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The front brakes consist of
296mm discs clamped by powerful six-piston calipers. Out back a 220mm rear
rotor is employed. The brakes have great bite with no fade. I have heard
people say that the brakes are too powerful. The fact is with a bike capable of the
sort of speed the ZX-9R can get to - the more brakes the better as far as I am concerned.
Clutch take-up is good and progressive.
The gearbox is very smooth, only giving a false neutral when you are bit too limp
with your shifts.
Instrumentation is quite good - an
electronic speedometer/odometer is driven by sensors located on the countershaft sprocket
nut (so you know how fast your wheelies are), electric tachometer, LCD clock (oh yeah !),
odometer, trip meter, and coolant temperature gauge with LED warning light.
On the more practical side of things the
Ninja has nylon bungee straps attached under the pillion seat (see left).
Simply remove the pillion seat and poke the
straps over the fairing and re-install the seat. Now you have 4 perfectly adequate
tie-down points for your swag etc. No need to worry about taping the bodywork up at
the sides to protect them from rubbing.
However if you are carrying anything at
speed, and what you have used to tie your gear to the straps can stretch... It does pay to
put a piece of tape on the paint-work just behind the pillion seat in case of rubbing as
your load moves backwards.
The Ninja is also quite comfortable, I would
say it is nearly as accommodating in this respect as a
VFR for the rider. Pillion's are not so well catered for but
still not too badly done by when compared to other sportsbikes.
The tank range is very good. I ran it
dry at 321 kilometres but have heard reports of people getting 350 kilometres out of a
tank on long stretches. The advertised tank capacity is 19 litres, however this
figure is closer to twenty, after switching to reserve you have about 50 kilometres to
find fuel. Normally hard riding will see you get around 200 kilometres from the tank
however if you really get stuck into it the tank can be drained in as little as 140
kilometres.
Quality of finish is quite good. The
fairing below the screen seems very resistant to stone chipping (much more so than the
VFR).
The Ninja is great on the road and no doubt
one of the fastest road-burners on the market, but it would not make a great track
tool. The 600 set, Blade and R1 are
faster on the track. Road riding is of course a different matter and the tides turn
in favour of the ZX-9R. Where do you ride most ?
The C-2 tested here has now been superseded
by the new E1, (which has slightly better
suspension). Thus the C-2 is now on the second-hand market and can be picked up
fairly cheaply.
The model pictured here is a blue '99 model
with corresponding graphics, personally I feel that the '98 model in blue is the pick of
the bunch in the looks department, but of course that is all up to the individual.
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