This old Kawasaki motorcycle I’m trying to resurrect has a neat
little engine of a type you don’t see anymore — unless you’re in
the backyard weed-whacking, that is.
I’m talking about two strokes.
In the late '60s, Kawasaki cleaned the streets with its
fearsome H1 triple, followed later by the even more fearsome H2 —
which upped the cc ante to 750 and gave those brave enough to twist
the throttle all the way and hold it there low 12 second quarter
mile capability. For some perspective, that was almost as quick as
a 2012 Corvette — only 40 years ago, when nothing was even
close to that fast that wasn’t a specially-made
racer.
Hunter Thompson wrote with respectful dread and awe about
the Kawi Triple’s capabilities — and of the song of The Sausage
Creature its rider might hear as the tach swang past 7,000 and the
front wheel rotated skyward like an F4 with both afterburners
ripping holes in the sky.
Best of all, these menacing triples were cheap or at
least, affordable. For the cost of a few payments on a new
Hemi ‘Cuda you could own an H2 — and mop the floor with
the ‘Cuda.
Not even Kaw’s own (and much better-known today) Z1900,
which was a four-stroker with dual overhead cams, four valves per
cylinder and 150 more cubes (250 more by ‘77-‘78 when the 900
engine was punched out to 1,000 ccs) outperformed the Terrible
Triple.
And that was stone stock.
With a set of Denco pipes (remember those,
anyone?) you could pull 120 head-kicking, ball-stomping and totally
untamed horsepower out of a 750 cc Kaw triple.
Even today, decades after the last two-stroke triple was
uncrated and put out on the showroom floor, they’re still
unbeatable. A two-stroke holds the record for the quickest
quarter-mile on two wheels: a 7 second pass that makes a ZR-1
Corvette look like an 180k Pinto with bad compression and two dead
cylinders.
So, as they once said about another King… what
happened?
I’ll give you a guess and it starts with a “G.”
Two strokes are outlaws, off the reservation, not so much
because of their anti-social performance but because of their
anti-social exhaust. Two strokes are designed to burn oil on
purpose. Many an uninformed victim of an H1 or H2’s bumblebee
fury has rolled up on one, seen the blue haze pouring out of those
three pipes (two on the right side, one on the left) and thought,
easy meat. He’s got a tired engine. I can take him. Only to find
himself with a big WTF just happened? expression on his
face a fraction of a moment later, after the light goes green —
and the Kaw checks out on him.
But, alas, the government is even quicker. Emissions laws
felled the Kaw triples — all two strokes, in fact. Or at least,
all street-legal ones. There are still two stroke
off-road/motocross bikes — for the moment. It is the last redoubt
of the Engine That Has No Valvetrain.
All of which is too damn bad, because, like another
oddball engine — the Wankel, or rotary — two strokes are much
more efficient at making power than four-strokes. For a
given displacement, you can get twice or more the output. Example:
I have a single cylinder, but four-stroke, dual-sport motorcycle.
It makes about 15 hp. Stack that up against the little S1 triple
I’m resurrecting. It’s also a 250 cc engine (though three cylinders
— the smallest such machine ever mass-produced, in fact) but it
makes about twice the power. It’s also much simpler — the
cylinder heads are a simple one-piece casting with no holes in them
other than the one for the spark plug. There are no
valves to adjust (or seats to recede), no cam chains, pushrods or
shims — nothing. Just three pistons riding a common
crank, sucking air (and oil) and exploding the mix in a
synchronized ballet of mechanical mayhem.
It is a magnificent thing.
Unfortunately, it’s also a highly unlawful thing — for a
bike (or car) manufacturer to try to slip into the line
today.
So, if you want to experience what it was like to ride an
unfettered berserker — and possibly, hear the song of the Sausage
Creature - you’ll have to do as I have and rummage in the trunk of
history, see if there’s anything there.
If there is, and you dare, it’ll be a moment of clarity -
and one you’ll never forget!