Tag Archives: Videos

Video Of The Week | Kawasaki Z1300 six-cylinder

When people think of six-cylinder motorcycles they naturally think Honda. From the six-cylinder 250cc GP racers that enjoyed great success at the Isle of Man TT and in Grand Prix Motorcycle Racing during the 1960s. Then of course there is the famous in-line six of the Honda CBX1000 of 1978, through to the flat-six of the current generation Gold Wing. Honda is somewhat synonymous with six-cylinder motorcycles.

Honda CBX 1000

Honda CBX 1000

Honda CBX 1000

Of course BMW currently has the very impressive K1600 line-up of touring motorcycles, and the likes of Benelli turned out six-cylinder motorcycles as far back as 1973 with the original Benelli Sei, the first production road going model to utilise six-cylinders.

Benelli Sei PA BenelliSei

Benelli Sei PA BenelliSei

Check out the Benelli 750 and 900 Sei through the lens of Phil Aynsley

And then of course there was the incredible V6 Laverda endurance racer! Just look at that beautiful bank of six Dell’Orto carbuerettors nestled in that 90-degree vee. Art!

Phil Aynsley features the Laverda V6 1000

Phil Aynsley features the Laverda V6 1000

Check out the incredible Laverda V6 through the lens of Phil Aynsley

Many though forget the muscularly handsome Kawasaki KZ1300 that was released in 1979.

It looked tough, with a sculpted modern style to its crankcases and cylinder block which, thanks to water-cooling, was notable at the time for its absence of cooling fins.

The shaft-driven beast tipped the scales on the wrong side of 300 kg but found many followers during its ten-year production run. It also had a spin-off touring variant known as the Voyager.

Power from the original 1286cc engine was a claimed 120 hp at 8000 rpm with 116 Nm of torque peaking at 6000 rpm. The engine was of an undersquare configuration with the 71 mm stroke much longer than the 62 mm wide bore size, to help reduce the width of the engine and boost torque.

The first model years saw the DOHC 12-valve engine fed by three Mikuni 32 mm CV twin-throat carburettors before Kawasaki then switched to fuel-injection in 1983. With EFI came an increase in power to 130 ponies.

UK tuner Allen Millyard also made a V12 version of the Z1300 by mating two of the six-cylinder donks to make a 70-degree V12! Give me some of the drugs that man is on! A bit of his engineering brilliance wouldn’t go astray either…. We have included a video of the Millyard V-12 further below also.

Kawasaki Z Millyard V

Kawasaki Z Millyard V

UK tuner Allen Millyard also made a V12 version of the Z1300 by mating two of the six-cylinder donks to make for a 2.3 litre V12! – Image by Phil Aynsley

In an earlier column for MCNews.com.au Phil Hall reflected on the efforts to race the Z1300 in Australia that we also include here. Back in those days if the company made it, then the company ensured someone raced it!


Kawasaki Z1300 Australian Racing History

In 1979 a well funded team entered two Kawasaki Z1300 machines for the Bathurst races at Easter time.

One was to be ridden by the Kiwi ace, Graeme Crosby and the other by one of the Blanco brothers (sorry, I can’t remember which one). However, after the first practice session, Croz returned the bike to the pits, jumped off and threw the bike against the wall of the tent, muttering in terms that were undeniable in their meaning and unrepeatable here that he wasn’t going to ride that *&&^%^%$ thing.

With numerous Honda CBX’s still entered and circulating, it was vital for Kawasaki to find a good rider to replace him, and find one they did. The by-now legendary Kawasaki stalwart, Gary Thomas was drafted in and quite unwittingly helped to tell one of the great Bathurst stories.

The Production Race soon became a brawl between Thomas on the amazing six and Honda’s trump card, Tony Hatton on a more conventional CB900/4 Bol d ‘Or.

Rumours and protestations continue to this day concerning the legality of Hatton’s mount but, that aside, the race was a cracker. Against all the odds, Thommo took it to Hatton and made old 55 pull out every bit of skill and daring that he possessed.

Gary was blindingly fast on the two long Bathurst straights aboard the Kawasaki, leaving Hatton in his wake. But, over the top of the mountain in the twisty bits, Hatton regained the ascendency as the Kawasaki added lightness by grinding large parts of its undercarriage away on the unforgiving track surface.

Hatton, cagey devil that he was (still is), waited till the end and, knowing that the big heavy K was running out of brakes at the end of Conrod Straight, he pulled out and executed the perfect inside pass and won the sprint to the line.

It was an amazing race and prompted the Crawford brothers to use the bikes again in further races, but never with the success that Thomas had achieved that day.


Kawasaki sold over 20,000 of the Z1300 variant over the ten-year production run of the model. Kawasaki Australia living legend Murray Sayle told us that, from memory, the model only had a three-year run in the Australian market.

This video below demonstrates the unique sound of the Z1300, which differs greatly from that emitted from Honda’s air-cooled CBX. Enjoy.


Kawasaki Z1300


Millyard Kawasaki V12


Source: MCNews.com.au

Video Of The Week | Audio-visual demonstration of the cross-plane four

Video Of The Week

The unique beat of a cross-plane crank four visualised

Introduced in 2009 with the RN22 YZF-R1 and then redesigned in 2015 with the RN32, and also used in the MT-10, we are now all well accustomed to the distinctive, unique and really quite evocative sound of the cross-plane crank Yamaha.

The first video provides a demonstration of the unique firing order of Yamaha’s YZF-R1 cross-plane crank four-cylinder engine. The second video, for comparison, shows the traditional firing order of a four-cylinder in-line motor.

While the engine sounds in both videos’ sound a little like an old school retro 80s arcade game, you can still clearly hear the difference between the two configurations, albeit in low-resolution.

Enjoy.

Feel free to share any of your favourite videos with us here at MCNews.com.au as we start this new Video Of The Week series. 

Source: MCNews.com.au

Video Of The Week | The rise and fall of Buell Motorcycles

Video Of The Week

An Oxymoron of a Motorcycle brand

As bizarre and quirky as Buell Motorcycles are, I’ve always warmed to some of their offerings to the extent that I’d even own one as a second motorcycle. Buell have had a turbulent history but persevered through controversy and bankruptcy. It’s a compelling story that would make for a great movie which brings us to this interesting Video Of The Week that presents in several parts the rise and fall of Buell Motorcycles.

Enjoy.

Feel free to share any of your favourite videos with us here at MCNews.com.au as we start this new Video Of The Week series. 

Source: MCNews.com.au

Video Of The Week | Spongy Brakes

Video Of The Week

Agghh spongy brakes!!

We’ve all been there, need I say anymore…..

Video Of The Week highlights one random man on the Internets’ journey of motorcycle mechanical DIY discovery. From expert confidence to irrational despair! 

Enjoy.

Feel free to share any of your favourite videos with us here at MCNews.com.au as we start this new Video Of The Week series. 

Source: MCNews.com.au

Video Of The Week | Rutter V4 Speciale at the IOM

Video Of The Week

Regular day at the office for Michael Rutter 

We’ve all seen some of the great on board footage from the Isle of Man that is out there on the net, from flying laps and races to ‘Average Joe’ having a Sunday blast.  Whatever you have seen whilst deep in your YouTube IOM Rabbit Hole, it’s all immensely impressive in its own right and deserving of praise and admiration.

This particular piece of on board footage with Michael Rutter has been doing the rounds for some time but worth another look as it stands out for me for various reasons. One being the conditions, which are not only hugely challenging due to the low lying sun flickering intrusively through the trees, but also the fact that the motorcycle (Panigale V4 Speciale) appears to be a stock motorcycle.  I’m not sure what is more impressive, a stock motorcycle fresh from the showroom floor that can be flogged that fast, or the pilot flogging the motorcycle that fast. I guess a bit of both!

Enjoy.

Feel free to share any of your favourite videos with us here at MCNews.com.au as we start this new Video Of The Week series. 

Source: MCNews.com.au

Video Of The Week | Mad Mick and his Africa Twin

Video Of The Week

Mad Mick

We stumbled across Mad Mick a fair while ago on YouTube and are only now getting around to sharing some of his exploits with you. We reckon he is a bit of a legend!  I am sure that this is not exactly Honda engineers back in Japan expected people to be getting up to on the Africa Twin…

Mick is a skilled rider with over 40 years of experience and has done a great deal of adventure and enduro riding all over Australia. A few injuries have been sustained along the way like a smashed ankle and a broken collarbone while high-speed sliding around on a KTM 640, and more recently a messed up shoulder from a low-speed tumble on the Africa Twin. 

Mick is known as Mad Mick for good reason. He is not scared of tackling anything on the Africa Twin and the bike is suprisingly standard. A cheap $60 eBay slip-on muffler, a bash plate, a Camel rear tank and some gearing tweaks are about the extent of modifications undertaken on this 2016 model. 

Mick regularly rides with a group called MVDBR who put together this video of a few of his exploits.  Enjoy. 

Feel free to share any of your favourite videos with us here at MCNews.com.au as we start this new Video Of The Week series. 


Mad Mick
2016 Honda Africa Twin


Source: MCNews.com.au

2019 Yamaha Niken GT | Video Review

2019 Yamaha Niken GT
2019 Yamaha Niken GT (Photo by Joe Agustin)

After the success of the Niken, the world’s first production Leaning Multi-Wheeled motorcycle introduced last year, Yamaha has launched a sport-touring version called the Niken GT, with a larger windscreen, heated grips, comfort seats, saddlebags, a centerstand and more. With neutral, natural steering feel and an incredible amount of front-end grip, the Niken must be experienced to be believed.

Check out our 2019 Yamaha Niken GT video review:

Read our 2019 Yamaha Niken GT First Ride Review

Source: RiderMagazine.com

2020 Suzuki Katana | Video Review

The 2020 Suzuki Katana is a modern interpretation of the Hans Muth-designed 1981 GSX1100S Katana, an icon of late 20th century motorcycle aesthetics. The new version has edgier lines and is built on the GSX-S1000 naked sportbike platform. We traveled to Japan to ride the new Katana on Kyoto’s Arashiyama-Takao Parkway, and you can watch our video review below. Or click the link at the bottom to read our complete First Ride Review report.

Read our complete First Ride Review of the 2020 Suzuki Katana here!

Source: RiderMagazine.com

2019 KTM 790 Adventure and 790 Adventure R | Video Review

2019 KTM 790 Adventure R
Rider magazine traveled to Morocco to test the new KTM 790 Adventure and 790 Adventure R. (Photo by Sebas Romero)

KTM’s all-new 2019 790 Adventure and 790 Adventure R are middleweight ADV bikes that are powered by a 95-hp, 799cc parallel twin, weigh just 417 lbs dry and are highly capable off-road. The 790 Adventure is aimed at general adventure-touring enthusiasts while the up-spec 790 Adventure R is aimed at more demanding off-road riders. Rider magazine tested them both in Morocco. Click on the player below to watch our video review, or the link below to read our full evaluation.

Read our 2019 KTM 790 Adventure and 790 Adventure R First Ride Review

Source: RiderMagazine.com

Inside A Motorcycle Carburetor – Main Jet Tuning

“I’m on the main jet!” Have you ever heard that expression while bench racing with your riding buddies? What the heck does that even mean? Well, after this episode of MC Garage, you’ll know. Today we talk about main jet.

For the past few weeks we’ve been going through a carburetor piece by piece. If you haven’t watched the first videos in this series, jump back, and check them out. We will have the links in the description below. We’ve covered the basic layout of the carb, the float bowl, and the pilot jet. The next piece in the properly running carbureted-motorcycle equation is the main jet.

The main jet is responsible for supplying the fuel that mixes with the air as it makes its way through the intake tract after the pilot jet is done doing its job. Starting at about 20 percent throttle the fuel flows through the main jet. (There is another part that meters that fuel until 80 percent throttle, but we will cover that next week.) When you are wide open, you’re on the main jet.

The main jet is located at the bottom of the carburetor inside the float bowl. It’s the larger of the two jets, and it is installed in the needle jet—that part we will be covering next week. If this guy is plugged up, you’re in for a full carb cleaning ritual. Everything will usually be clogged if the main jet is plugged up. Check out Ari’s video on how to clean a carb.

So we are going to assume you have a clean carburetor so we can get into knowing if your main jet is too rich or lean. First, start with the manufacturer’s recommendation in the service manual. Just like we discussed in last week’s video, there will be recommendations according to temp and altitude. This is where you want to begin.

A “lean” condition means the ratio of air to fuel is too high. This can cause issues from not making full power at wide-open throttle and rpm to detonation and pinging that could damage your engine over time. Lean jetting is the kiss of death for two-strokes with a possibility of a quick meltdown and seizure. Damage can take longer in a four-stroke.

It’s fairly easy to hear pinging on a two-stroke. Think of a metallic tick that sounds like a rattling ball bearing in a tin can as the fuel charge detonates before it should, smashing into the top of the piston too early before it reaches top dead center (TDC). The same sound can be heard from a four-stroke, but the sound is masked by the sound of the valve train. If you hear this, you need to rejet before you do serious damage.

Also, a lean condition will have a crisp throttle response, but the top-end will feel weak and the bike will run hotter than it should. Many times I’ve heard two-stroke racers say it was running so crisp and snappy and then it just stopped. Classic case of a seizure from being too lean. To fix a lean position, go up a jet size and run the bike again; repeat until you find the right size. These numbers may not increase or decrease in increments of one; usually it’s by five or 10.

“Rich” means there is more than the optimal amount of fuel in the air charge. This leads to stumbling and poor overall running. It’s doesn’t lead to a premature death like a lean condition can, so if you must, err on the side of being rich. As the bike moves through the midrange and onto the top-end, the power will stumble and miss. It’s an easier condition to feel and hear for most people. It’s clear it is running bad. Just drop a jet size and retest.

On a two-stroke you can also do a plug chop to check for proper jetting, but this will be a separate video in the future. For now, that’s it for checking the main jet. It’s one of the simpler jets to get dialed in, but if it’s not right, it can cause issues with next week’s topic—the needle jet and needle.

Source: MotorCyclistOnline.com