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Kawasaki ZZ-R 1100
One mile away, a single point of light breaks the horizon
on a desolate stretch of desert two-lane. Twenty seconds later, the light has
come and gone, leaving only swirling turbulence and a 175-mph reading on the
radar gun's display in its wake. But five years after the original ZX-11 took its toll on the Editorial Adrenals, the Editorial Driving Privilege and the Editorial Sphincter, nothing else in anybody's showroom comes close to that velocity mark. Nothing betters its 130.92 rear-wheel ponies or its 10.25-second, 135.7-mph quarter-mile clocking, either. Surprised? Don't be. Kawasaki has defined and redefined motorcycle performance for nearly three decades. From the 1967 A1 Samurai 250 twin to the '69 Mach III and '72 Mach IV triples, through the omniscient 1973 Z-1, the '81 Gpz 1100 and the 1984 Ninja 900, Team Green has led the horsepower war on every front. Stretching the 900 Ninja's bore and stroke numbers to 997cc produced the nasty black 1000 Ninja in 1986, which would flirt with 160 mph on a good day thanks to large stacks of horsepower and some very tall gearing. And after all bloody heck broke loose with Suzuki's GSX-R1100 and Yamaha's FZR1000, Kawasaki countered with an '88 ZX-10 that would perforate the 160-mph barrier at will. Even then, it didn't take the Amazing Kreskin to figure out what was next.
What came next was exactly what Kawasaki intended from the
beginning: the fastest, most powerful motorcycle in creation. Strapped securely
to the dyno, the 1990 ZX-11 cranked out a herd of nearly 127 rear-wheel ponies
with no help from its new ram-air system-the first such arrangement ever fitted
to a production two-wheeler.
The most noticeable glitch is some off-idle abruptness
around town and generally indecisive carburetion under 3800 rpm.
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Any corrections or more information on these motorcycles will be kindly appreciated. |