AS THE DUST SETTLED FROM THE SHAKE-UP OF Japan’s motorcycle industry in the early 1960s, a handful of manufacturers were left from the 77 that had existed in 1959. By 1963, as well as Honda, Suzuki and Yamaha, those still fighting their way into the showrooms included Bridgestone, Marusho, Tohatsu and Meguro, but soon these too would be gone. And one manufacturing behemoth was starting to appear in US showrooms: Kawasaki, or in those days, Kawasaki Aircraft.
Kawasaki was making ships, trains, aircraft, tunnel-boring machines and all manner of heavy and light engineering products, including motorcycle engines, which were used by the Kawasaki subsidiary company, Meihatsu Industries, based in Kobe, for a range of machines in the 1950s. In 1959, Kawasaki opened a motorcycle R&D department and then opened a…