Menus
- Kawa bestseller just got better
- Motor receives software updates
- Dunlop series tires leave a good impression
- Nissin brakes are convincing
- 2020er-Z 900 – what’s new?
- Conclusion
Kawasaki
15th photos
Kawasaki
1/15
Kawasaki has extensively revised the Z 900 for the 2020 model year.
Kawasaki
2/15
New are four driving modes with three intervention thresholds.
Kawasaki
3/15
The traction control can now be switched off.
Kawasaki
4/15
A 48 hp version is also still available.
Kawasaki
5/15
The more powerful variant has an output of 125 hp.
Kawasaki
6/15
The bench is now a little higher as standard.
Kawasaki
7/15
The seat height is 820 mm.
Kawasaki
8/15
A lower bench is available as an option.
Kawasaki
9/15
Prices for the 2020 model start at 9,845 euros.
Kawasaki
10/15
In general, the Z 900 is very popular in Europe. 32,000 copies of the previous model sold speak for themselves.
Kawasaki
11/15
The spring elements will come with adapted damping in 2020.
Kawasaki
12/15
The engine has been revised on the software side.
Kawasaki
13/15
The headlight has also been redesigned.
Kawasaki
14/15
When it comes to standard tires, Kawasaki relies on Dunlop Road-sport 2, which has been specially adapted to the Z 900.
Kawasaki
15/15
Full LED lighting will also be on board from 2020.
Kawasaki Z 900 (2020) in the driving report
Kawa bestseller just got better
The Kawasaki Z 900 rolls out onto the streets in the 2020 model year with a few updates. The first driving report reveals how the new Z is doing.
“Dominate the road” is Kawasaki’s motto for the revised Z 900. Or the markets? The 900 series has already found 32,000 buyers in Europe in three years and was the best-selling in 2019 Kawasaki in Germany – third most popular model after BMW R 1250 GS and Yamaha MT-07. Do you have to upgrade a top seller? Yes why not?
Motor receives software updates
“Frankenstein’s great-granddaughter” Z 900, with 125 hp and 948 cubic meters, breaks the usual categorization of the so-called middle class. In terms of hardware, the famous engine remained unchanged. But thanks to the new software, it hangs fine and direct, but at the same time wonderfully soft on the gas, is very smooth. Electronically operated throttle valves smooth the gas flow and optimize the filling. That is tangible technology. Even idling is as constant, stable and even as the firing order: Every half crankshaft revolution ignites one of the four cylinders. The dull, calm, sonorous sound of this extremely casual engine fits in with this. At the same time, Kawasaki wants the sound of the outwardly unchanged exhaust to be even more “full”. Samig pushes the 950er, runs nice and smooth even at 50 km / h in city traffic with just over 2000 tours in sixth gear. Elasticity has a name: four-cylinder!
On the winding streets of the pre-Pyrenees you are always up a gear than you think. The Zett easily circles even the tightest of turns in third gear. As is usual with big bikes, in real life you are always up a gear than you think. Looking at the gear indicator in the brilliant, crystal-clear new TFT display is often an aha experience. Everything is so relaxed here. The velvety engine works softly, but is not a softie. Woe to you, kick the tiger’s tail! Then he pulls the chain. If you downshift and willfully drive the speed into the second half, the quadruple changes behavior and tonality: from 8000 tours at the latest, the speed jumps up at lightning speed. Now the tree is on fire. And certainly not just before Christmas. A full 98 Newton meters stand for plenty of power. The manifolds 2-3 and 1-4 are connected to one another in an interfering manner to promote torque. You don’t need more power on the country road. Basta. Okay, a quickshifter for shifting gears without clutching is missing. Yes and? After all, the transmission works unobtrusively in the best sense of the word. The gears just click in. A great partner here is the super-adjustable cable coupling that can be pulled with one finger. A point of honor: Both hand levers are of course five times adjustable in reach.
Dunlop series tires leave a good impression
The new KTRC traction control, which regulates three intervention thresholds, takes the fear out of damp or sandy areas. It is coupled with the three newly added driving modes. Early on, the traction control straddles in between in rain mode. When turning on the straights, the rain mode has a castrated effect, turns tough and does not slow down: Logically, the power is now limited to 69 hp. In good conditions, the “Road” mode with full power output and later intervening traction control is better suited. The latter allows even more slip in “Sport” mode, plus high wheelies. You should still have a feeling of being in the gas hand: On actually quite cold, sometimes quite slippery streets, the rear wheel slips from time to time, even before KTRC intervenes.
Kawasaki
Kawasaki has given the Z 900 lots of updates for the 2020 model year.
Apart from that, the Dunlop Road-sport 2 tires, specially adapted to the Z 900, leave a good impression: They roll right up to the edge of the tire and, on the one hand, drive the motorcycle over themselves in the special code “Z” (Kawasaki obviously has a good standing at Dunlop) 200 km / h stable, on the other hand wonderfully handy and accurate. And even neutral: they hardly stand up when the brakes are applied when cornering. Most of all, the feedback is right. Yes, friends, for an almost 1000 cc, the 212 kilo Kawa is wonderfully agile. She gratefully accepts course corrections and enables other lines, even narrower ones, at any time. That creates a lot of trust. Kawasaki’s chassis is not sloppy: the balance between feedback, suspension comfort and reserves is absolutely successful.
Nissin brakes are convincing
Upside-down fork and horizontal mono-spring strut with progressive deflection are well cushioned and swallow a lot. Still depict the asphalt relief well. Great. Even with around 200 things, the straight-line stability is absolutely stable. Not a matter of course on a naked bike. Nissin four-piston calipers bite the serrated brake discs so powerfully and, above all, transparently that you ask why not all motorcycles in this price range can decelerate so well. In this respect, the sharpened (should one really say “more aggressive”) fighter look of the 2020 Z 900 appears as a pure attitude. In reality it is a tame, easy to drive motorcycle. That only takes the knife between your teeth if you expressly force it to do so. Front-wheel-oriented, perfectly integrated into the action and integrated into the motorcycle, it sits as usual on the Z 900. The knee-lock is compact and good – the beefy-looking 17-liter tank is only wide at the top. The fairly straight handlebars are great at hand. The standard is now the higher seat, which allows people 1.70 meters to stand securely with both legs. The best place is clearly in front.
Kawasaki
The new Z 900 will be available from 9,845 euros.
A passenger does enjoy an open, relaxed knee angle. But squats on a hard, tightly cut bun. There is a higher than extra. Plus lots of extras: tank bag, USB charging socket, crash pads, and so on. Connectivity with a smartphone via the Kawasaki app is modern. It loads a lot of vehicle information onto the mobile phone, saves the route traveled via GPS (according to Kawasaki only for the owner) and, if necessary, even projects incoming calls and emails onto the great TFT display. Well, we really enjoyed driving even without such “newfangled stuff”. Compliment. Spring may come. For a total of 9,845 euros, the modernized Z 900 means a more stringent challenge to the KTM 790 Duke, Triumph Street Triple and Yamaha MT-09 – two- and three-cylinder with significantly less displacement. Kawasaki heard them and quickly implemented the signs of the times.
2020er-Z 900 – what’s new?
- New engine control software, revised clutch damper springs
- Four driving modes with three intervention thresholds of the likewise new traction control, which can also be switched off: “Sport” and “Road” with full power, “Rain” with a maximum of 69 hp, “Driver” freely selectable)
- 95 PS version: “Low mode” releases a maximum of 52.25 PS
- 48 hp version with fuller torque curve at low and medium speeds; “Low mode” also delivers 48 hp, but with the linear power output of the previous model
- Full LED lighting (position lights, turn signals, redesigned headlights, taillights and license plate lights)
- Reinforced steel frame in the area of the swing arm mounting
- Original equipment tire Dunlop RoadSport 2 “Z”
- Spring elements with adapted damping (modified shim packages)
-
High bench now standard: seat height 820 millimeters (lower bench optional)
-
New, digital 10.9 cm TFT color display with extensive on-board computer: gear indicator, gear indicator, fuel level indicator, current and average fuel consumption, range, average speed, total driving time, battery voltage, service and oil change reminder
-
Front mask, tank cover, “underfloor covers” and the swing arm cover redesigned, “more compact”
-
Smartphone connectivity via app: vehicle information and recording of the route traveled are sent to the mobile phone, notifications about phone calls and incoming emails are sent to the cockpit
Conclusion
After more than 32,000 copies sold across Europe to date, the Kawasaki Z 900, which has been revised for 2020, continues the success story seamlessly. Because it stays what it was: an extremely lively, active and uncomplicated naked bike. Now much better again, thanks to driving modes, traction control and many other goodies.
Related articles
-
Triumph Speed Triple R in the driving report
triumph 28 photos triumph 1/28 Back to the true hooligan bike: With a sharper design, more power and new electronic helpers, Triumph is building on its…
-
Ducati Hypermotard 939 SP in the PS driving report
Ducati 27 pictures Ducati 1/27 Ducati Hypermotard 939. Ducati 2/27 An oil cooler was implanted into the revised engine, which can be seen in the front of the …
-
KTM 690 Duke – KTM 690 Duke R in the PS driving report
KTM 15 pictures KTM 1/15 The single gets off to a refreshing start, as if the engineers had carved kilos of flywheel mass from all the waves. StudioMAC 2/15 …
-
Kawasaki Z 900 in the driving report
Kawasaki 17 pictures Kawasaki 1/17 Kawasaki Z 900 Kawasaki 2/17 Dipped in bright green, the new tubular steel lattice frame takes the engine as a supporting …
-
Driving report: Kawasaki 1400 GTR
Kawasaki Driving report Kawasaki 1400 GTR (2009) Sporty touring machine With many changes in detail, a combination brake and even a traction control, the…
-
Driving report KTM 690 Duke and KTM 690 Duke R
KTM 19th photos KTM 1/19 There is one thing you have to give to the KTM model planners: their instinct for filling niches with precisely fitting models….
-
Driving report MotoGP-Honda RC 211 V
Rudolph Driving report MotoGP-Honda RC 211 V (2005) Driving force Beat by Yamaha in MotoGP? is the Honda racing department in crisis? No. MOTORRAD let…
-
Driving report MV Agusta F3 675 (2012)
Photo: MV Agusta 18th photos MV Agusta 1/18 Driving report of the MV Agusta F3 675 from MOTORRAD 5/2012. MV Agusta 2/18 MV Agusta F3 675: everything…
-
Driving report new Kawasaki ZX-9R
Driving report new Kawasaki ZX-9R Change on the fly Not even two years on the market, Kawasaki is pushing a completely renovated version of the…
-
Driving report Moto Guzzi California Special and Quota 1100 ES
Driving report Moto Guzzi California Special and Quota 1100 ES Magical power Forza in movimento – there is power in movement: The Moto Guzzi eagle should…