The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

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Trail Ryder
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The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by Trail Ryder »

A good read:

http://dirtbikemagazine.com/home-featur ... aki-kdx200
To this day, no one knows what the Kawasaki KDX200 was supposed to be. Was it a beginner bike designed to teach wives and kids the fine art of off-road riding? Or was it a Navy SEAL of a bike built for the toughest enduros and the most grizzled riders? Clearly it was used as both. In its official lifespan from 1983 to 2006, the KDX was an evolutionary alligator, remaining mostly unchanged as eras passed and other bikes became extinct. One of the reasons that Kawasaki engineers made so few changes was because they were afraid they would mess up the magic formula. The KDX sold thousands of units, year in and year out, without any need for reinvestment.

The reason it appealed to beginners is clear—it was light, mild-mannered and inexpensive. The reason it appealed to the hardcore enduro cult has something to do with the off-road war between the states. The rift between East Coast riders and West Coast riders goes back decades. In the east, races were tight and tough. Out west, they were fast and angry. The KDX became the poster bike of the east, while bigger, faster, motocross-based bikes dominated the deserts. Kawasaki clearly didn’t care who was buying the ’DX. It continued to sell, and no other manufacturer really caught on. Aside from brief intrusions on its turf, the KDX200 was in a class of one for years.

KDX200-1991THE YEARS

1980: The first KDX200 wasn’t a 200 at all; it was the KDX175 that came in Kawasaki’s dirt redo of 1980. The KDX175 was introduced alongside a single-shock “Uni-Trak” line of motocross bikes (and even a short-lived KDX250). The 200 was closely related to the air-cooled KX125, but had a larger tank, a headlight and different gear ratios. Oddly enough, it was faster than the KX that year and inspired some cheating on the amateur level.

1983: This was the first year of the “real” 200. The KX125 motor was new the previous year, and the 200 got its more compact lower end but remained air-cooled. The frame was similar to that of the 175, but it was shorter and had a newer version of the Uni-Trak rear suspension. The new rear end had a single wishbone pushing a rocker that gave the shock a rising rate. The 175, oddly enough, had a regressive rate. As the direct result of a racing program with Jack Penton, the 200 got a quick-detach rear wheel. It also got one of the first digital odometers in the dirt world. The MSRP was $1600.

1986: Kawasaki gave the 200 a major makeover, again borrowing much from the KX125 motocrosser. It kept its air-cooled cylinder but got a power valve, which was called the Kawasaki Integrated Powervalve System. The bike had a front disc brake, but a drum in the rear. The rear suspension still had a rocker arm on top. These were glory days for the KDX. Kawasaki was alone in the 200 class and virtually alone as a Japanese company offering a two-stroke enduro bike. The price was $1899.

1989: This was the biggest redesign in the long history of the 200. The bike became larger, faster and heavier, which was well received by some, but alienated the beginners who loved the old bike. The motor finally took its own path, diverging from the KX125 of the day. It got liquid cooling and a heavier crank. The frame was based on the 1987 KX125, which had modern-style linkage. The tank capacity was an impressive 3.3 gallons, which added to the bike’s mass. It tipped the scales at 232 pounds without fuel—8 pounds heavier than its previous year.

1991: The KDX was a hit, but it was under fire. Yamaha and Suzuki had 250cc two-strokes, so Kawasaki introduced the KDX250 to take the pressure off the 200 as a first-line enduro winner. But one thing didn’t go according to plan; almost everyone liked the 200 better than the 250.

1995: Kawasaki dropped the 250 and brought the 200 up to date with a new chassis and a new look. This is the form that the KDX would keep for the rest of its days—gone were the bulky tank and fat bodywork. The 1995 model got a perimeter frame and big changes to the suspension. The motor was unchanged for the most part. By this time, the 200 was being measured against more effective competition and clearly needed more motor to maintain its role as an eastern enduro contender. It did, however, regain some of its following among beginners.

1997: After failing to get buyers excited about the KDX250, Kawasaki tentatively stuck its big toe back into the bigger-than-a-200 class by offering a KDX220, in addition to the 200. It had a bigger bore and a smaller carb in an effort to gain torque. The 220 was priced $250 higher than the 200 at $4549. It sold in decent numbers and coexisted with the 200 until both machines were dropped in ’06 due to the coming of more stringent federal emission standards.
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Jim B
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Re: The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by Jim B »

Cool article, thanks for the link!

I'm not sure I understand this sentence: "The 2006 KDX would no doubt continue to sell well today if the two-stroke trail bike hadn’t been outlawed." Seems there's an Austrian company that still sells a lot of them...
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Re: The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by doakley »

Yes and KTM just abandoned the 200cc market by discontinuing that engine size. Too bad Kawasaki doesn't make an "updated" 200KDX again and continues to focus on 4s. I'm betting a lot of orange riders could be persuaded to change colors if there were an updated model.
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The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by pumpguy »

Dirt Bike published that article in their January, 2012 issue.

Much has changed since then, and no doubt, there will be many changes in the future. Us two stroke fans can only hope the pendulum will swing in our direction, and hopefully the color will be green.
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Re: The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by sarrant »

doakley wrote:Yes and KTM just abandoned the 200cc market by discontinuing that engine size. Too bad Kawasaki doesn't make an "updated" 200KDX again and continues to focus on 4s. I'm betting a lot of orange riders could be persuaded to change colors if there were an updated model.
Has the world gone mad?
The 200 class is the magic size for an easy-to ride woods bike.
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Re: The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by doakley »

Maybe the world has gone mad. All I know is a local KTM dealer told me KTM dropped the 200 in favor of the 150. Maybe it was taking away from 250 sales? Seems to me there are tons of KTM 200's at every race. KTM has left a door open. It's a shame Kawasaki won't take advantage of that. Wouldn't it be cool to see Jeff Fredette cut a deal with Kawasaki to begin manufacturing an updated 200?
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The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by Jim B »

pumpguy wrote:Dirt Bike published that article in their January, 2012 issue.
Ok. So? KTM was selling two-stroke off-road bikes in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, and I'm pretty sure they'll be selling them in 2017. :bravo:

I still don't understand WTH Dirt Bike is talking about...:hmm:
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Re: The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by KDXGarage »

Jim B wrote:Cool article, thanks for the link!

I'm not sure I understand this sentence: "The 2006 KDX would no doubt continue to sell well today if the two-stroke trail bike hadn’t been outlawed." Seems there's an Austrian company that still sells a lot of them...
KTM never sold a 2007 and newer EPA legal trail bike. Those are closed course, non EPA legal, competition only models.

If one thinks trail bike, then one can think Honda CRF250X, CRF450X, Yamaha WR250 and WR450 (that kind of model). They are EPA legal and even are pretty close to "race ready".
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Re: The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by Jim B »

Jason wrote:KTM never sold a 2007 and newer EPA legal trail bike. Those are closed course, non EPA legal, competition only models.
Ah, so from '07 onward they had to be called "Closed-course competition-only models?" Why didn't/doesn't Kawasaki just do that? Seems to be what the Austrians did. The KTMs still have 18" rear wheels, kickstands, lights, off-road gearing, off-road porting, etc., just like the KDX. (Whatever you call them for legal reasons, they're still off-road/enduro/hare scrambles/"trail" bikes.) I guess the answer is they (Kawasaki) just don't want to. Hard to believe a small company like Beta can get their bikes into the U.S., but a big company like Kawasaki couldn't (if they wanted to).
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Re: The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by KDXGarage »

I can't remember the details, but if you did some, then they were somehow related to all models, meaning it would affect the KX line.

Look at specs on KTM's in 2006 or 2007 vs. the previous year. For years, they had a spark arrestor, then they went to just a silencer. that is the year it hit. The good old EPA changed it to make hydrocarbon emmision even stricter. I want to say the RMX250 got canned that way.

One thing I never understood is why did they discontinue the KDX220R a year early. I can only guess they wanted to use up all the parts on one line.
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Re: The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by Trail Ryder »

Well, Yamaha got sick of KTM taking 95% all of the off-road 2-stroke market share and FINALLY came out with the YZ250X.

It would be great if Kawasaki threw a 200/220 2-stroke into the old steel, perimeter frame KX250F chassis, with no spark arrestor or lights (but a lighting coil), and priced it at $4,999. They would sell everyone. We can go to the aftermarket for lights, spark arrestors, etc.

As far as KTM dropping the 200 for the new 150XC, the new 150 might be everything the old 200 was and more! A few years back, I demo rode a KTM 144SX in the woods and it was pretty sweet.
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The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by sarrant »

It would be great if Kawasaki threw a 200/220 2-stroke into the old steel, perimeter frame KX250F chassis
I don't know if I'd base it on that model. Aside from being all wrong for a center-port 2 stroke engine, I'm not sure that's any better a frame for off road than an H-Series. And I don't even know which bits of intellectual property/tooling Kawasaki and Suzuki respectively own.

I could def see going with the last KX chassis, which I was told the Gas-gas offroad machines copy heavily.
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Re: The KDX History according to Dirt Bike Magazine

Post by doakley »

I understand, for enough money, Jeff Fredette will build you a KDX220 that will knock the socks off most any current 250. Not sure but I thought he based it on a KX125 frame. If I had the money....but then I can't make use of the stock KDX220 motor so it would be wasted on me. I did have him rework my rear shock and I got the correct spring weight recommended by Fredette in the forks. That made a huge difference and has garnered some surprised approvals from a couple of KTM riders who have ridden my KDX. I'm doing the "shim mod" now in the forks. Can't wait to see the results of that.

Hey, I just realized, I'm going to be out of excuses for being so slow!
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