Menus
- What you must remember
- Themore
- Theless
- Prices
- Make yourKawasaki Z 750 R 2011
- Opinion
- Performances
- The technical aspect
- Competitors
- Gallery
- Related articles
Success is when you see you everywhere, when you are instantly recognized in the street, when many strangers are talking about you, and when you prance in the charts. And that is exactly what the Z 750 has known since 2005. An unbeatable price / performance ratio, a manga design that seriously disrupted in the third of the decade, a 750 for the price of a 600, and today , it is more than 125,000 Kawa Z 7 and a half who roam in Europe; just our country has swallowed up no less than 45,000 copies. But at Kawasaki, we didn’t just look at the sales figures – the Greens also looked, scrutinized, analyzed user behavior. A little inspiration, a dose of technique, more selected components, and a priority goal: to improve the feeling of driving and the performance of the machine. This idea is the new Z 750 R.
R for racing? More or less, yes. Let’s say the standard Z 750 has everything it takes to honor the success it sticks to the chassis; but the latter is not without reproach, especially when you step up the pace. In arsouille mode, things move. The R version is now here to fix it all, with a bunch of little tweaks and watermark on the manual, you could almost read an invitation to the track. Before that, let’s take a close look at this Z 750 R. Because if we can easily confuse them from a distance, there is another one closer.
Let’s leave aside the dark color for one simple reason: the two-tone green-black suits it much better and clearly expresses the sporty side of this Z 750 R. The new fork crown is a sharp evolution of the standard model, with more facets. trimmed and a more prominent meter protection. The dashboard is a redesigned chouia (you can hardly see it). The main instrument, the tachometer, features new calligraphy, a black background and a large R above the only needle on board. Minor changes include new front fenders, chain guard, mirror stems, redesigned indicators, handlebar grips (those from the sporty ZX-10 R 2010), engine surface treatment, Supersport-style footrests. and some retouching on the on-board wiring. No changes on the engine side; it is still the re-bored 4-cylinder from the old ZX-9R hypersport. Now, let’s get down to business:
Which can be summed up in 3 areas: braking, suspensions, chassis rigidity. Let’s start with this last point. The Z 750 R had the good idea to turn its banal and antiquated technological steel swingarm for a much more shiny aluminum model with hollowed out side rails. Not only does it have frankly more mouth, but it brings above all more rigidity and a certain weight gain.
On the front, the diameter of the wheel axle has been enlarged to make it stronger; the wheel has also been modified accordingly. While we’re in the wheels, let’s see what rubber Kawa has put on them. Better: the Dunlop Qualifiers give off and they are more efficient D210 than one belt on the rims.
Here, I can see a few of them kicking the pitchfork up close. What’s so special about her? Look at the end. Eh vi, the calipers have changed. The original model is equipped with axially fixed clamps with 2 pistons – On the Z 750 R, these are 4 radial pistons from the Z 1000 version 2009. The master cylinder has also become radial. Between the two, big surprise. Aviation hoses !!! Finally, should I say! It was high time that a sporty Japanese motorcycle got equipped with steel wire braided hoses. Widely used on European models, this type of equipment significantly improves the efficiency of the brake control and its endurance. It is also compulsory in competition. The rear brake is also fitted with an avia hose; to compensate for the change in feeling at the foot, the piston diameter is reduced from 14 to 12.7 mm.
Now that we suspect that the Z 750 R will brake better and twist less than its brother Z 750 not R, we will see up close where the R is expected around the turn. Chapter suspensions. It’s getting better, and ‘we hoped for more’. Already adjustable in preload, the inverted 41 mm fork can here adjust its rebound on each sleeve (only one side on Z 750 standard). The rear shock absorber is a separate cylinder model to improve oil cooling. Its positioning on the oscillating arm is set back by 2 mm: same modification value for the center distance, which goes from 172 to 174 mm. This allows for more progressivity. But to fully justify its R designation and its sporty side, we would have liked fully adjustable suspensions, with compression, preload and rebound on all elements – like the optimized damping of the Triumph Street Triple R And worse, a little titanium niture treatment on the fork sticks would have been nice too..
Badder this Z 750 R? Let’s say more rigorous. By dint of seeing a crowd of modified Z 750s, Kawa simply said to himself: “Do they want Zs like this?” We are going to build it ”. This model wisely complements the Z lineup, offering a sportier alternative for those who want more than what the standard Z 750 can offer. The bonus video below illustrates perfectly the symbiosis that Kawasaki wants to generate with this Z 750 R: the bike that wants to reconcile the 2 worlds, that of the road and that of the circuit. From there to imagine that a Z 750 R Cup or a new version of the Kawasaki Cup will soon be born, there is only one slider that roadsters would like to rub.
The Kawasaki Z 750 R in rotation
Kawasaki Z 750 R presentation clip
What you must remember
Themore
Theless
Prices
8 599 €
Price
nine
Compare
the credits
Make
yourKawasaki Z 750 R 2011
Estimate, calculate and compare the cost of insuring your motorcycle.
Calculate the cost of
insurance
Test the price of the motorcycle insurance specialist
Opinion
on 8 opinion
users
Read the reviews
Model marketed in
2011
2012
2013
Performances
-
Max speed:
about 230 km / h
The technical aspect
Kawasaki Z 750 R 2011
- Frame
- Frame: Tubular steel, diamond type
- Tank: 18.5 liters
- Seat height: 815 mm
- Length: 2,085 mm
- Width: 805 mm
- Height: 1,100 mm
- Wheelbase: 1440 mm
- Dry weight: 203 kg
- Weight in running order: 226 kg
- Train before
- Telehydraulic inverted fork Ø 41 mm, deb: 120 mm
- 2 discs Ø 300 mm, 4 piston calipers
- Front wheel:
120/70
– 17
- Transmission
- 6-speed gearbox
- Secondary chain transmission
- Rear axle
- Mono-shock, deb: 124 mm
- 1 disc Ø 250 mm, 1 piston caliper
- Rear wheel:
180/55
– 17
- Motor
- 4 Cylinders
in line
, 4 stroke - Cooling: Liquid cooling
- 32 mm injection
- 2 ACT
- 4 valves per cylinder
-
748 cc
(68.4 x 50.9 mm) -
106
ch
at 10,500 rpm -
8 mkg
at 8,300 rpm - Weight ratio /
power
: 1.92
kg / hp - Compression: 11.3: 1
- Crit’air:
Detached pieces
exhaust
motor
fluid
electricity
filtration
braking
chain kit
Competitors
BMW F 800 R 2011
Yamaha 800 FZ8 2011
Gallery
Related articles
-
The Z 800 quickly rose to the top 5 on the market. However, the Z 750 does not immediately bow out, nor the R version. With a recalibration of the price,…
-
Success is when you see you everywhere, when you are instantly recognized in the street, when many strangers are talking about you, and when you prance…
-
Going from 750 to 800, the Z has become more powerful, fuller, better suspended, more efficient … In short, more and better everywhere; except at the…
-
Kawasaki played (and succeeded) a very nice shot with its bubbling Z roadsters. Proud of a devastating aesthetic, a tip top chassis and hot-blooded…
-
Kawasaki played (and succeeded) a very nice shot with its bubbling Z roadsters. Proud of a devastating aesthetic, a tip top chassis and hot-blooded…
-
In the absence of large road at Kawasaki, it is the trail-GT which occupies the role of long-distance traveler. A case far from being an exception. You…
-
A new 10-R! Completely redesigned, completely dedicated to the track, more sulphurous and powerful than ever. Do you want the numbers? Not right away,…
-
Do you remember the 1st version of the Z 1000? Click here to dismiss an eye. Why ? For two reasons. First, to remember that it was this roadster that put…
-
Kawasaki 1000 ZX-10R 30th anniversary 2015
Kawasaki celebrates 30 years of an event in the world of sports: the GPZ 900 R. It was the first of the Ninja, the first to achieve a power-to-weight…
-
To power his DB7, Bimota had chosen the twin of the Ducati 1098, and had reworked it in its own way to offer more gniak than the cousins of Bologna….