by Ratmick » Fri Mar 04, 2005 8:59 pm
My thoughts on this, such as they are, are thus...and this is all IMHO, so don't bite me.
All the other three Japanese manufacturers CHANGE the majority of their bikes from year to year. Until comparatively recently Kawasaki seemed to be more intent on smaller incremental changes to their range, and in some cases, no changes at all apart from colour. Take the ZZR range, and the GPX250R as an example. The other manufacturers push ahead with new designs, cutting weight and pushing the design envelope and changing people's perceptions...take a look what Honda have done with the FireBlade, and Suzuki with the GSX-R range, Yamaha with the R1/R6, in the last ten or so years. Over a period of four/five years Kawasaki ends up with a solid decent-performing well-handling albeit often heavier bike without the cutting-edge looks and hence slightly less street cred.
The other three often push their designs down to the lower end of the market, a lot of people seem to formulate their riding choices on what they learned to ride on...You learn on a GPX/ZZR, you may end up with another Kawasaki as you'll know they are a reliable and competitively-priced bike. If you're 18 and you learn on an Aprilia, or an Across, or a baby CBR, you will probably end up elsewhere as they shit over the baby GPX (for example) in both looks and performance. It would have helped if the big K took more notice of the newer riders, and didn't leave them with bike choices based on a late-80s design (the GPX) or early 90s (the baby ZZR). It doesn't really matter that these bikes are sedate predictable handling, reliable, light-weight, run on the smell of a oily rag, and a great learning machine...they have a low bling-factor. Hence you see the majority of young male riders on grey import garishly-coloured CBRs, and Honda has another convert to the cause. If the big K made more of an effort getting the ZX-2 into the country ten years ago the results may have been slightly different.
Being out of the major bike events and having less than overwhelming interest in promoting themselves didn't really help either. The sales of any sporting equipment manufacturer, be it mountain bike/motor bike/soccer boot/tennis racket/lawn bowls or even 1/10th scale remote-control car racing, ALL increase when the gear is used by WINNERS....something the big K has been slightly lacking in recently.
Also IMHO, here are some home truths...some of the upper-edge of the naked range is heavy, fugly, pricy and outdated and needs rejigging/removing. It's one thing looking retro, it's another thing being retro because you can't be bothered. The new Z range is tops. The ZX range of bikes is cutting edge (now). The ZZR range needs updating, but without alienating every the entire short-biker community or the small/medium sports-tourer fraternity in the process (the big K needs loyalty, it won't get it if you f*ck people around). The GPX250R needs retiring and replacing with the ZX2R. The Vulcan range are too fat and underpowered. The lurid green, with or without stripes is not a good look, except on a sportsbike, where it looks spot-on. It IS identifiably Kawasaki, but most of the range is recognisable without it, and there are far more attractive colours.
The future? It's a long road back. The way I see it (again, IMHO) is that the ZX and naked Z series will be the mainstay of Kawasaki sales. The ZX-10R has to start winning for this to happen, and last years Moto GP results, although they weren't that impressive on paper, were pretty shit-hot when you consider it was their first year back. I can see some of the bike ranges either disappearing (goodbye ZZR, hello ZX-R J-Series rebadged) or models morphing in from Suzuki in Kawasaki clothing. Given motorbikes must be an incredibly small proportion of KHI's profit, seeing they seem to specialise in really HEAVY machinery, mostly trains and ships, I am surprised they have persevered this long with motorbikes.
Whether this continues remains to be the case remains to be seen, although my magic 8-Ball says 'Indications are Good'. I hope so, the bikes are worth it, I just wish Kawasaki would make more of an effort in R&D to make it so.
Last edited by
Ratmick on Sat Mar 05, 2005 11:38 am, edited 1 time in total.