Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2007 Kawasaki Zzr600 on 2040-motos

$6,000
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:9
Location:

Houston, Texas

Houston, TX
QR code

Kawasaki Other description

I have a 2007 Kawasaki zzr600 for sale the bike runs well it was well takin care of just changed oil royal purple 10w-40 full synthetic brand new NGK spark plugs i keep it in the garage, it only has 9,zero miles on it. It has a yoshimura exhaust it sound great, flush mount turn signals, intergrated tail lamps, frame sliders, dog bone lowering link that lowers the back is 2in, brand new Michelin Pilot Power tires only 100mis on them. The bike has 180 mph on the speedometer and will do every bit of it. I just had the bike two tone painted with tri pearl flake clear coat it looks awesome especally in the light it is A1 the only reason i posted it on here is to see whats out there trades welcome any other questions just hmu.

Moto blog

Superbike Coach Teams With Feel Like A Pro

Tue, 11 Mar 2014

Can Akkaya, former European superbike racer and currently proprietor of SuperbikeCoach.com, has announced a partnership with Feel Like A Pro. For those unfamiliar, Feel Like A Pro provides Kawasaki Ninja 250 race bike rentals across the west coast for a nominal fee of $299. The namesake comes from the experience you get, as a technician, gas, and tires are all included in the cost.

The North East,Prescott and fast laps with Chris Walker at Mallory

Thu, 26 Apr 2012

A big thanks to all at Newcastle Motorcycles for lending me a Honda CB1000F on Saturday to do nothing other than join mates for a blast round some fantastic roads in the North East. The buddies in question were Alan Smith (Bradley’s dad) and two stroke addict and race fan Chris Berriman. We headed east over the moors from the ‘Toon’ heading towards Barnard Castle then back through Consett before finishing up at the picturesque Tynemouth.

A Weighty Issue

Mon, 03 Nov 2008

For as long as I can remember, motorcycle manufacturers have been playing fast and loose with regard to what they claim for the weight of their bikes. The “dry weights” they foisted upon us had little basis in reality. The “dry” part of that claim meant that listed weights on a spec chart were the result of all fluids being MIA from the bike, including necessities like engine oil, coolant and fork fluid (not to mention fuel), but even that didn’t fully explain the overly optimistic specs.