- Kawasaki is working on a small capacity four-cylinder motorcycle called the Ninja ZX25R.
- Reports suggest Kawasaki already has a 250cc four-cylinder prototype running at their Indonesia facility.
- The new 250cc bike is likely to make its debut later this year.
Kawasaki is reportedly working on a small-capacity motorcycle for Asian markets. According to reports online, the new bike will be powered by a 250cc in-line four-cylinder powerplant. It바카라™s also rumoured that Kawasaki already has a running prototype of the bike at its Indonesia facility and it바카라™s likely to be called the Ninja ZX25R.
Speculations are rife that this will be a high-performance motor and will develop close to 50PS of peak power. That's substantially higher than the twin-cylinder Ninja 300바카라™s 39PS output, and even the larger Ninja 400 whose twin-cylinder powerplant makes 49PS. We expect this bike to be more of an entry-level supersport tuned for the racetrack and accordingly get a sportier bodywork and ergonomics. In fact, the ZX25R prototype spotted in Kawasaki바카라™s Indonesia factory had a race exhaust, which could mean Kawasaki is keen to make a track-worthy entry-level motorcycle.
This new bike is expected to have the larger Ninja H2바카라™s design language and have proper premium features like LED headlamps, digital instrument console and even ride-by-wire. The suspension too is expected to be updated in the form of upside-down forks and a linked monoshock.
We can expect Kawasaki to debut the ZX25R at the Tokyo Motor Show later this year and launch it in Japan and South Asian markets early next year. Â
Given the four-cylinder motor바카라™s high manufacturing costs and high-spec parts, the bike is expected to cost close to the Kawasaki Ninja 400, which is sold in India along with the twin-cylinder Ninja 300. That would make it really difficult for Kawasaki to position the ZX-25R here. However given us Indian enthusiasts바카라™ penchant for four-cylinder motorcycles, an entry-level inline-four sportsbike around the Rs 4 lakh mark might just work.
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Source:Â