| The Suzuki Motor Company
was founded by Michio Suzuki, a son to a Japanese cotton
farmer. He was born in Hamamatsu, a small town 200 km
from Tokyo, in 1887. As Michio grew up he became a carpenter
and an enterprising young man. In 1909, at the age of
22, he constructed a pedal-driven wooden loom, and started
to sell his product. Suzuki Loom Works was founded.
The business went well, the order stock was growing
and Michio Suzuki further developed his machine for
the silk industry. New, much more sophisticated machineries
were developed and the business was blooming.
Eleven years later, in 1920, Michio Suzuki decided to
introduce his business to the stock exchange. The days
of a small family business were long gone; Michio Suzuki
needed the capital to be able to expand the business
to meet the demands of the growing market. The founding
of Suzuki Loom Manufacturing Company (Suzuki Jidosha
Kogyo) in March of 1920 is regarded as the start of
the Suzuki Motor Company as we know it today. The company
celebrated its 80-year anniversary in 2000.
Suzuki Loom Manufacturing Company got the capital needed
for the investments and the company was now growing
fast. Already in 1922 the Suzuki Jidosha Kogyo was one
of the largest loom manufacturers in Japan.
By that time, Japan was not the large industrial power
that it is known today. The most important export items
were fabrics and cloths. In 1926 the new-established
Suzuki Loom Manufacturing Company started to export
looms to the Southeast Asia and India. But the market
was soon to be sated, the high-quality looms from Suzuki
lasted practically forever and the demand for new looms
was getting gradually smaller. Suzuki started to consider
manufacturing other things on the side of the weaving
machines.
There were hardly any manufacturers of
motorcycles or cars in Japan before the Second World
War. Soichiro Honda was to build his first cyclemotor
in 1947. In Europe and the United States there had been
motorcycle and car industries for decades.
The Otto motor had been patented in Germany in 1876
and the Einspur, Gottlieb Daimler’s first motorcycle
prototype was built in 1885. Robert Bosch introduced
a low-tension magneto the motorcycle before the end
of the 19th century and by the time Michio Suzuki was
designing his first loom, European companies like Zedel
(later NSU), Royal Enfield, Puch, Peugeot, Norton and
Husqvarna were already producing motorcycles, as well
as Indian and Harley-Davidson in America. There were
already motorcycle magazines and motorcycle clubs organized
reliability trials in Europe. The first Isle Of Man
TT-race was held in 1907, two years before Michio Suzuki
started his loom works.
There’s no question about it, the Japanese were not
pioneers in designing motorcycles. The Japanese manufacturers
came into the business decades after Europeans and in
the beginning they mostly copied the design and the
technical solutions of the European machines. But we
all know what happened; a couple of decades after the
Second World War the mighty Japanese manufacturers dominated
the motorcycle markets of the world.
But let’s get back to the time before the war. Suzuki
Loom Manufacturing Company is an impressive company
but there’s little demand for its products. Suzuki considered
going into the automotive business. 20,000 vehicles
were imported to Japan annually, still not satisfying
the growing demand for cheap commuting vehicles. Michio
Suzuki noticed the market gap and made his first move.
In 1938 Suzuki made its first prototype of a car, based
on the Austin Seven. The Suzuki research team had bought
an Austin from England, dismantled and studied it and
a few months later was able to make a replica of the
Brittish 737cc car. Japan possessed little technical
knowledge of how to produce good cars or motorcycles
and imitating the car manufacturers in Europe seemed
to be the way to get started.
But the timing was lousy. Japan was already prepairing
for the war. The project was abandoned and the Suzuki’s
version of the Austin Seven was never mass produced.
That wouldn't have been that original idea anyhow, Nissan's
first automobile was based on Austin Seven.
After the war followed a period of rebuilding and economic
instability. The manufacturing of weaving looms was
renewed but a wave of strikes at the forties and in
the beginning of the fifties and the post-war chaotic
financial structure nearly destroyed the Suzuki Loom
manufacturing Company.
According to a story it was Michio Suzuki’s son, Shunzo,
who came with the idea of motorizing his bicycle a fall
day when riding home from a fishing trip. Without any
specific goal, only for his own pleasure, Shunzo went
to his drawing board at home and started to design his
own cyclemotor. Nevertheless the story is true or not,
manufacturing cyclemotors saved the company from the
edge of a crash.
In November 1951 the engineers of the Suzuki Loom Manufacturing
Company started to design an engine that could be attached
to a bicycle. The idea was not unique, there were actually
over 100 other Japanese companies that had came up with
the same idea. Soichiro Honda started his Honda Technical
Research Institute in 1946 with renovating used small
engines used by the Japanese army during the war and
mounted them onto bicycles. A year later Honda started
to make their own engines. By the time Suzuki put his
first cyclemotor into production Honda (now renamed
to Honda Motor Company) owned 70% of the commuting market.
Before the 36cc Power Free engine was released, a 30cc
prototype, that was given the name ”Atom” was created
by Suzuki. The Atom was never mass produced.
The high quality of the Suzuki’s cyclemotor made it
to stand out and made it a big hit in Japan. Many of
Shunzo Suzuki's original ideas were used on the final
product.
The engine was a "square" 36 x 36 mm piston-ported two-stroke
mounted within the cycle frame, just above the pedals.
It powered the cycle through the normal pedalling chain
and required special chain-wheels to enable the rider
to free-wheel while the engine was running. The engine
could also be pedal-assisted, or disconnected completely.
The system was so ingenious, the Patent Office of the
new democratic government granted Suzuki a financial
subsidy to continue research into motorcycle engineering.
Unlike most of its competitors, the Power Free did not
use army surplus or proprietary engines and was built
entirely by Suzuki. Suzuki manufactured even the carburettor
and flywheel magneto.
The Power Free, launched in late '51, was only on sale
for a few months before it was substantially improved.
Just after the release of the Power Free the Japanese
goverment changed the requirements to be allowed to
ride a small motorcycle. No driver's license were longer
needed to ride a bike with an 4-stroke engine up to
90cc or a 2-stroke engine up to 60cc. Suzuki started
immediatly to develop a new cyclemotor which engine
capacity was increased to 60cc. and a two-speed gear
was incorporated.
In 1953 a new model, the "Diamond Free"
was introduced. This was built on very similar lines
to the Power Free and used the same method on transmission.
The engine capacity was now 58cc (43mm x 40mm); neat
alloy side panels tidied up the unit's appearance. Power
output was 2 bhp at 4000 rpm. |