Classic Four-Cylinder Bikes
Author: Peter Rakestrow
Published by: Amberley Publishing, The Hill, Merrywalks, Stroud, Gloucestershire GL5 4EP
Tel: 01453 847823
Email:[email protected]
www.amberley-books.com
Softback, 165 x 235mm (portrait); 96 pages with approx. 100 photographs.
ISBN 978-1-4456-5717-2
£14.99
Honda stunned the motorcycle world in 1969, with the launch of its fabulous four-cylinder CB750. Then Kawasaki raised the bar in 1972 with its bigger and faster Z1 – the bike that prompted Soichiro Honda to instruct his engineers to build the ‘King of motorcycles’ – the fastest and best grand sports tourer ever built.
The prototype, code-named M1, was built in just six weeks, featuring a six-cylinder water-cooled, horizontally-opposed engine with a capacity of 1470cc. Very much a bike of bit parts, the front end was taken from the CB750 and the rear half, including the shaft final drive, from a BMW R75/5. While this prototype ticked all the required boxes, it was considered unsuitable for mass production.
Book reviewed by Jonathan Hill.
Read more in January’s issue of TCM