Mr. Li's Original Lishi KW14(15) Key Reader for Kawasaki Motorbikes
Mr. Li's Original Lishi KW14(15) Key Reader is designed for KAWASAKI Motorbikes [Profile: KW14 (7-Cut)]
List of makes and models (for guidance only)
KAWASAKI (CYCLES)
- 1997 - 1997 Cagiva 900
- 1993 - 1994 Cagiva City
- 1997+ Cagiva Elefan
- 1993 - 2007+ Cagiva Mito
- 1993 - 1993 Cagiva Supercity
- 1994 - 2001 Ducati Monster
- 1997+ Ducati ST2
- 1987 - 1988 Kawasaki 305
- 2004+ Kawasaki Boulevard
- 2002+ Kawasaki Classic
- 1987 - 1988 Kawasaki CSR
- 1987+ Kawasaki Eliminator
- 1983+ Kawasaki GPZ1979 – 1989 Kawasaki KL
- 1987 - 2008+ Kawasaki KLR
- 1994 - 2009 Kawasaki KLX
- 1979 - 1988 Kawasaki KZ1979 – 1983 Kawasaki LTD
- 2004+ Kawasaki Marauder
- 2002+ Kawasaki Mean Streak
- 2002+ Kawasaki Nomad
- 1990+ Kawasaki Tengai
- 1987 - 2009+ Kawasaki Vulcan
- 2004+ Suzuki Boulevard
- 2004+ Suzuki Marauder
- 2001 - 2005 Triumph America
- 2001 - 2005 Triumph Bonneville
- 2001 - 2005 Triumph Speedmaster
- 2001 - 2005 Triumph T100
- 1995 - 2000 Triumph Thunderbird
- 1995 - 1998 Triumph Tiger
- 1995 - 2003 Triumph Trophy
- 2001 - 2005 Triumph Truxton
Mr. Li's Original Lishi Tools (exactly speaking “Lishi 2in1 Decoder and Pick”) is the most effective way to unlock and decode vehicle locks whilst at the scene. The tools we supply are from the original manufacturer, ensuring quality and supply is guaranteed. There are currently more than 90 tools available. We can also be able to supply a complete kit of Lishi picks at a discounted price. Please contact us.
Mr. Li is designer, creator, inventor of all Lishi tools. Lishi Tools was formerly known as “Lishi” which was widely used on their products as a logo. Mr. Li had a partnership with an UK company named Tradelocks (aka. UAP Limited) to market his tools worldwide. Tradelocks is still selling Lishi tools with their trademark “Genuine Lishi”, but the two companies has no relationship at all when their contract ended in 2014. And later, Mr. Li had a new logo which uses his own face as the trademark, and brand name changed from Lishi to Li Zhi Qin (Mr. Li’s name in Chinese), which is the three Chinese characters stands for, but it’s still known as Lishi all over the world except China.