Cars
Bikes
Boats
Caravans/RVs
Trucks
Farm
Construction
Real Estate
Shopping & Auctions
Motoring
The Carsales Network
Home
Bikes for Sale
All Bikes for Sale
Brand New Bikes in Stock
Dealer Used Bikes
Demo & Near New Bikes
Private Used Bikes
Learner Approved Bikes
Bike Showroom
Please wait......
Sell Your Bike
Create Bike ad
Edit my ad
Selling Tips
Safer selling
Bike Accessories
Helmets
Riding Gear
Parts
Accessories
View All
Research Bikes
Bike valuations
Finance
Insurance
Club Listings
News & reviews
Dealer Directory
News & Reviews
Latest news
Latest reviews
Motorbike Video Reviews
Help
Buying a bike
Selling a bike
Scam defence
Contact us
Toolbox
Back
Save to PDF
Post to facebook
Send to a friend
Related Bike News & Reviews
KAWASAKI
Kawasaki unveils 2013 MX range
Kawasaki has lifted the lid...
Published :
Thursday, 24 May 2012
Kawasaki Ninja electric race bike
Team green is going really...
Published :
Wednesday, 23 May 2012
Road rage video: Car vs Bike
This road rage video from...
Published :
Wednesday, 28 March 2012
More bike reviews
Brand New Bikes in Stock
Location
Any State
ACT
NSW
NT
QLD
SA
TAS
VIC
WA
Go
2011 TRIUMPH Thunderbird
$19,890^
QLD
Ride Away No More to Pay
2012 DAELIM VJF250
$4,790^
WA
Ride Away No More to Pay
2011 HUSQVARNA TE511
$9,995^
VIC
2012 TRIUMPH Bonneville T100 (865cc)
$15,490^
QLD
Ride Away No More to Pay
2011 TRIUMPH Rocket III Touring
$24,990^
QLD
Ride Away No More to Pay
View 3840 matching bikes in stock
Search new bikes in stock
Subscribe
to the BikePoint Newsletter and stay up to date
Kawasaki Vulcan 1700 Classic ABS
Total photo(s): 4
Prev
Next
Play
Close
Kawasaki Vulcan 1700 Classic ABS
words -
Martin Child
photos -
Jake Jackson
Kawasaki’s big Vulcan Classic comes as no surprise to anyone who’s followed the Japanese verses Harley slow war over the last couple of decades
Back in the ’90s, the Japanese had a good look at the sector dominated by the American mega brand and took an engineered approach to getting a piece of that bad-boy pie. They turned out cruisers that went, stopped and handled better than anything Milwaukee could produce. Bikes like Honda’s F6C made it cool for real riders to be seen on a cruiser. It was fast, decent handling and fun. But the sales were modest for the Jap ‘copies’ of the Harley original.
And so the lesson was learnt – people that buy cruisers aren’t the same people that buy ‘other’ motorcycles. Need proof? When was the last time the owner of American iron ever called it anything less than a Harley? It’s more about association the brand rather than with the actual machine.
BACK AND FORTH
With that in mind, Kawasaki seems to have gone backwards to get ahead in the sales charts. The Vulcan 1700 Classic is a huge piece of two-wheeled real estate. At 350kg, it sinks into the road rather than hugs it, has the ground clearance of an upturned bucket and stops with the urgency of a coin on ice. If you didn’t know better, you’d think it was a Harley… And that goes to show that the Japanese understand their sales enemies better than ever before.
Forget the advances in materials and technology, riding the big Vulcan harks back to a time when life was simpler. Despite a true capacity of 1700cc, the V-twin engine makes modest power but healthy torque. Coupled with a six-speed (five-speed plus overdrive) gearbox, at legal cruising speeds the engine is unstressed, relaxed and drinks like a nun at mass.
BATTLEGROUND
The only stress felt by the rider is stirring the gearbox to get there. Clunky doesn’t cover the change from first to second gears. Battle seems more apt. However, salvation is just a lateral thought away. With that fit torque present, I found starting in second was the way to go. This gives you more time to get into your stride, before clutchless changes up to the overdrive sixth. This was the way to put the pleasure in the ride.
And, like many cruisers, it’s best to pick your journey well. I’m not saying the Vulcan is big and wide, but cars try to lane-split you. And we haven’t even got to corners yet. Corners and cruisers generally get along like North and South Korea, and the Vulcan is no different. I can’t ride it out of my complex without scrapping the running board slider on the first left-hander and its bum on the first speed hump. Even the local hoons in slammed WRX’s think I’m taking the piss…
But all motorcycles have their place and the Vulcan’s is on an open road at 130km/h. At that speed, the huge, chrome (naturally) headlight bezel literally forces the wind over the rider, who has little more to do than point it in the right direction and settle in for the duration.
I found having a substantial backpack strapped to the pillion seat made for a welcomed (and needed) backrest. It’s in this situation that the Vulcan makes sense. With the engine throbbing away below, wind tugging at your jeans and the sun burning off the chrome cockpit, there are much worse ways to travel.
The dual air/spring shocks and belt drive band together to give a smooth ride, and that’s something your pillion will need – I’d nearly lost photographer Jake off the back of the flat seat (who needs grab handles?) before we’d got out of the car park.
SAVING GRACE
Perhaps the real surprise of my stint with the $19,999 Vulcan was the general public’s love for it. For every sports bike rider offering their condolences when they knew I was testing the cruiser, non-motorcyclist seemed to go out of their way to say how good the bike looks. Mind you, to a man, woman and child they’d open the conversation with, “Is it a Harley?”
So the Vulcan 1700 Classic doesn’t push the genre on at all. The normal motorcycle design language of faster and lighter were clearly dirty words at the design meeting and test rides. It’s become more Harley than ever. And that just might be the saving of it.
Read the latest Bikesales Network news and reviews on your mobile, iPhone or PDA at
the Bikesales Network's mobile site
. Or download the
all-new App.
Published :
Thursday, 24 November 2011
Please enable JavaScript to view the
comments powered by Disqus.
Disclaimer:
In most cases, the Carsales Network attends new vehicle launches at the invitation and expense of vehicle manufacturers and/or distributors.
Editorial prices shown are a "price guide" only, based on information provided to us by the manufacturer. Pricing current at the time of writing editorial. Pricing prior to editorial dated 25 May 2009 may refer to RRP. Due to Clarity on Pricing legislation, RRP for those editorials now means "price guide". When purchasing a bike, always confirm the single figure price with the seller of an actual motorbike or accessory. Click
here
for further information about our Terms & Conditions.