
Kawasaki Good Times World was good times indeed, and the start of what promises to be a series of walk-and-gawk activities that have the 18 journalists on this trip shuffling around like obedient school-kids (while looking signifcantly less cute than the actual school-kids who swarmed KGTW in matching hats).



Post-Good Times World, it was back on the bus for a ride to KHI's Akashi Works plant, which is not only the source of "leisure products" (like motorcycles) familiar to U.S. consumers, but also responsible for bohemoth projects like fabricating one of the two main towers of Japan's Akashi Kaikyo Bridge, which boasts the longest span of any suspension bridge in the world and did a first-rate job of getting our bus from one side of the Akashi Straight to the other.

Once the bus arrived at Akashi Works, we were quickly outfitted in jackets, hard hats, and ear-pieces for a tour that wove in-and-out of various motorcycle assembly lines, the noise and bustle of which didn't obscure the obvious efficiency of a system that allows several different models of bike to be assembled on the same line. Cameras weren't allowed in the facility—and won't be in any of the other factories we tour, either—but some stock photos are apparently winging their way home for use in a later RRX article, and hopefully they'll convey some of the wonder of seeing motorcycles careen overhead

Always good to work in a reference to a Rubic's cube.
ReplyDelete20th scale, ha. Nice artwork, by the way. At first I thought it looked like a meatpacking plant but I'm definitly feeling the bikes now.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Adam. I agree that my handlebars have an aura of long-horn steer about them.
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