Commuting on a ZXR400
Moderator: Moderators
-
Chazzman_bm
- Posts: 44
- Joined: Sat Apr 22, 2006 2:43 pm
- My Bike: ZXR400 H1
- Location: Scotland
Commuting on a ZXR400
Gents,
It's been a long time since I've posted probably because my H1 ZX has been in bits for a while.
Not long ago, I took a job in Glasgow and have been taking the train back and forth every day. The truth is, I'm fed up with the state of the rail service and want to take the bike. Here's the problem. I got the ZX as a forgotten project. I have since completely stripped it and had the frame, subframe, swingarm, wheels and other bits powdercoated gloss black. The intention was to turn it into a dedicated track bike but now I'm considering putting it back together as a commuter. It will have all new bearings, sprockets, chain, discs, the lot so it should be as new. I'm not going to rebuild the engine (unless I have to). I'll just service it with new plugs, oil fluids, clean and balance the carbs and check the compression of each cylinder before it gets on the road.
I'm not a small guy (6' and heavier than I should be) and have only ridden the ZX short distances before I stripped it. Does anybody use their bike on a daily basis and if so, how do you rate it?
Chazz.
It's been a long time since I've posted probably because my H1 ZX has been in bits for a while.
Not long ago, I took a job in Glasgow and have been taking the train back and forth every day. The truth is, I'm fed up with the state of the rail service and want to take the bike. Here's the problem. I got the ZX as a forgotten project. I have since completely stripped it and had the frame, subframe, swingarm, wheels and other bits powdercoated gloss black. The intention was to turn it into a dedicated track bike but now I'm considering putting it back together as a commuter. It will have all new bearings, sprockets, chain, discs, the lot so it should be as new. I'm not going to rebuild the engine (unless I have to). I'll just service it with new plugs, oil fluids, clean and balance the carbs and check the compression of each cylinder before it gets on the road.
I'm not a small guy (6' and heavier than I should be) and have only ridden the ZX short distances before I stripped it. Does anybody use their bike on a daily basis and if so, how do you rate it?
Chazz.
- Scott221
- Restricted

- Posts: 909
- Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2007 6:23 pm
- My Bike: ZXR400 L9
- Location: Bham, U.k
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
Ive been riding my zxr for about 2 weeks now. I can honsetly say i think its incredible. A deffinate all rounder. Will give you good economy (aroung 50 mpg) its got enough power, but not too much. im 6 ft 1 and around 12 and a half stone and it still goes like sh*t off a shovel. it really depends on the mileage your looking to cover daily. The riding position really denotes how comfortable your going to be, which sometimes is not very, its good for around 100 miles, after that your butt will probably be numb for a month.

One life, Live it!
- zxr_oli
- zxr400 oc member

- Posts: 319
- Joined: Sat Jun 02, 2007 10:42 am
- My Bike: Daytona 675
- Location: East Sussex
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
I use mine every day, usually about 50 miles each.
I have no complaints and neither does the bike
I just need to ride a bit easier so save some fuel, but now thats not much fun now is it
I have no complaints and neither does the bike
I just need to ride a bit easier so save some fuel, but now thats not much fun now is it
-
Chazzman_bm
- Posts: 44
- Joined: Sat Apr 22, 2006 2:43 pm
- My Bike: ZXR400 H1
- Location: Scotland
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
Cheers guys. My commute will be 60 miles each way so I wanted to know if it was realistic or not. I'll give it a shot and see how I get on.
Thanks.
Chazz.
Thanks.
Chazz.
- RedexRobB
- Site Admin

- Posts: 7212
- Joined: Fri Aug 30, 2002 7:37 pm
- My Bike: ZXR400L3
- Location: Ipswich, Suffolk
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
Jamz used to use his for despatch riding! When i commuted to and fro college years ago it was fine, I only used to travel 5 miles or so, but i always looked forward to riding it 
60 miles is a long way to and fro work! A tank of fuel was about a tenner when i was riding mine, not sure now with prices etc.. but you'll get roughly 100 miles out of a tank, you never know you might might manage 120 which will obviously get you to work and back! Dunno how much your train fare is but worth taking into consideration up against the cost of running a bike!
60 miles is a long way to and fro work! A tank of fuel was about a tenner when i was riding mine, not sure now with prices etc.. but you'll get roughly 100 miles out of a tank, you never know you might might manage 120 which will obviously get you to work and back! Dunno how much your train fare is but worth taking into consideration up against the cost of running a bike!
- zxr_oli
- zxr400 oc member

- Posts: 319
- Joined: Sat Jun 02, 2007 10:42 am
- My Bike: Daytona 675
- Location: East Sussex
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
If i ride more economically i can get upto around 140ish (before reserve) to about £12 of petrol 
-
rene
- zxr400 oc member

- Posts: 1918
- Joined: Fri Feb 23, 2007 10:34 am
- My Bike: kwack ZXR750L1
- Location: Northampton
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
i did around 100 miles a day for over a year on my 400 and she was perfect. I treated the old girl like a whore as well, oil changes every 8,000 miles, red line every were, just genral lack of service and she did fine! only bad thing for commuting is your 'forced' to ride flat out as its the only way the bike wants to be ridden (in my mind
)
ZXR750 L1
tail tidy, polished bits, custom paint job, k&n, dynojet, Full akropovik, down geared, GSXR calipers, hel brake lines front and rear & clutch line, maxtron resprung froks 120BHP
BikePics page-
http://www.bikepics.com/members/zxr400rene/
tail tidy, polished bits, custom paint job, k&n, dynojet, Full akropovik, down geared, GSXR calipers, hel brake lines front and rear & clutch line, maxtron resprung froks 120BHP
BikePics page-
http://www.bikepics.com/members/zxr400rene/
- zxr_oli
- zxr400 oc member

- Posts: 319
- Joined: Sat Jun 02, 2007 10:42 am
- My Bike: Daytona 675
- Location: East Sussex
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
+1 to thatrene wrote:only bad thing for commuting is your 'forced' to ride flat out as its the only way the bike wants to be ridden (in my mind)
- deviant
- zxr400 oc member

- Posts: 1352
- Joined: Thu Jun 02, 2005 9:50 am
- My Bike: ZXR400 L3
- Location: Nottingham, UK
- Contact:
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
get on and ride it. I've commuted on mine at various points although I tend to use the GPz at the moment.
the only thing that would get on my nerves with doing 60 miles each way is you would be filling up every day. but if you can live with that then go with it.
the only thing that would get on my nerves with doing 60 miles each way is you would be filling up every day. but if you can live with that then go with it.
In the garage:
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
-
Bozzie
- zxr400 oc member

- Posts: 136
- Joined: Fri May 26, 2006 6:59 pm
- My Bike: tomos moped
- Location: Nottingham, UK
- Contact:
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
I used to ride to london and back every weekend from nottingham 320 mile round trip Bike handled fine, till it went pop. But saying that it wasnt in the mechanically best state of mind. and after talking to a few 'experts' i belive that the bike was sold in a unfit state. But i managed to get4,000-6,000 out of it.

- Gemini
- cloning technology

- Posts: 1323
- Joined: Fri Nov 15, 2002 1:57 pm
- My Bike: CBR1000RR4 Fireblade
- Location: Shrewley, Warwickshire
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
at the end of the day u can commute on any bike but look at it this way...
the zxr400 is a race replica bike so it was never made with comfort in mind.
a gpz, bandit, vfr etc were made for commuting,
its the compromise between speed and looks, and comfort and durability. but either way the choice is yours, the zxr will easily manage the commute as its a jap bike, but whereas the bike will lap up the mileage, your body may not
gem
the zxr400 is a race replica bike so it was never made with comfort in mind.
a gpz, bandit, vfr etc were made for commuting,
its the compromise between speed and looks, and comfort and durability. but either way the choice is yours, the zxr will easily manage the commute as its a jap bike, but whereas the bike will lap up the mileage, your body may not
gem
There's No Explanation For The Way I'm About To Behave!!!
-
rene
- zxr400 oc member

- Posts: 1918
- Joined: Fri Feb 23, 2007 10:34 am
- My Bike: kwack ZXR750L1
- Location: Northampton
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
gpz was actualy built as a sports bike, so was the origanal FJ1200's just over time are ideas of what sports bikes are have changed. Back in the day road sports bikes were built for road riding with some sports-e-nuss to them, now people think if it dosent look like a GP bike then it wont be able to go round country lanes. Marketing is an amazing thing
ZXR750 L1
tail tidy, polished bits, custom paint job, k&n, dynojet, Full akropovik, down geared, GSXR calipers, hel brake lines front and rear & clutch line, maxtron resprung froks 120BHP
BikePics page-
http://www.bikepics.com/members/zxr400rene/
tail tidy, polished bits, custom paint job, k&n, dynojet, Full akropovik, down geared, GSXR calipers, hel brake lines front and rear & clutch line, maxtron resprung froks 120BHP
BikePics page-
http://www.bikepics.com/members/zxr400rene/
- deviant
- zxr400 oc member

- Posts: 1352
- Joined: Thu Jun 02, 2005 9:50 am
- My Bike: ZXR400 L3
- Location: Nottingham, UK
- Contact:
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
the GPZ being the original Kwak "Ninja" sports bike...rene wrote:gpz was actualy built as a sports bike, so was the origanal FJ1200's just over time are ideas of what sports bikes are have changed. Back in the day road sports bikes were built for road riding with some sports-e-nuss to them, now people think if it dosent look like a GP bike then it wont be able to go round country lanes. Marketing is an amazing thing
In the garage:
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
- Gemini
- cloning technology

- Posts: 1323
- Joined: Fri Nov 15, 2002 1:57 pm
- My Bike: CBR1000RR4 Fireblade
- Location: Shrewley, Warwickshire
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
i think if i needed a bike to commute on i think i would get a shaft driven bmw
gem
gem
There's No Explanation For The Way I'm About To Behave!!!
- deviant
- zxr400 oc member

- Posts: 1352
- Joined: Thu Jun 02, 2005 9:50 am
- My Bike: ZXR400 L3
- Location: Nottingham, UK
- Contact:
Re: Commuting on a ZXR400
depends how far/where you are commuting...a few miles in town in rush hour and I bet you'd be faster on a £200 CG125 than on £10k of three foot wide BMW boxer twin....
...course you'd be buggered at the first bit of motorway.
...course you'd be buggered at the first bit of motorway.
In the garage:
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
Kawasaki ZXR400 L3 - shiny
Suzuki DR800 - bouncy
1978 Suzuki GS400 - PROJECT RETRO RACER!
Kawasaki GPz500S - for sale soon
Honda CG125 BR-J - in bits
