IRVINE, Calif. (April 29, 2016) – When it comes to performance, few motorcycles in the last 50 years created the impact that Kawasaki’s 500 Mach III two-stroke triple did in 1969. Coming right on the heels of the 350cc A7 Avenger, the Mach III (also known as the “H1” model) vaulted performance to new heights, at an equally amazing price of just $999. Sharpening its point, the H1 quickly set acceleration records, with Tony Nicosia making a quarter-mile run of 12.96 seconds at 100.7 miles per hour aboard the raging triple. A highly accomplished dragracer, Nicosia was also a Kawasaki service technician and development rider for the H1, which had been tested extensively in the Southwest—including near Nevada’s secret military base Area 51.
Such rider talent is essential in wringing the most out of a bike on the dragstrip, but the underlying machine has to be capable. The Mach III was. Its 499cc piston-port triple was like three highly tweaked two-strokes ganged together, with three Mikuni carburetors, three separate inductive pickups for its hot CDI ignition, and three individually tuned exhausts producing a kind of high-intensity acceleration no other production bike could match. As a result, the language of the H1—actually a rapturous howl!—immediately became spoken in high-performance motorcycle circles. And the H1 just as quickly became known to car guys, as many Corvette, GTO, and Mustang owners learned after encountering a Kawasaki Mach III.
The H1 model run lasted eight years, from the first drum-brake 1969–71 H1 and H1A versions through the disc-brake KH500 swan song in 1976. Finally, the triple became a casualty of emissions laws and was replaced by the four-stroke KZ650 model. But what a run it was. Among its high points were those blistering early runs that Nicosia made at a special press demonstration at Lions Drag Strip in Southern California. Here personnel uncrated a brand-new H1 and put Nicosia aboard, where he soon scorched to the world’s first sub 13-second 1/4-mile run on a production bike. Although brand-new, the H1’s legend was already secure.
In time, the audacious H1 became known by a number of nicknames, some of which are not repeatable here. However, all recognized the incredible performance of its seething three-cylinder two-stroke engine, which helped make motorcycling an incredibly exciting sport in 1969 and beyond. Long live the Kawasaki Mach III.