May 31, 2009 | Posted by: roboblogger
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What was Kawasaki thinking when they came up with this design? The Vulcan 1700 looks and sounds like a HD want-a-be. I work for a Kawasaki dealership and have had the opertunity to drive one. Kawasaki should have stuck with the in line four.
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Judged:
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Bill if you worked for my Kawasaki store and could'nt keep your neg voice to yourself ,you would be working at a Harley store. The bike is super!!! Harleys are wanabe Kawasaki's |
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Just purchased one . Pick it up Tuesday. it is replacing my 1991 Connie with 84500 k. I'm sure the Voyager will be just as trouble free.
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Kawasaki has in their infinite (lack) of wisdom, decided that they could garner more market share by dropping their popular Vulcan 1600 Classic & Nomad models in favor of a 1700 belt drive featuring six speeds and aimed at the "heart" of Harley's Ultra TourGlide Classic with the new Voyager 1700, Classic & Nomad models. In so doing, they apparently gave their corporate "bean counters" a significant say in how to cut manufacturing costs to the bone. They did so, by tossing out the shaft drive an attendant ring & pinion gear sets & housings, no maintenance gear-driven engine counter balancers, lovely chrome plated (metal) engine and valve covers in favor of an engine that is based upon the Vulcan 2000 but retaining the vulcans overhead camshafts but chain-driving the balance weights rather than with gears; Substituting chrome plated plastic on the L/H engine cover, valve covers and miscellaneous bright work sprinkled throughout the machine. The saddle bags now are bulbous and ugly on the Voyager and Nomad and of single wall construction on the lids and very flimsy at that. Overall, the net effect is a tremendous let down both in looks and perceived cheapness of manufacture. Surley Kawasaki must realize the the uniqueness of their Shaft-Driven, 1600 Nomads and classics stood out from the competition in terms of quality and value? What they now have achieved is jumping into the frey of a waunnabee Harley imitation that is neither unique or as an attractive a piece; but a cheaper imitation of a myriad of other Harley clones!
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I have researched motorbikes thoroughly and I have to say the 2009 kawasaki 1700 nomad is one beautiful machine. I'm picking mine up on Saturday.
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I just bought a 1700 voyager and the bike is great.
But I've got a noise the dealer is telling me coming from the trans. a skreeching at low rpms in 2nd thru 4th. can anybody shed some light on this. thanks. Brian. e-mail race374@aol.com |
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Brian, Just got mine this past Saturday. Love the bike but have the same gear noise. Took it back to the dealer. They're not sure what it is. Said they will contact Kawasaki. Keep me posted, I'll do the same. Jim |
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Got tired of waiting for the dealer to get back to me. Contacted Kawasaki directly. Guy in customer service said he was aware of the tranny noise issues on the 1700 Nomad. I was told the noise will quiet down after the tranny gets a couple of hundred miles on it. I'm skeptical but we'll see. Customer Service assures me it's okay to continue to operate.
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Did a demo ride at Dayton on a 2009 Voyager, stopped half way and cooked a steak and roasted two chickens with the heat coming off the engine on the right side, this not what I have come to expect from Kawasaki products and I have 3 sitting in my garage. Had all intentions of getting rid of a 2008 Gold Wing for a new Voyager, after the demo ride it's not going to happen. Looks like they will force me to go to Harley for a cruiser.
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Took the new Nomad back to the dealer for the third time on the noise issue. They finally heard the noise. After two days they adjusted the drive belt, 95% of the noise is gone. Apparently the factory is shipping the bikes with the belts set wat too tight ( minimum deflection). Should be set to maximum deflection
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I bought a 2009 1700 Nomad after riding an 03 V-Star 1100 (63,545 miles) and never had a problem with it - just loved the looks of the Nomad. I took the Nomad back after one week due to a small coolant leak coming from the rear cylinder. Service department said probably just an O ring and they would fix it when I brought it in for the 1000 mile oil change and service. Turns out the leak was due to a "porous" cylinder caused during casting. Kawasaki has still not approved the repair and they have been asking me about my riding habits, etc. I am 57 and my wife rides with me. I have gone through the breakin as instructed and am very concerned about the quality control at Kawasaki to have allowed this cylinder out the door. Has anyone else had this happen to them?
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