved 24 January 2008.
  8. ^ "Kawasaki Supertwin".
  9. ^ "Kawasaki Supertwin".
  10. ^ "Kawasaki Supertwin".
  11. ^ http://www.sdkmotorsport.co.uk/kmr/?cat=3 [permanent dead link]
  12. ^ http://www.sdkmotorsport.co.uk/kmr/?cat=4 [permanent dead link]
  13. ^ http://www.iomtt.com/TT-Database.aspx [bare URL]
  14. ^ http://www.iomtt.com/TT-Database/Machines.aspx?marq_Name=Kawasaki&filter=K [bare URL]
  15. ^ http://www.iomtt.com/TT-Database/competitors.aspx?ride_id=2785&filter=G [bare URL]

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Kawasaki motorcycles at Curlie

kawasaki, motors, カワサキモータース株式会社, kawasaki, mōtāsu, kabushikigaisha, japanese, mobility, manufacturer, that, produces, motorcycles, terrain, vehicles, utility, vehicles, watercraft, outboard, motors, other, electric, products, derives, origins, from, kawasaki, . Kawasaki Motors Ltd カワサキモータース株式会社 Kawasaki Mōtasu Kabushikigaisha is a Japanese mobility manufacturer that produces motorcycles all terrain vehicles utility vehicles watercraft outboard motors and other electric products It derives its origins from Kawasaki Aircraft Industries a subsidiary of Kawasaki Heavy Industries and is rooted in the motorcycle boat and engine businesses In 1953 they began manufacturing engines for motorcycles and have since produced products such as the Mach and Ninja series in motorcycles and the Jet Ski which has become a generic term for personal watercraft Until 2021 it was a division of Kawasaki Heavy Industries known as the Kawasaki Aerospace Company 川策重工業汎用機カンパニー and later the Kawasaki Motorcycle amp Engine Company 川崎重工業モーターサイクル amp エンジンカンパニー In 2021 it was separated as Kawasaki Motors Ltd a wholly owned subsidiary of Kawasaki Heavy Industries Kawasaki Motors Ltd Native nameカワサキモータース株式会社Romanized nameKawasaki Mōtasu KabushikigaishaCompany typeSubsidiaryIndustryAutomotivePredecessorKawasaki Heavy Industries Motorcycle amp Engine CompanyFoundedFebruary 12 2021 3 years ago 2021 02 12 1 Headquarters1 1 Kawasaki cho Akashi Hyōgo Prefecture JapanKey peopleHiroshi Ito 2 President ProductsMotorcycles ATVs utility vehicles personal watercraft general purpose petrol enginesParentKawasaki Heavy IndustriesSubsidiariesAutopolis Co Ltd Websitewww global kawasaki motors com Kawasaki dealership in Japan Contents 1 Motorcycles 2 All terrain vehicles and utility vehicles 3 Watercraft 4 Racing 4 1 Grand Prix MotoGP 4 2 Superbike 4 3 Supertwin 4 4 Isle of Man TT 4 5 Motocross 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksMotorcycles edit nbsp 2006 Kawasaki Ninja ZX 10R Main article Kawasaki motorcycles Kawasaki s Aircraft Company began the development of a motorcycle engine in 1949 The development was completed in 1952 and mass production started in 1953 3 The engine was an air cooled 148 cc OHV four stroke single cylinder with a maximum power of 4 PS 2 9 kW 3 9 hp at 4 000 rpm In 1954 the first complete Kawasaki Motorcycle was produced under the name of Meihatsu a subsidiary of Kawasaki Aircraft In 1960 Kawasaki completed construction of a factory dedicated exclusively to motorcycle production and bought Meguro Motorcycles All terrain vehicles and utility vehicles edit nbsp Kawasaki KVF650 4x4 in Switzerland Kawasaki s first ATV was the three wheeled KLT200 which debuted in 1981 Its first four wheel ATV the Bayou 185 was introduced in 1985 and in 1989 its first model with four wheel drive the Bayou 300 4x4 Today Kawasaki s ATV line up includes a wide range of recreational and utility ATVs Kawasaki s MULE Multi Use Light Equipment utility vehicle combines an ATV with a pick up truck The first MULE was produced in 1988 Kawasaki now calls their utility vehicles side by side vehicles Watercraft edit nbsp Kawasaki Jet Ski In 1973 Kawasaki introduced a limited production of stand up models as designed by the recognized inventor of jet skis Clayton Jacobson II 4 In 1976 Kawasaki then began mass production of the JS400 A JS400s came with 400 cc two stroke engines and hulls based upon the previous limited release models It became the harbinger of the success Jet Skis would see in the market up through the 1990s In 1986 Kawasaki broadened the world of Jet Skis by introducing a two person model with lean in sport style handling and a 650 cc engine dubbed the Kawasaki X2 Then in 1989 they introduced their first two passenger sit down model the Tandem Sport TS with a step through seating area In 2003 Kawasaki celebrated the Jet Ski brand by releasing a special 30th anniversary edition of its current stand up model the SX R which has seen a revival of interest in stand up jetskiing The X 2 has also been updated based on the SX R platform and re released in Japan Kawasaki continues to produce three models of sit downs including many four stroke models The four stroke engines have come on since the late 1990s with the help of superchargers and the like the engines can output up to 300 horsepower 220 kW as seen in the Kawasaki Ultra 300x Jet Ski is the brand name of personal watercraft manufactured by Kawasaki The name however has become a genericized trademark for any type of personal watercraft Racing edit nbsp 2007 Kawasaki Ninja ZX RR nbsp Kawasaki Ninja ZX RR nbsp Norio NAKAYAMA in Kawasaki dealership Kawasaki s traditional racing colour is green Many Kawasaki racing teams are called Team Green The Monster Energy Kawasaki Team Green provides a support program developing amateur motocross racers 5 Grand Prix MotoGP edit Kawasaki s first title was with Dave Simmonds in 1969 when they won the 125 cc World Championship Kawasaki dominated the 250 cc and 350 cc grand prix classes from 1978 to 1982 winning four titles in each category With the introduction of the four stroke engines into MotoGP in 2002 Kawasaki decided to take part in the new MotoGP World Championship Kawasaki entered the championship in 2003 with 250 cc Grand Prix racer Harald Eckl s Team Eckl In 2003 the Kawasaki Racing Team was formed after Kawasaki had developed their new 990cc ZX RR bike throughout 2002 and raced it in the last three races of the 2002 MotoGP season The racing activities were managed by Harald Eckl s team based in Germany It was not until 2004 that Kawasaki had two riders Alex Hofmann and Shinya Nakano who raced for the entire season Nakano placed 3rd in Japan that year achieving Kawasaki s first podium finish in MotoGP 6 In 2007 Kawasaki split from Harald Eckl because of Eckl s involvement with a competitor s MotoGP activities which forced Kawasaki to terminate the relationship immediately 7 Kawasaki formed Kawasaki Motors Racing a European subsidiary of Kawasaki Heavy Industries responsible for managing the racing activities of the MotoGP team and any other motorcycle racing activities Kawasaki may enter in the future For the first time since Kawasaki returned to the premier class of motorcycle racing the team became a complete in house factory team On January 9 2009 Kawasaki announced it had decided to suspend its MotoGP racing activities from 2009 season onward and reallocate management resources more efficiently The company stated that it will continue racing activities using mass produced motorcycles as well as supporting general race oriented consumers Grand Prix motorcycle racing Year Champion 350 cc 250 cc 125 cc 1982 nbsp Anton Mang 1981 nbsp Anton Mang nbsp Anton Mang 1980 nbsp Anton Mang 1979 nbsp Kork Ballington nbsp Kork Ballington 1978 nbsp Kork Ballington nbsp Kork Ballington 1969 nbsp Dave Simmonds Superbike edit See also Kawasaki Motors Racing Kawasaki s involvement in the World Superbike Championship started in 1990 with the USA based Team Muzzy Kawasaki which managed the superbike activities until 1996 Between 1997 and 2002 Kawasaki gave factory backing to the Harald Eckl s team based in Germany while Muzzy focused on the AMA Superbike domestic series From 2003 to 2008 only privateer teams like Bertocchi and PSG 1 entered the world championship with small factory support In 2009 Kawasaki officially returned to SBK with Paul Bird Motorsport but after three seasons in 2012 Kawasaki switched the factory support to the Spanish based Provec Racing team Kawasaki has won several superbike racing championships They won the rider s Superbike World Championship in 1993 with Scott Russell two decades later in 2013 with Tom Sykes and six times consecutively in 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 and 2020 with Jonathan Rea The manufacturer has also claimed nine AMA Superbike Championships with riders such as Reg Pridmore Eddie Lawson Wayne Rainey Scott Russell and Doug Chandler During the 1990s they also dominated the Endurance World Championship Superbike World Championship Year Champion 1993 nbsp Scott Russell 2013 nbsp Tom Sykes 2015 nbsp Jonathan Rea 2016 nbsp Jonathan Rea 2017 nbsp Jonathan Rea 2018 nbsp Jonathan Rea 2019 nbsp Jonathan Rea 2020 nbsp Jonathan Rea AMA Superbike Championship Year Champion 1977 nbsp Reg Pridmore 1978 nbsp Reg Pridmore 1981 nbsp Eddie Lawson 1982 nbsp Eddie Lawson 1983 nbsp Wayne Rainey 1990 nbsp Doug Chandler 1992 nbsp Scott Russell 1996 nbsp Doug Chandler 1997 nbsp Doug Chandler Endurance World Championship Year Champion 1981 nbsp Jean Lafond nbsp Raymond Roche 1982 nbsp Jean Claude Chemarin nbsp Jacques Cornu 1991 nbsp Alex Vieira 1992 nbsp Terry Rymer nbsp Carl Fogarty 1993 nbsp Doug Toland 1994 nbsp Adrien Morillas 1996 nbsp Bryan Morrison Supertwin edit Kawasaki machinery has been pivotal in the development of Supertwin racing 8 The racing machines are developed from the Kawasaki 650cc parallel twin commuter bike ER6 n or ER6 f 9 The machines are then transformed through development into an 85 bhp race bike with top end speeds in excess of 150 mph 10 The KMR Kawasaki Racing Team 11 are one of the leading race teams in the category whose team members include Ryan Farquhar and Jeremy McWilliams 12 Isle of Man TT Supertwin Race Year Champion 2012 nbsp Ryan Farquhar 2013 nbsp James Hillier 2014 nbsp Dean Harrison 2015 nbsp Ivan Lintin 13 Isle of Man TT edit Kawasaki has enjoyed numerous successes at the Isle of Man TT Races The marque has notched up a total of 34 victories which include 3 victories in the Sidecar TT 14 Notable achievements include Mick Grant s 1975 outright lap record of 109 82 mph 176 74 km h finally beating the previous record set by Mike Hailwood and which had stood since 1967 15 Motocross edit Riders on Kawasaki motorcycles won races in the British Motocross Championship Motocross des Nations AMA Supercross Championship Sidecarcross and Supermoto Championship wins 1995 Stefan Everts FIM Motocross World Championship 250cc 29 times the AMA Motocross ChampionshipSee also edit nbsp Companies portal Kawasaki Motors Racing List of Kawasaki motorcyclesReferences edit Kawasaki Motors Corporate Info 14 April 2024 Retrieved 14 April 2024 Company profile Retrieved 6 January 2024 Kawasaki history Action Johnny Adams Tania Packer Matt 2006 Origin of Everyday Things Sterling Publishing pp 124 ISBN 1 4027 4302 5 kawasaki com Team Green Racing retrieved 8 September 2012 Kawasaki Racing Team Archived 2014 02 02 at the Wayback Machine highrevs net Retrieved on 2009 05 10 Kawasaki A new beginning in 2007 kawasaki motogp com 29 November 2006 Retrieved 24 January 2008 Kawasaki Supertwin Kawasaki Supertwin Kawasaki Supertwin http www sdkmotorsport co uk kmr cat 3 permanent dead link http www sdkmotorsport co uk kmr cat 4 permanent dead link http www iomtt com TT Database aspx bare URL http www iomtt com TT Database Machines aspx marq Name Kawasaki amp filter K bare URL http www iomtt com TT Database competitors aspx ride id 2785 amp filter G bare URL External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kawasaki Heavy Industries Motorcycle amp Engine Official website Kawasaki motorcycles at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kawasaki Motors amp oldid 1218878008, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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