Kawasaki Z650


The Kawasaki Z650 was a standard motorcycle made by Kawasaki from 1976 till 1983. It had a four-cylinder four-stroke, DOHC, air-cooled, wet sump engine with two valves per cylinder and a five-speed gearbox. Designed as a middleweight version of the Kawasaki Z900, the similar-styling had "an attenuated version of the traditional Kawasaki tail fairing". It competed in the market against the smaller SOHC Honda CB650. The Z650 was the epitome of the "Universal Japanese Motorcycle", or "UJM".
It press-debuted in late 1976 when six US-specification machines were air-shipped from the Akashi works to the UK distributor near London. The bikes were assembled and road-shipped to Edinburgh, Scotland, by Kawasaki UK's road race transporter, to be road-tested by 30 assembled European journalists.

Model development

The Z650's project leader was Ben Inamura, who designed the engine of the 1976 KZ650. In its seven-year history, the Z650 underwent a number of alterations, as follows:

1977 Z650/KZ650

This first Z650 had a single front 275 mm disc brake and a 250 mm rear drum. Although the Z650's engine was based on the there were several differences: the 650 used a plain bearing crankshaft with a HyVo chain primary drive instead of a gear drive, which necessitated the installation of a third shaft in the transmission to drive the input side of the clutch. Another departure from the Z1 engine design was the use of a shim-under-bucket method of setting valve clearances..

1978 Z650/KZ650

The front brake caliper was resited to the rear of the fork leg and the front master cylinder reservoir shape was changed. A hazard switch was added. Needle roller bearings were fitted to the swingarm instead of the earlier plain bushings. Tuning modifications were made to the carbs to improve low speed operation. The manual operation fuel tap was replaced with an automatic diaphragm unit. A rear disc brake replaced the earlier drum.

1979 Z650/KZ650

This model had a self-adjusting camchain tensioner. For US-only models, an air injection system for emissions reduction was fitted. This model was the first Kawasaki to use all-weather sintered disc pads and drilled brake discs to improve braking in the wet. A derivative version, the KZ650SR had "chopper styling" with a fat 16-inch rear wheel.

1980 Z650/KZ650

A HyVo-type timing chain replaced of the earlier roller chain. An "LTD" model became available with just a single front disc brake and a rear drum brake.

1981 Z650/KZ650

CDI ignition was introduced. The front end from the 750E was grafted on meaning a change to the brakes, front wheel and clocks. The kick-starter was removed and a passenger grab rail was fitted. Larger 32mm Mikuni CV carbs were fitted, allowing the redline to be lifted from 9,000 to 9,500 rpm. A new generation of Kawasaki cruisers, the "CSR" was introduced.

1982 Z650/KZ650

Changes included new CV carbs, a clutch upgrade, modified fork internals, new switchgear, tail light, and different rear shocks.

1983 Z650/KZ650

Some minor updates including new pistons with four rings, and changes to the cylinder head and cover. After 1983 the KZ650 is surpassed by the GPZ models.