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CB500 or ZZR400

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Remoulay
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PostPosted: 09:13 - 26 May 2015    Post subject: CB500 or ZZR400 Reply with quote

This will be my first big bike after my Van Van.

I'm looking at a 1991 Kawasaki ZZR400 and a 1995 Honda CB500. Both done under 25k miles and for some reason the insurance is reasonable (only on third party, of course.) Both under a grand.

I don't do a lot of commuting if any, as I live 10 minutes ride from uni and 30 mins from Saturday job. Only thing is, next year I might be frequently travelling from SW London to Northampton and back. Not every day, potentially a few times a month.

Anyone have any personal experience with either, in particular the ZZR? Seat height is low but it's a bit heavy apparently (400 engine in the 600 frame...?)

Thanks Very Happy
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Eddie Hitler
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PostPosted: 09:20 - 26 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

CB500 all day long.
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DrSnoosnoo
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PostPosted: 09:26 - 26 May 2015    Post subject: Re: CB500 or ZZR400 Reply with quote

Remoulay wrote:
Anyone have any personal experience with either, in particular the ZZR? Seat height is low but it's a bit heavy apparently (400 engine in the 600 frame...?)

Thanks Very Happy


Don't take this as gospel but some of the ZZR lot would argue it is the very same engine as the 600 for the 400 K or N is the same as the D or E because many people have found the parts are identical.

In my case, I found a 400N oil sump fitted my 600E but it didn't have the oil cooler pipes.

To answer the question though, I'd go for the CB500. They are well known, sturdy reliable bikes. The ZZR will probably be good too but I'd have thunk the CB would be "better". I'm a big ZZR fan too.
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wr6133
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PostPosted: 09:59 - 26 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I own a 1991 ZZR400 (and a 92 in bits).

https://i1249.photobucket.com/albums/hh504/wr6133/LPIC5295_zpsxhl7pruc.jpg

The 400K is a 600D, engine is downsleeved and minus oil cooler.

Did 240 miles on mine 2 up yesterday in comfort. It's an all day comfy ride. The 400 lump is fun if you like a revvy bike that requires a bit of thought while riding but can be spanked without putting your licence in a shredder. It is a heavy bugger (210kg wet) but once moving you don't notice. My wife is just shy of 5'4" and weighs around a grain, she can man handle it without issue.

Parts and consumables are widely available so they are not an issue. Replacing fairings though can be a pain so if the one you are looking at has mashed plastics it better be cheap.

MPG, varies massively on how you ride it. Currently I have a smaller front and bigger rear sprocket and tend to redline it all the time so I'm seeing mid 40's. When I had a bigger front and smaller rear and rode it sensibly in the winter I could get mid 50's (upper 50's on motorways if I just cruised along).

Chewing up motorway miles it is great, comfortable, fairing shelters you reasonably well and you can strap half a metric fuck ton of crap to the pillion seat. Its weak spot compared to the other 400's is tearing up smaller roads, CBR400's and the like out corner it.

Due to it being a downsleeved 600D you can quite easily swap a 600 lump in to it should the desire arise.
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Remoulay
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Joined: 20 Sep 2014
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PostPosted: 08:35 - 28 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Update...

Matching Very Happy Very Happy Very Happy !

https://i844.photobucket.com/albums/ab5/billyjeans1/IMG_3643_zpsidqxwjjq.jpg

It's been well looked after and I'm not so worried about finding parts for it now (thanks for advice). Price was great, chucked in a new battery too! I rode it around for a bit and felt comfortable, boyfriend gave it the Thumbs Up , so why not.

But those Michelin man stickers are coming off straight away...
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DrSnoosnoo
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PostPosted: 08:42 - 28 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Remoulay wrote:
Update...

Matching Very Happy Very Happy Very Happy !

It's been well looked after and I'm not so worried about finding parts for it now (thanks for advice). Price was great, chucked in a new battery too! I rode it around for a bit and felt comfortable, boyfriend gave it the Thumbs Up , so why not.

But those Michelin man stickers are coming off straight away...


Looks clean but why did it need a new battery? I'd get a voltmeter and check charging voltages for peace of mind.

That one looks like the corresponding 400 (K, IIRC) to the 600D so if you need parts, that's what you can look towards.

Keep on top of cleaning those tokicos to maintain good braking, I didn't like mine, probably because I was being a bit lazy with cleaning.
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Remoulay
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PostPosted: 08:59 - 28 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

He said that when he was starting it up the previous morning it was straining a little bit. He thought that wasn't a good state to be selling it so bought a new one and fitted it. Will do Thumbs Up also, the guy who sold it to me has been a mechanic for his whole life (mostly does Harleys as you can see in pic) so I did get the feeling I could trust his judgement.

You didn't like the bike or the brakes Laughing ? How often do you suggest cleaning them then?
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wr6133
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PostPosted: 09:30 - 28 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

That looks pretty clean Thumbs Up

Do you know if the JDM restriction has been bypassed? If it hasn't top gear will restrict at 10k RPM (something like 112MPH). You can bypass it by adding a resistor to I think the pink CDI wire (look at zzr international for instructions) or if you don't want to snip wires just swap the CDI for one from a 600D.

The Tokico front callipers are notoriously poo. If you keep them clean they are ok but in winter if you rack up lots of miles that can mean weekly blasting out with brake cleaner and monthly cleaning the pistons. They can also be a bit fiddly to bleed properly. Looked after they do work fine but lots like to swap them for Nissins which require less maintaining.

ZZR International is pretty much the font of all knowledge for these bikes, if you can't find information relating specifically to the 400K just remember other than the engine it is a 600D.
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DrSnoosnoo
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PostPosted: 10:57 - 28 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Remoulay wrote:
You didn't like the bike or the brakes Laughing ? How often do you suggest cleaning them then?


I've got the 600E but they share the same brakes, it's the brakes I didn't like. The bleeding of those tokicos is notoriously ballachey
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Did have: '95 ZZR600 '83 CG125 '97 ZZR1100 '15 Hypermotard 821 SP Do Have: '10 ZX10R
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 11:29 - 28 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I did the brembo brake on Mrs stinkwheels CB500 last weekend (strip and cleancalliper, new seals fitted.

Filled them from the bottom nipple with a big syringe and nipped it up. That was it. Three pulls on the lever and had immediate, firm pressure. No further bleeding required. 2 minute job.
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I did the 2010 Round Britain Rally on my 350 Bullet. 89 landmarks, 3 months, 9,500 miles.
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RhynoCZ
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PostPosted: 12:13 - 28 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I want to say the ZZR, because of the in-line four cylinder engine and it is a Kawasaki, but I'm afraid the CB 500 is the sensible choice here. Thumbs Up

I wouldn't go for the '95, I'd go for something rather later, with Brembo calipers on both wheels and 44 kW engine, but it's up to you. My mate had a '98 model, not a bad motorcycle, a bit boring if you asked me, but the build quality and reliability was superior to anything I've ever owned. Plus, there are tons of spare parts. Thumbs Up
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stevo as b4
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PostPosted: 16:15 - 28 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

You make it sound like an in line 4pot is the only engine worth having in a bike though???

Also I too am a Kawasaki fanboi, but they don't automatically make the best Jap bikes in every category, none of the big four do IMO. You'd need to mix and match every manufacturer to get the best regarded bike in each class.

I would have voted CB500, they are a good bike and also better than a neglected Fazer at the same money too.
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RhynoCZ
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PostPosted: 21:50 - 28 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

stevo as b4 wrote:
You make it sound like an in line 4pot is the only engine worth having in a bike though???

Well it's not that, but yes. Thumbs Up Laughing
If the motorcycle is interesting enough, engineering or historical wise, then I don't mind a in-line twin cylinder. But I prefer 1, 3, 4 or 6 cylinders in the row, rather than a twin. Not that I've ever been on a 6 cylinder, but one can dream. I've got my to buy bike list, there are some twin cylinders, but not many. Twins from my list: CZ 250/471; RGV 250 Gamma; R45/65, VTR SP01/02. Other bikes on the list are in-line fours, V4, two singles and Z1300 is also on my list, but that will never happen. Not a single triple on my list, but I am quite tempted to get a 955i, at some point.

I made the list when I got the '88 GPz. I'm always willing to have a look and eventually buy any motorcycle, if I find it interesting enough and the price is right.

stevo as b4 wrote:
Also I too am a Kawasaki fanboi, but they don't automatically make the best Jap bikes in every category, none of the big four do IMO. You'd need to mix and match every manufacturer to get the best regarded bike in each class.

Kawasaki was never the best, might have been the fastest but never the best. If you want the best, buy a Honda. Thumbs Up
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Aspire2
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PostPosted: 22:43 - 30 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I would vote cb500 but that zzr looks nice. cb500 is a very underrated bike keep it spinning and it goes well and only loses out on fast a roads/motorways. When things tighten up cb500 can hang with the big boys. I noticed on mine I can out ride some people on 600's because the cb500 is very manageable and forgiving, people jump on 600's to quickly IMO and miss out a learning curve the little bikes offer.
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Casper
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PostPosted: 22:51 - 30 May 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

It does look nice but i would have bought neither. ZZR due to parts availability. Yes you can fin/get them but not as fast as a more mainstream bike i would say. CB500 i like but i think the GPZ500 is a far better bike and very underrated. I have seen nice ones with no MOT pass hands at 400 quid. Great on fuel, No slug when wound up and great wee sports tourer. Whats not to like.
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Motorhate
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PostPosted: 09:48 - 02 Jun 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

CB500 all day long. Stick a racing stubby exhaust on the end and you have a great bike. I loved mine but recently sold it for just under 100 quid less than what I bought for it. Great engines too and as along as you change the oil every 4-5000 miles you won't go much wrong.
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trevor saxe-coburg-gotha
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PostPosted: 12:27 - 02 Jun 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I would've said 500 too, fwiw - but mainly because it's naked and will stand more of a dropping. Otherwise there probably isn't that much in it - although the honda is legendarily unkillable. Which appeals.
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