1975 Kawasaki BX2000 
#1 2007-03-06 3:58pm
- flowdart
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1975 Kawasaki BX2000
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#2 2007-03-07 3:10am
- shivadread
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
Very nice early motocross in what looks like excellent condition
RIDE IT LIKE YOU STOLE IT
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#3 2007-06-14 12:03pm
- intense bmx4570
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
very nice
CHECK MY BIKES OUT!
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#4 2007-07-21 10:14am
- jljacobs406
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
Beautiful bike - great condition. I just acquired one in need of restoration - any ideas on where to find parts?
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#5 2007-08-05 8:36pm
- hnorthin
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
where'd you get it? got outbid on a similar frame recently, been lusting after one but can't find anywhere. any ideas?
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#6 2007-08-07 7:45pm
- jljacobs406
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
got mine on eBay
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#7 2007-10-28 8:20pm
- AncientRebel
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
Hey, Gang. Man, this brings back memories.
I worked for Bill Bastian when he was just starting the Kawasaki BMX line. That was his design and he used Triple A as a financial backer. We made both steel and aluminum bikes for Kawasaki back then, starting in 1975. They had rear shocks and fake rubber boots for front shocks and that was about it. The steel ones were green and the aluminum ones were of course ball burnished silver.
I don’t know whether Bill is dead or alive, so I’ll be kind to him here. My mental picture of him has him in a tan Member’s Only jacket. His blonde hair was thinning and his face was in the first stages of wrinkles, but there was always mischief in his grey eyes. I’ll never know if he liked me but I like to think so.
Triple A was an armpit of a place, based on cheap labor and no amenities. A guy I went to welding school with named Brian and I were hired right out of high school. Neither of us really knew how to weld, so we were hired and spent a few weeks welding scrap metal and generally screwing off.
Eventually we got our act together and started making bikes. Ed Penfold (III) of Triple A helped Bill with the fixtures and equipment. We had one ancient TIG machine and one workable Cobra MIG. Brian got the MIG while I started working the TIG when we got a new Lincoln.
You can tell the earliest Kawasaki bikes by the rear sections. The first ones were TIG welded and have an appearance much like the rest of the welds on the bike, but the later ones were MIG welded (by Brian) and the welds are much rougher just because of the process, not because of Brian. Okay, maybe a little because of Brian.
I never welded a steel bike, Brian did those. I did all of the aluminum bikes. I started out making about three a day. It was hot, July heat and no air. By October I was cranking out three an hour. By spring I was doing 35 a day. I think I was making about $2.75 an hour.
I left Triple A in 1977 for another job, but when Bill went on his own he needed a welder to help him make his first bikes, so he called me. He had a small service garage on some alley in Gardena. He had a surface plate, a micrometer, a tube bender, a lathe, a mill, a saw, and a cot upon which he spent many nights. A small office with a drawing table was attached.
Bill hand measured each bend, each cut, every detail on those first bikes. His new design was much different from the Kawasaki. Bill eliminated the rear suspension and moved the seat post up. He put a triangular throat for the rear stays in and beefed up the wheel stays, creating a solid union with the crank tube. Those first few bikes weren’t perfect, but he had them ball burnished and/or anodized and took them on road shows.
That’s when he came up with the simple Race, Inc. sticker he put on the head tube. As the first trade show was near, one night (we always worked late those first months), Bill sent me to a Carrow’s restaurant for some dinner. He gave me some cash and told me to get what I wanted and whatever looked good for him. As we ate on the granite flat, bill started to sketch a logo out. It was just Race, Inc. inside a circle, but as the ink bled out it created a scalloped effect along the edge of the circle. I shrugged. At that point I had a crush on his daughter and had little else on my mind.
Eventually Bill moved his shop to a location not at all far from Triple A. We went into production soon after. I got to do everything on those bikes in the first year. I bent the handlebars, cut the head tubes on the mill, cranktubes, too. I bent the downtubes and deburred the gussets. I welded my head off, and learned a lot by doing that.
I left Race, Inc. in 1978 to work in aerospace. That has been a wild ride, and a whole ‘nuther story, but those days with Bill Bastian, his son, and his company were juicy, rich days. I missed out on his daughter, though.
I have a lot of stories about those days if anyone is interested.
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#8 2008-05-20 9:49pm
- -WOLF-
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
who very nice first time i seen a bmx bike styled like that looks like a chopper cruiser
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#9 2008-08-23 6:04pm
- firekilr2
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
Hey I have one of these (mine as a kid) in the attic. Are they worth anything and can I get parts. You can still ride mine.
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#10 2008-11-14 3:54pm
- dirkadirka6982
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
how much one could one go for cuz i want to know![]()
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#11 2008-12-17 6:07pm
- firekilr2
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
Decided to sell mine is on e-bay.
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#12 2009-03-31 2:29pm
- Boggzilla
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
No comments on the how Race Inc came to be because of this bike? Ancient Rebel....Great Story!
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#13 2010-05-03 9:05am
- Oaktown Massive
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
wow! now thats a piece of history on wheels! great history lesson, AncientRebel!
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#14 2010-11-13 2:08pm
- I cant drive 55
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
Great bike, I have one also. Its in the process of restoration. I just picked up a set of oem tires in great shape, tuff to come by. Ill put pics up when finished.
"Life is far to important to be taken seriously"
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#15 2010-11-13 2:18pm
- unfit4society
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
I have one half built too, I'm gonna flatland on mine.
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#16 2011-01-10 11:05am
- eglbrickie
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
Nice!!!
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#17 2011-12-13 1:50am
- g-flash
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
Very nice!![]()
Free your mind and your ass will follow!
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#18 2012-01-17 11:52am
- ooter
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
super gay
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#19 2012-07-03 9:02pm
- filobedo
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
Somebody stole the wheels off of my brand new Kawasaki BX-2000. So, I swapped all the parts onto my trusty old Yamaha Moto-Bike. WoW! I had the Coolest Bike on the Block!
At least I thought so.. lol ![]()
"CRUSADER FOR THE RIGHTS OF THE DISABLED"
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#20 2012-09-17 7:09pm
- teckman12
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Re: 1975 Kawasaki BX2000
I just found one in an old barn in pretty good shape. What are these bikes worth.
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