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The Suzuki DR-Z400 is a dual-sport motorcycle manufactured by Suzuki beginning in 2000. It is powered by a single-cylinder, 398 cc (24.3 cu in), carbureted, liquid-cooled four-stroke engine. [2] Kawasaki marketed a private labeled version of the DR-Z known as the KLX400 – it is nearly identical to the DR-Z400 except for bodywork and some ...
The engine is an air-cooled 349-cubic-centimetre (21.3 cu in) single cylinder overhead cam (OHC) 4V (four valves per cylinder), with the Suzuki Advanced Cooling System (SACS), dry sump lubrication, 6-speed manual transmission, 21-inch front wheel and 18-inch rear wheel. The brake disc at the front wheel is a single 220mm disc and at the rear ...
Kawasaki Z400-J The Kawasaki KZ400-J had an air-cooled four-cylinder, four-stroke, eight-valve DOHC engine, and six-speed gearbox derived from the larger Kawasaki Z500/Z550 . The KZ400J was produced from 1980 to 1983.
KFX 50 (re-badged Suzuki LT-A50 until 2006, now an independent design) KFX 80 (re-badged Suzuki LT80) KFX 90; KFX 400 (re-badged Suzuki LT-Z400) KFX 450R; KFX 700 V-Force; KLT 110; KLT 160; KLT 185; KLT 200 Duckster 200; KLT 250; Lakota 300; Lakota Sport 300; Mojave 110; Mojave 250; Prairie 250 (based on the KLT 250) Prairie 300; Prairie 360
A Suzuki GSX-R1000 at a drag strip – a 2006 model once recorded a 0 to 60 mph time of 2.35 seconds. This is a list of street legal production motorcycles ranked by acceleration from a standing start, limited to 0 to 60 mph times of under 3.5 seconds, and 1 ⁄ 4-mile times of under 12 seconds.
The Kawasaki Z400 is a 399 cc Z series standard motorcycle introduced by Kawasaki as a successor to the Z300. It was unveiled at the 2018 EICMA in Milan , Italy. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It is powered by a 399 cc (24.3 cu in) liquid-cooled parallel-twin engine derived from the Ninja 400 sport bike .
[3] [4] Italian magazine Motociclismo claimed to have achieved 193.24 mph (310.99 km/h) testing the F4 R 312, more or less confirming the claimed speed and tying, if not exceeding, the 1999 Suzuki Hayabusa's tested speeds of 188–194 mph (303–312 km/h), [5] whereas Sport Rider were only able to achieve a 185.4 mph (298.4 km/h) top speed ...
(Top) 1 Single cylinder. 2 Parallel-twin. 3 Inline-four. 4 Inline-six. 5 See also. ... Z400/KZ400 (1974–1984) Z500 (2024–present) Z400 (2018–present) Z650 (2017 ...