1978 Kawasaki Z1R-TC: Turbo Power

By Robert Smith
Published on December 7, 2012
1 / 10
The appeal of turbo power launched a brace of unlikely motorcycles, as well, including the Honda CX500/650 Turbo, the Kawasaki GPz750 Turbo, the Yamaha XJ650 Seca Turbo and Suzuki’s XN85. Almost forgotten in the rush was the first turbo bike, the 1978 Kawasaki Z1R-TC.
The appeal of turbo power launched a brace of unlikely motorcycles, as well, including the Honda CX500/650 Turbo, the Kawasaki GPz750 Turbo, the Yamaha XJ650 Seca Turbo and Suzuki’s XN85. Almost forgotten in the rush was the first turbo bike, the 1978 Kawasaki Z1R-TC.
2 / 10
For the first batch of 250 or so Z1R Turbos, TCC simply replaced the header pipes with a new cylindrical exhaust collector (known to TC fans as “the log”) to feed the ATP turbo unit, added an adjustable wastegate, installed a new open exhaust to eliminate back-pressure in the turbo and added a boost gauge to the dashboard.
For the first batch of 250 or so Z1R Turbos, TCC simply replaced the header pipes with a new cylindrical exhaust collector (known to TC fans as “the log”) to feed the ATP turbo unit, added an adjustable wastegate, installed a new open exhaust to eliminate back-pressure in the turbo and added a boost gauge to the dashboard.
3 / 10
Every Z1R-TC buyer was required to sign a liability waiver at purchase.
Every Z1R-TC buyer was required to sign a liability waiver at purchase.
4 / 10
Mark Scott owns the Molly Designs Z1R-TC featured here. “This is my third one,” he says, noting he sold one to a Japanese collector. “I got this one at auction in Las Vegas in 2010, so now I have two. It’s very original, low mileage, stone stock. It has a deep oil pan and the welded crank as options.
Mark Scott owns the Molly Designs Z1R-TC featured here. “This is my third one,” he says, noting he sold one to a Japanese collector. “I got this one at auction in Las Vegas in 2010, so now I have two. It’s very original, low mileage, stone stock. It has a deep oil pan and the welded crank as options.
5 / 10
“Off boost, it runs like a Z1R,” Mark says. “Below 4,000-5,000rpm it rides like a nice strong 1,000cc bike. The difference comes when you spin it up and it reaches six grand, and then it’s like whoaaaa! It just becomes a completely different kind of animal.”
“Off boost, it runs like a Z1R,” Mark says. “Below 4,000-5,000rpm it rides like a nice strong 1,000cc bike. The difference comes when you spin it up and it reaches six grand, and then it’s like whoaaaa! It just becomes a completely different kind of animal.”
6 / 10
The biggest problem, Mark says, is that you need a really good stretch of straight road to get it up on the pipe — and then you have to watch the rev counter carefully.
The biggest problem, Mark says, is that you need a really good stretch of straight road to get it up on the pipe — and then you have to watch the rev counter carefully.
7 / 10
The TC’s performance capability far exceeded the limitations of the stock Z1-R chassis on anything but a billiard-table-smooth drag strip.
The TC’s performance capability far exceeded the limitations of the stock Z1-R chassis on anything but a billiard-table-smooth drag strip.
8 / 10
Not many bikes come with a list of “Do’s and Don’ts,” but the Z1R-TC Turbo wasn’t just any bike.
Not many bikes come with a list of “Do’s and Don’ts,” but the Z1R-TC Turbo wasn’t just any bike.
9 / 10
The Z1R-TCs offered to the press for testing were specially prepared.
The Z1R-TCs offered to the press for testing were specially prepared.
10 / 10
Light ‘em up! Mark Scott shows his TC has more than “sufficient” power.
Light ‘em up! Mark Scott shows his TC has more than “sufficient” power.

1978 Kawasaki Z1R-TC
Claimed power
: 130hp @ 8,500rpm
Top speed: 135mph (period test)
Engine: 1,016cc air-cooled turbocharged DOHC inline four, 70mm x 66mm bore and stroke, 8.7:1 compression ratio
Weight (wet): 560lb (255kg)
Fuel capacity/MPG: 3.4gal (12.9ltr)/35-45mpg (est.)
Price then/now: $4,995/$12,000-$18,000

Notoriously reticent about horsepower figures, the Rolls-Royce company adopted a snooty retort to inquiries about the output of its automobile engines: “Sufficient,” was all they would say. But when the pavement-bending Bentley Mulsanne Turbo first rolled out of the Derby Works in 1982, the stock answer would no longer do. It became: “Sufficient — plus 50 percent.”

The 50 percent came from a Garrett AiResearch turbocharger bolted on to R-R’s 412ci V8. The prestige car maker wasn’t alone in its approach to instant horsepower, and the 1980s became the turbo decade. Saab, Volvo and others adopted turbos to pep up their 4-cylinder engines, and many American automakers used turbocharged V6s to replace gas-guzzling V8s as a way of meeting fuel consumption targets.

The appeal of turbo power launched a brace of unlikely motorcycles as well, including the Honda CX500/650 Turbo, the Kawasaki GPz750 Turbo, the Yamaha XJ650 Seca Turbo and Suzuki’s XN85. Almost forgotten in the rush was the first turbo bike, the 1978 Kawasaki Z1R-TC.

Boost

The first widespread use of turbochargers was to boost the performance of high-altitude World War II aircraft like the B-17 Flying Fortress and the P-38 Lightning and P-47 Thunderbolt fighters. In 1978, Kawasaki’s flagship 1,000cc model needed a boost. The 1970s had become a game-changing decade in motorcycle development, and Kawasaki was being left behind. In spite of leapfrogging Honda’s CB750 with the double overhead cam 903cc Z1, Kawasaki’s big bike development had stalled in mid-decade.

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