Kawasaki-historicus op het forum ?

Mario

Die hard MF'er
22 aug 2001
361
0
Turnhout
Nu ik een Kawasaki heb gekocht, ben ik ook wel benieuwd naar de geschiedenis van dat merk en wat het precies onderscheidt van andere merken. Heeft iemand hier een idee van ? (PS: wegens tijdgebrek heb ik nog niet gezocht op het Internet).

Andere merken mag ook natuurlijk, is altijd mooi meegenomen, maar aub geen toestanden van \"Yamaha is beter\" of \"Harley kicks ass\", gewoon historische gegevens.

En tot slot, bestaan er sites gewijd aan de ZZR 600 ?

Dank bij voorbaat :) .
 
Der is best wat te vinden over de ZZR 600...
Effe zoeken levert http://www.google.com/search?q=zzr600 (* DIT *) op :P
 
Nu ik een Kawasaki heb gekocht, ben ik ook wel benieuwd naar de geschiedenis van dat merk en wat het precies onderscheidt van andere merken. Heeft iemand hier een idee van ? (PS: wegens tijdgebrek heb ik nog niet gezocht op het Internet).

Andere merken mag ook natuurlijk, is altijd mooi meegenomen, maar aub geen toestanden van \"Yamaha is beter\" of \"Harley kicks ass\", gewoon historische gegevens.

En tot slot, bestaan er sites gewijd aan de ZZR 600 ?

Dank bij voorbaat :) .

De geschiedenis van zijn grote broer vind je hier:
http://www.xs4all.nl/~zx11/ (www.xs4all.nl/~zx11/)

De Kawasaki Heavy Industries site vind je hier:
www.khi.co.jp/
 
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Ik weet dat ze tijdens WO II nog vliegtuigmotoren gemaakt hebben. Misschien was dat toen een van die zgn Zaibatsu (?)(gigantische conglomeraten die zeker een rol hebben gespeeld in het oorlogszuchtige Japan) ?

Die website van Kawasaki Heavy Industries is wel een mooie, vooral het deel over motorfietsen ;) .
 
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mario, jij rijdt dus ook zzr600? hoe zit het volgende dan bij jou?

als ik 200 km heb gereden moet ik echt hoognodig tanken (of op reserve zetten), want hij staat dan ver in het rood. Dan tank ik zo\'n 12 liter. Hij rijdt dus 200/12=16,7 km per liter, niet slecht (onzuinig gereden, heb ook al meer gehaald). Maar die tank inhoud is toch 18 liter? zit er 6 liter reserve in??? Dat begrijp ik niet... Hoe is dat bij jou?

En ik vind hem bij +200 km per uur zenuwachtig worden, met name achter. Heb jij dit ook, en / of weet jij (iemand anders) hier iets op?

TNX...
 
Sorry Deamon, maar heb er nog niet eens mee kunnen rijden: slecht weer, maar vooral nog geen verzekering, noch nummerplaat :snif:.
 
En ik vind hem bij +200 km per uur zenuwachtig worden, met name achter. Heb jij dit ook, en / of weet jij (iemand anders) hier iets op?
TNX...

Een jongen van de club heeft ook zo\'n ZZR. Toen ik er een keer achter reed zag ik ook dat het ding achter veel te slap geveerd is. Wat kun je er aan doen, misschien voorspanning verhogen? Kweetniet of ook demping aan te passen is. Anders andere veer laten monteren door een veringspecialist.

Mijn ZX-6R is een stuk stabieler bij die snelheden ook in lange 200+ bochten.
 
Ik zal er eens een aparte topic van maken. Dan krijg ik misschien meer antwoorden. De vraag is nu nogal off-topic hier...

Maar alvast bedankt.
 
The History of Kawasaki


Kawasaki is a multi-national corporation with more than fifty holdings (manufacturing plants, distributions centers, and marketing and sales headquarters) in most major cities around the world. Business interests include environmental control and energy plant engineering, machinery and robotics, ship building and marine engineering, power plant engineering and steel structures, rolling stock, aerospace, and of course, ATVs, motorcycles, utility vehicles and personal watercraft. Like all companies, Kawasaki began with a dream and grew into the great corporation it is today.

In 1878 Shozo Kawasaki, the founder, opened a shipyard to build ocean-going steel ships. In 1886, the fledgling operation was expanded to become Kawasaki Dockyard.


Ten years later in 1896, Kawasaki Dockyard was incorporated and Kojiro Matsukata was appointed first president of the company. Fabrication of locomotives, freight cars, passenger carriages and bridge girders began in 1906 at the newly opened Hyogo Works,and in the following year, production of marine steam turbines began at the dockyard.


During 1918, the Aircraft Department was established at the Hyogo Works only 15 years after the Wright brothers\' virgin flight. The department began manufacturing aircraft at a time when airplanes, which could only remain airborne for a few hours, were still made from cloth and wood. Soon after, a plant to manufacture airplanes was built, and Japan\'s first aircraft made from metal was completed at this plant.


The following year saw the beginning of many changes as The Marine Freight Department was split off to form Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd. (K-Line). In 1928, the Hyogo Works was split off to become Kawasaki Rolling Stock Manufacturing Co., Ltd. The Aircraft Department became Kawasaki Aircraft Co., Ltd. in 1937, and in 1950, the Steel Making Department became Kawasaki Steel Corporation. The Rolling Stock, Aircraft, Marine Freight and Steel Making departments became companies in their own right, establishing a firm foundation in their respective fields.

In 1961, the first Kawasaki motorcycle was produced by Kawasaki Aircraft Co., Ltd. Then in 1969, Kawasaki Dockyard, Kawasaki Rolling Stock Manufacturing and Kawasaki Aircraft merged into one giant corporation, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd., to better compete in the emerging and very competitive global market.



Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd.


Today, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd. (KHI) is engaged in building transportation systems for the 21st century, and in doing so, is utilizing the wealth of technological know-how it has accumulated over the past 100 years. The ship building division has led the world in producing ever larger, ever faster, increasingly automated ships. It is constantly striving to find ways to increase ship manufacturing and navigation efficiency while conserving energy. So far, the quest has resulted in the development of Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) carriers, high-speed ships and other future-oriented marine technologies.

By applying aviation principles, a Jetfoil that speeds above the water at an amazing 45 knots is one project that has become reality. Kawasaki led Japan\'s shipbuilding consortium formed to build the Techno-Superliner. This exciting new vessel is planned to carry a payload of approximately 1,000 tons and travel at a cruising speed of 50 knots.

Kawasaki is supplying rolling stock for the world-famous Shinkansen bullet train as well as other trains. The company is now developing a next-generation Shinkansen that will travel at a top speed of 240 mph. Kawasaki\'s expertise extends well beyond simply the development and manufacture of rolling stock. As a systems integrator, Kawasaki engineers total railway transportation systems, from train operation control to rolling stock inspection and repair operations.


In the aircraft sector, Kawasaki is engaged in a broad range of activities as a manufacturer of both aircraft bodies and engines. At present, the company is manufacturing the Kawasaki-developed MBB K117 helicopter and portions of the latest passenger aircraft, the Boeing 777. Kawasaki is also an important player in the project to develop the Supersonic Transport (SST), a plane that will travel at altitudes of 60,000 to 90,000 feet at a speed of Mach 2.5 and will carry from 200 to 300 passengers. Kawasaki\'s high-speed transportation technologies also extend beyond the atmosphere of earth in the new quest to utilize space and its resources.


Kawasaki\'s civil engineering and construction machinery is contributing to the creation of new towns with its bridges and high-rise buildings. The success of the Eurotunnel, the large-scale project that links England to France, owes much to the two tunnel boring machines made by Kawasaki. The company also built the shield machines -- the worlds largest, at more than 46 feet in diameter -- for the construction of the Trans-Tokyo Bay Highway.


Bridge construction is another Kawasaki strength. The company recently completed a main tower of the Akashi Kaikyo Bridge. When completed, this will be the longest suspension bridge in the world.


Plus, Kawasaki is doing its utmost to fulfill its responsibilities to the planet by being environmentally conscious. It is making every effort to develop environment-friendly plants, technologies to protect the earth, new sources of energy that will help ensure a stable supply of resources and energy, and energy-conserving and recycling technologies.

The Combined Cycle Power Plant (CCPP), for example, uses lowpolluting natural gas to turn the turbines that generate power, while exhaust heat is used to generate additional electricity. Kawasaki\'s resource recycling system uses heat from city refuse incinerators to power coolers and heaters and to heat water; it also collects reusable resources from various types of refuse.


Other technologies, including water treatment, flue gas desulfurization and denitration plants, are also proving highly effective in the protection of the environment and the conservation of energy. Kawasaki is always monitoring future technologies and is well positioned to enter the era of fusion energy that will follow.


The Kawasaki name represents a technological enterprise whose activities range from large-scale, international projects to items used in daily life and for recreation. And at every step, Kawasaki pays the utmost attention to humankind and the environment. The past 100 years of innovation has enabled Kawasaki to establish a firm foundation as a leading technological enterprise. Now, the company is fully prepared to welcome the new century and looks forward to playing a leading role in the advancement of humankind and to another century of innovation.
 
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