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1990 Kawasaki ZXR400R - 7-Page Vintage Motorcycle Article

$ 7.15

Availability: 11 in stock
  • Make: Kawasaki
  • Condition: Original, vintage magazine advertisement / article. Condition: Good

    Description

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    1990 Kawasaki ZXR400R - 7-Page Vintage Motorcycle Article
    Original, Vintage Magazine advertisement / article.
    Page Size: Approx. 8" x 11" (21 cm x 28 cm)
    Condition: Good
    Kawasaki’s
    Japanese-market
    ZXR400R invades the
    States and finds plenty
    of competition in
    Yamaha’s FZR400
    Those who don’t consider
    400cc sport bikes serious ma-
    chines need only throw a leg
    over one of these two bikes, hold the
    throttle open and start shifting gears.
    Thirteen seconds and a quarter-mile
    later, the speedometer needle flashes
    past 100 mph, and after one mile a ra-
    dar gun records a top speed near 130
    mph. That’s serious. Steer one of these
    off the straight and level and point it at
    the curviest road you know to experi-
    ence a thrill unavailable in any other dis-
    placement class at any price: handling
    nirvana. Yamaha’s FZR400 and Kawa-
    saki’s ZXR400R take to corners like Ma-
    donna to a microphone, offering light
    weight, unhindered cornering clearance,
    blink-quick directional changes and sur-
    prising stability in a package cute
    enough to hide in a Christmas stocking.
    The willy-nilly race to produce the best
    400cc sport bike in Japan has new mod-
    els popping up as frequently as every
    nine months, but the United States sees
    little of the technology that is currently
    roaming the streets of Tokyo. One of the
    all-time best-handling street machines
    and a staff favorite is Yamaha’s FZR400,
    a bike imported since 1988 to a luke-
    warm public reception despite unani-
    mous racetrack approval. The all-alumi-
    num Deltabox frame has been updated
    for '90 with a slab-sided Deltabox swing-
    arm and new paint. We count ourselves
    among the fans of 400s and jumped at
    the chance to compare what’s reputedly
    the best 400 available in Japan, Kawa-
    Not many sport bikes offer ride-height ad-
    justment at the rear, but all race bikes do.
    The ZXR's racing intentions extend far be-
    yond the multiadjustable rear shock.
    saki’s ZXR400R Sports Production,
    against our U.S.-market FZR400.
    WAR OF THE WORLDS
    Our racing-green ZXR came to us
    through the good graces of George
    Kanemori, a sport-bike enthusiast who
    purchased it through Exotic Motorcycle
    Imports (22130 S. Vermont, Suite E, Tor-
    rance, CA 90502; 213/320-9844). In the
    past EMI has supplied us with such jew-
    els as the Pepsi-edition 250 Gamma Su-
    zuki and continues to tempt us with exot-
    ics from all over the world. Kanemori’s
    limited-edition ZXR Sports Production is
    currently the rage in Japan, offering
    items unavailable on the regular ZXR,
    such as a solo seat, remote-reservoir,
    multiadjustable rear shock, close-ratio
    tranny and Kawasaki’s traditional racing
    colors. Officially called the ZXR400R,
    the Sports Production finally puts Kawa-
    saki in the lead in the competitive 400cc
    production-racing class, a class in which
    Team Green hasn’t been heard from un-
    til now. Kanemori’s bike makes the
    FZR400 look positively pedestrian; if the
    FZR400 is razor sharp, the ZXR400R
    cuts like a laser.
    The Kawasaki’s parts list will impress
    case-hardened motor-heads. Imagine a
    downsized ZX-7 that weighs 391 pounds
    wet, rides on wide aluminum wheels, a
    3.5-by-17 front and 4.5-by-17 rear, and
    controls front-wheel movement with an
    inverted fork previously reserved for fac-
    tory racers or unobtainable exotics. The
    Kayaba inverted fork measures 41 mm at
    the sliders and 50mm at the upper stan-...
    16935-AL-9009-02