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View Full Version : ZX-14 Review (Comprehensive) Part 2



beyond
18th July 2006, 20:35
Suspension and Chassis.
This bike was straight off the floor with original ex factory suspension settings. For me, they were virtually spot on. Front end dive was negligible under heavy braking and all irregularities in the road surface were absorbed without jarring or getting the bike out of line in corners. That same high speed stability is there in the fast sweepers. It is rock solid and holds its line perfectly but the line can be altered by minimal steering input as required.

Frankly, I was expecting this bike to be a bit of a barge in the tight stuff, as it looks so long. Normally, a longer wheelbase means a stable, high speed line, through a sweeper but at the sacrifice of flickability in the tighter stuff. Not so here. Kawasaki has tuned the whole package to perform amazingly well whatever you toss at it.

The first long sweeper appears and I head towards it at a higher speed than normal, which is easy enough to do on this bike. A little counter steering drops her into the corner and I hold the throttle slightly open to keep the line. Absolutely rock solid, the odd ripple absorbed without a fuss. Out of the apex and on with the throttle and I sling shot out of the corner with that melodious induction roar in my ears. With confidence in the bikes ability to handle corners, up the speed goes and the next few sweepers are taken at a brisk pace with no signs of chassis movement or flexing. The Bridgestone BT014’s grip well and there is no ground clearance issues.

I pick a very twisty road and make a mistake. The road has not dried out as it’s in a gully and very tight. Now I know why this bike has been setup to bring the power on gradually under 5000rpm as I tip into the wet corners going easy on the throttle coming out. Only once did I provoke the rear into a slight twitch and only to see how much throttle would be required to do so. Again, I am impressed. This bike is easy to ride on a wet twisty section of road, unless you get too heavy handed on the throttle.

The ultimate test arrives as I reach my favourite piece of road with many tight curves and chicanes. My GSX1400 has to be literally muscled through this section with heaps of counter steering input, which can set up some headshake, powering out of one bend into the next. Initially, I take things easy to get a feel for the bike as these corners leave no room for error. The bike tips in easy and comes up easy. Transitions from side to side are nearly effortless, so I find my speed picking up with the bikes ever increasing confidence, inspiring ride. I can’t fault its handling. For a bike this large and powerful, the Kawasaki engineers have done an incredible job of making it a complete package that works well.

Okay, let’s see what late braking into a corner will do. Hard on the front binders, deep into a corner and slowly releasing the brake as the lean angle increases and no sign of the front end pushing away at all: amazing! Not once did I upset the bike. I didn’t want to push things too much seeing this was not my bike but suffice to say, I went through this section of road, three times, trying different lines, braking patterns and speeds and never once did I feel out of my depth.

The ride back to Mt Eden Motorcycles was disappointing. I had to return this skillfully constructed piece of Japanese Engineering. Traffic on the motorway was building and yet again this bike proved it could filter and change lines and lanes, as good as a full on sports bike.

Summary. I am impressed and blown away by such a well handling and capable package. This baby is well and truly on my short, short list.
Pros:
Speed freaks satisfied.
Cornering freaks satisfied.
Drag racers satisfied.
Wannabe astronauts satisfied.
Too many to list……

Cons:
I like my licence.
Heavy throttle handlers better have shares in BP.
(BUT, if you buy a bike like this, you aren’t going to worry about fuel costs are you? You aren’t going to ride this bike like a Nana, but you actually can if you want).

sugilite
18th July 2006, 20:55
Thanks for the great write up!
I feel I know that bike better now than reading most mag tests. Well done that man!:yes:

Filterer
18th July 2006, 20:56
Great write up dude...sounds like heaps of fun

185km/h in first holey bajesus :gob:

Zed
18th July 2006, 21:53
Very good, thanks Beyond! :2thumbsup

Edbear
18th July 2006, 21:59
Thanks for the great write up!
I feel I know that bike better now than reading most mag tests. Well done that man!:yes:




Wot he said!:first:

beyond
19th July 2006, 08:52
Thanks for the pics Zed. Will take a few myself as Bob would like to use my review and needs original pics so as not to avoid copyrights etc.

ZeroIndex
20th July 2006, 14:53
I WANT ONE!! Beyond: you should either be a magazine article test rider or a salesperson.. :D extremely good review.. green rep sent

kiwifruit
20th July 2006, 14:58
thanks for the great report beyond

limbimtimwim
20th July 2006, 19:46
It's funny you say it looks long.

There is one at Sawyers here in Wellington parked next to a previous model ZX-10. Those are not big bikes at all. The '14 wasn't much bigger. Not much longer, not much wider, I think the pillion seat was lower (Probably a good thing for a pillion!!). I was amazed. And those lights that look so stupid in pictures look good in the metal.

A lot of of bike <$22K!

bugjuice
20th July 2006, 19:56
good write up there..

There's a recently new ZX14 in Spectrum. The owner took it away all happy and proud, then brought it back a couple of days later, minus a license. Again. Astonishingly quick bikes..

Hellraiser
21st July 2006, 17:14
good write up there..

There's a recently new ZX14 in Spectrum. The owner took it away all happy and proud, then brought it back a couple of days later, minus a license. Again. Astonishingly quick bikes..

Was that the same guy that bought the blue 636 and wrote it off?

bugjuice
21st July 2006, 22:45
yup..
sounds like a clever rich bloke..

Seen that black ZX10 with the gold bling? it's always in there..

BeakerRAT
22nd July 2006, 00:47
Nice write up. Sounds great. :yes:

jimbo600
22nd July 2006, 13:51
Saw one on the road today. Looks way better in the flesh than in the photos. Looks awesome in blue, not too big either. Very nice all up.

Scouse
22nd July 2006, 15:14
Just took the Mt Eden motorcycles demo ZX14 for a ride they are certainly an awsom motorcycle It feels like there is alot of electronic wizardry working away to keep things sane in the first three gears below 120 kph but once you get to the point where the electronics hand over control back to your right hand its like hitting warp speed on the starship enterprise

Toast
22nd July 2006, 18:22
0-180mph in 18.9 seconds...impressive

http://www.motorcycle-usa.com/Article_Page.aspx?ArticleID=3504&Page=1

(see page 5)

Nice write-up Beyond.

V Twin Raver
25th July 2006, 13:01
There's a recently new ZX14 in Spectrum. The owner took it away all happy and proud, then brought it back a couple of days later, minus a license. Again. Astonishingly quick bikes..

thats probably this guy here;

http://www.trademe.co.nz/Browse/Listing.aspx?id=63935582&key=113073

kawa
29th July 2006, 10:00
I own one, if you intend to get one protect the radiator with a guard. At 2200 Km's I put a stone into radiator and had to leave bike at Kopu. Now fixed and back doing what I love.

Scouse
29th July 2006, 10:33
I own one, if you intend to get one protect the radiator with a guard. At 2200 Km's I put a stone into radiator and had to leave bike at Kopu. Now fixed and back doing what I love.Ooo Nasty Grant Hope it wasn't to expensive to fix

degrom
29th July 2006, 10:54
good write up there..

There's a recently new ZX14 in Spectrum. The owner took it away all happy and proud, then brought it back a couple of days later, minus a license. Again. Astonishingly quick bikes..

Oh,no! Then I can get one!!! I am begin to make it a habit now,getting a ticket on the first night out with a new toy...

terbang
29th July 2006, 11:10
I own one, if you intend to get one protect the radiator with a guard. At 2200 Km's I put a stone into radiator and had to leave bike at Kopu. Now fixed and back doing what I love.

Ooh Aaah it was a good ride though eh...
On a more serious note, all those modern bikes, GSXZZRZRXR1CBRVTR whatevers, do have very exposed radiatiors that could easily take a stone especially on a group ride. I have built a stainless steel mesh grill for my Busa that only cost $10 bucks which is cheap peace of mind (1100- doesnt need one). On the above ZX-14 incident it was only lucky that we stopped at Kopu for a break and noticed the coolant pissing out all over the place. There was sufficient coolant remaining at that stage and the engine was fine. I must admit that on a curved section of road, when riding in a spirited fashion, I rarely look at my instrument panel and an emptied radiator could easily lead to the nip up stage before I woke up to it by spotting a light or gauge warning.

beyond
29th July 2006, 17:45
Hey Terbang and Kawa,

Seeing you two ride together, how do the two bikes compare. i.e. Busa and ZX-14.

Whats your feeling on the cornering of both bikes and any ideas on which one has the edge. I'm 186cms and not having ridden a Busa at this stage (have a test planned soon) apparently the Busa is a bit tighter on ergonomics?

Be good to hear how you guys find the bikes seeing you ride together??

TONO
30th July 2006, 11:00
Hey Terbang and Kawa,

Seeing you two ride together, how do the two bikes compare. i.e. Busa and ZX-14.

Whats your feeling on the cornering of both bikes and any ideas on which one has the edge. I'm 186cms and not having ridden a Busa at this stage (have a test planned soon) apparently the Busa is a bit tighter on ergonomics?

Be good to hear how you guys find the bikes seeing you ride together??

LORD!
I feel there is a traitor in our midst.....:gob:

terbang
30th July 2006, 11:42
Hmm interesting question. The ZX is definitely newer technology than the Busa and yes I think it is taller than the Busa giving a more stretched leg. Didn't really do any real performance comparasons except that we both saw some big numbers. Grant also videoed the ride (scary stuff). A couple of times I was redlining it through the gears to keep up with him but he also admitted to red lining it at the same time and Vise versa. I think he could brake later than me though I didn't notice any major cornering differences. He commented that it rode itself through corners where I describe the Busa, on a sweeper as being on rails. I am left with the impression that on the real tight stuff <35K he was making an slightly easier job of it which is not surprising as the Busa is a bit porkier than the ZX. The over all impression is, and I think Grant agrees,that they are two big powerful road bikes that demand a lot of discipline to ride and we are both a long way off ever riding them to their max capabilities..

sAsLEX
30th July 2006, 14:13
Can we see some higlights of the video?

beyond
30th July 2006, 20:39
LORD!
I feel there is a traitor in our midst.....:gob:

:) A very reluctant traitor if I go that way mate.

If I do stick with the GSX, I'll do after market front springs and rear shocks that will give me another 20-30mm of ground clearance under compression.
Might solve a few problems and stop my side stand, centre stand and footpegs from wearing away.

beyond
30th July 2006, 20:43
Hmm interesting question. The ZX is definitely newer technology than the Busa and yes I think it is taller than the Busa giving a more stretched leg. Didn't really do any real performance comparasons except that we both saw some big numbers. Grant also videoed the ride (scary stuff). A couple of times I was redlining it through the gears to keep up with him but he also admitted to red lining it at the same time and Vise versa. I think he could brake later than me though I didn't notice any major cornering differences. He commented that it rode itself through corners where I describe the Busa, on a sweeper as being on rails. I am left with the impression that on the real tight stuff <35K he was making an slightly easier job of it which is not surprising as the Busa is a bit porkier than the ZX. The over all impression is, and I think Grant agrees,that they are two big powerful road bikes that demand a lot of discipline to ride and we are both a long way off ever riding them to their max capabilities..


Thanks for that. Some overseas review rank them both very close. Reckon the ZX-14 holds the edge on comfort, speed and braking but that the Busa, suprisingly (as it has a slightly longer wheelbase) is easier to hussle throught the tighter stuff.

Both bikes sound very similar, so for me it would come down to ergonomics.

Toast
30th July 2006, 21:44
but that the Busa, suprisingly (as it has a slightly longer wheelbase) is easier to hussle throught the tighter stuff.


Not too surprising when you conisder that the 'Busa is a fair bit shorter (height-wise) than the ZX...weight down low makes it easy to flick from one lean to the opposite.

kawa
1st August 2006, 10:12
$20 to repair (2 holes) plus some aluminium expanded mesh $60 and a bit of head scratching when it came to removing the fairings, but I can say all is well. Took it to Taupo in the weekend 2 up and it performed very well. As for warning lights etc the ZX has a over temp warning light and then in the middle of the digital dash it will put up a over temp warning that flashes constantly, luckily we never got to that stage and only saw the temperature high on the gauge. When reviewing the video we noticed a wisp of steam half way from Whangamata to the Kopu road so luck was on my side as there was fluid baked onto the exhaust, I think the leak got worse once we had slowed and thats when the pressure really built up. Interestingly I talked to a guy with a Busa in the weekend, he had fitted handle bar risers to ease the riding position so I think it comes down to personal choice and how hard you want to push the bike, they both handle well for hyper beasts. i have always been a Kawasaki man and Bruce a Suzuki man. But I'm sure we both agree that all bikes these days are good and it just depends on personal taste and how much you can afford to spend and the type of riding you do the most of.

terbang
7th August 2006, 20:35
Here is a comparison done by some yanks.
ZX-14 Busa (http://www.motorcycle-usa.com/Article_Page.aspx?ArticleID=3504&Page=1)

ZeroIndex
7th August 2006, 22:26
for the size, I don't fit very comfortably on the ZX-14.. although it's probably more comfortable riding it than just sitting on it.. argh.. my knees are to long..