Is the Kawasaki 750 the same as last year?

Is the Kawasaki 750 the same as last year?

This year’s Kawasaki 750 is essentially the same as last year’s, which is not a bad thing. It’s a dohc, inline Four with a bank of four 34mm Keihin CV carbs. Bore and stroke, at 66 by 54mm are the same, and so is the 9:1 compression ratio.

When did the Kawasaki GPz 750 come out?

1982 was the first year of the 750, as both the GPz550 and GPz1100 were introduced a year earlier. 1982 was also a bit of a one year only model, based on the older architecture.

When did Kawasaki stop making the 650 Class?

The 650 worked for a couple of years, with the aftermarket helping things along by offering all sorts of hop-up equipment. But by 1979 the 750 class was by far the most popular, and 100cc was a lot to give away, so Inamura decided that he was going to have to go 750.

How much does a Kawasaki KZ750 E cost?

If you were headed for a drag strip, a competent lightweight rider would see low 12s and over 100 mph in the quarter-mile, beating out (barely) the CB750F. But the prices of the two were now pretty equal, with the KZ at $2,750, the CB at $2,850.

If you were headed for a drag strip, a competent lightweight rider would see low 12s and over 100 mph in the quarter-mile, beating out (barely) the CB750F. But the prices of the two were now pretty equal, with the KZ at $2,750, the CB at $2,850.

How big is the bore on a Kawasaki KZ750?

And then he developed the KZ650/4, with a bore and stroke of 62 by 54mm, for 652cc total. It was intended to have the handling of a 500, the power of a 750…and at less than two grand, be 10 percent cheaper than any 750/4.

What kind of engine did Kawasaki have in 1980?

Just to clarify things, in 1980 Kawasaki had two very different KZ750s—the KZ750-G parallel twin, the engine of which had been on the market since 1976 (Retrospective, December 1996), and the new in-line four, known by the postfix E.

The 650 worked for a couple of years, with the aftermarket helping things along by offering all sorts of hop-up equipment. But by 1979 the 750 class was by far the most popular, and 100cc was a lot to give away, so Inamura decided that he was going to have to go 750.