MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
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MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
https://www.motorcyclenews.com/bike-rev ... 2-se/2021/
I know we have one of these on the forum so thought i'd chuck it in here for chat too
This is the Kawasaki Z H2 SE and it’s quite possibly the best bike in Kawasaki’s range. It’s also positive proof that you can have a bike with the performance to turn your brain into scrambled egg without having to tolerate a track-focused chassis or unfriendly ergonomics.
Latest news: Kawasaki Z H2 SE unveiled
Any bike fitted with a supercharger is clearly A Very Good Thing Indeed. You can keep all your adjustable riding modes, pretty colour screens and light-up whatnots. For me, nothing equals the thrill of forced induction, from the chirping, whistling and whooshing Star Wars soundtrack to the phenomenal throttle response and unparalleled midrange drive.
Anyone who’s sampled Kawasaki’s supercharged Z H2 will know exactly where I’m coming from; the boosted 197bhp inline four stuffs your belly with butterflies from the moment the garage door swings open.
At £16,050 on the road the standard Z H2 is not flawless, though. Despite being eerily smooth, a doddle to ride, nicely screwed together and bristling with of-the-moment tech, the big naked is let down by its suspension. Or to be precise, the rear shock. Things are tickety-boo in normal riding, but tramp on and the shock stands out as the weak link in Kawasaki’s otherwise high-class chain.
Which is why the SE version features electronic semi-active suspension. Also boasting one-piece Brembo brake calipers swiped off the faired H2, it’s available only in wondrously sparkly Golden Blazed Green and Metallic Diablo Black, and it sets you back £18,500 ready to play.
I already rate the regular Z H2; I’ll take proper engineering over gizmos any day, and its supercharged engine is a modern marvel. And in SE form it’s better still. With improved suspension action, ride quality and, crucially, handling prowess when pushed, Kawasaki have fixed the only real flaw with their blown naked.
What the Z H2 SE isn’t is a ‘pure’ super naked like a Ducati Streetfighter V4 S or Aprilia Tuono V4 Factory. It isn’t based on a superbike, doesn’t have a hard focus and still hasn’t the outright handling potential of these racier rivals.
But what these rivals don’t do is offer the Kawasaki’s sense of luxury, day-to-day usability or, of course, it’s astonishing and addictive supercharged engine. The SE is a road bike for road riders, and the way it delivers smooth, comfy progress punctuated by hilarious spurts of shocking acceleration is of far more use than chassis feel around Misano. And when I do want to crack on it has as much handling as I’ll ever use on the road.
Like the cooking version, the Z H2 SE is easy to ride and accommodating. Its chassis rolls and turns with fluidity (once the front tyre is up to temperature, before which the steering drops in a touch like an old Z1000SX), and it’s friendly and pleasingly usable.
The SE retains the secure and inspiring feel of the less expensive version on wide, fast A-roads too, sweeping cleanly through turns. Where it differs is in ride quality. While not quite as plush as the sports touring H2 SX SE, the semi-active Showa forks and shock give the upgraded naked a slightly more supple ride; you sense the superior damping.
And the difference is pronounced on dancing B-roads and bumpy backlanes, the SE dealing with imperfections and retaining its poise and steering accuracy where the regular Z H2’s rear end becomes crashy and the handling a little vague.
They call it KECS, or Kawasaki Electronic Control Suspension. It’s a Skyhook system with chassis position continually referenced to an imaginary point above the bike. Damping changes are made using data on wheel travel, road speed, acceleration and braking.
Suspension settings are tied to three riding modes – Sport, Road and Rain. The SE is noticeably firmer in Sport, the chassis gathering itself ready to get down for business, while Rain mode puts it at its softest. Road, predictably, is where the handling has the best all-round feel and behaviour.
Any difference from the uprated front brake calipers is harder to detect, but this doesn’t matter as there’s certainly no shortage of bite or stopping power.
The merest hint of gas and, seemingly in any gear and at any revs, the supercharged 998cc inline four instantly turns your surroundings into a smeared blur. Its midrange response and dimension-shifting thrust are unequalled, the Zed wasting everything with each whoop-inducing taste of forced induction torque. The rush is so addictive…
Yet despite this nuclear potential the blown motor is super-smooth and extremely well-mannered. The abrupt fuelling step that plagued the first H2 is nothing but a fading memory, the twistgrip on the Z H2 SE delivery predictable response, and the engine is a pussy cat in town and whirrs soothingly on a motorway.
Dawdling gets decent economy, but normal use sees consumption in the low 30s to a gallon – but you’ll forgive iffy fuel figures every time the blower supplies boost.
The gearbox is light and features ratios that extract the most from the engine in road conditions, rather than being configured for hot laps of a track you’re never going to visit. A two-way quickshifter gives clutchless upshifts and downshifts anywhere above 2500rpm.
It’s not the slickest system – the action is fine, but unless you’re riding briskly the shift feels a tad too long in the lower half of the revs. Doesn’t stop you using it all the time, though.
It’s quite a classy thing, the Z H2. And it feels more sumptuous in SE form with its spangly green paint and suspension with wires dangling out. Switchgear feels good quality and works well, the colour dash is easy to read and loaded with data, and the finish gives a sense of quality, especially with the Kawasaki River Mark badge proudly sat on the nose. Ooh, special.
There are one or two cheap looking fasteners, and owners of Z H2s report that some chassis parts are prone to corrosion if not smothered in ACF-50 or similar. One or two riders reckon the paint is a bit thin too, but the overriding opinion is that the Zed is well made. No concerns over the dependability of the supercharged motor, either.
Eighteen-and-a-half bags of sand is a lot of money. It’s the same as Aprilia's exotic Tuono V4 Factory and nearly £3000 more than KTM’s benchmark super naked, the 1290 Super Duke R.
The same outlay could also get you Ducati’s fabulously capable Multistrada V4 all-rounder, or Suzuki’s new Hayabusa with two thousand left over to pay for speeding fines.
The Kawasaki is up there on value, though. First, it’s got just as many whizzbang trinkets and glimmering features, and quality is on the money. Second, this green torquemonster is every bit as exciting as the super-naked opposition but also friendly, easy to use and practical in a way that others aren’t. And third, despite other Kawasakis being a little prone to depreciation the H2 models have pleasing residuals.
But fourth, and most importantly, the Z H2 SE is fitted with a supercharger – and so wins hands-down every time.
Every widget, toy and gizmo box has a big, fat, green tick in it. As well as the new semi-active suspension, the SE is adorned with cornering ABS and traction control, cruise, a two-way quickshifter, colour TFT display showing a myriad of data, phone connectivity, LED lighting… oh, and of course a supercharger.
There’s also a high-quality two-tone perch, that deep sparkly metallic paint, and a neat ‘Z’ shape to the front brake caliper mounts. This last feature might be purely accidental, but it looks cool all the same.
I know we have one of these on the forum so thought i'd chuck it in here for chat too
This is the Kawasaki Z H2 SE and it’s quite possibly the best bike in Kawasaki’s range. It’s also positive proof that you can have a bike with the performance to turn your brain into scrambled egg without having to tolerate a track-focused chassis or unfriendly ergonomics.
Latest news: Kawasaki Z H2 SE unveiled
Any bike fitted with a supercharger is clearly A Very Good Thing Indeed. You can keep all your adjustable riding modes, pretty colour screens and light-up whatnots. For me, nothing equals the thrill of forced induction, from the chirping, whistling and whooshing Star Wars soundtrack to the phenomenal throttle response and unparalleled midrange drive.
Anyone who’s sampled Kawasaki’s supercharged Z H2 will know exactly where I’m coming from; the boosted 197bhp inline four stuffs your belly with butterflies from the moment the garage door swings open.
At £16,050 on the road the standard Z H2 is not flawless, though. Despite being eerily smooth, a doddle to ride, nicely screwed together and bristling with of-the-moment tech, the big naked is let down by its suspension. Or to be precise, the rear shock. Things are tickety-boo in normal riding, but tramp on and the shock stands out as the weak link in Kawasaki’s otherwise high-class chain.
Which is why the SE version features electronic semi-active suspension. Also boasting one-piece Brembo brake calipers swiped off the faired H2, it’s available only in wondrously sparkly Golden Blazed Green and Metallic Diablo Black, and it sets you back £18,500 ready to play.
I already rate the regular Z H2; I’ll take proper engineering over gizmos any day, and its supercharged engine is a modern marvel. And in SE form it’s better still. With improved suspension action, ride quality and, crucially, handling prowess when pushed, Kawasaki have fixed the only real flaw with their blown naked.
What the Z H2 SE isn’t is a ‘pure’ super naked like a Ducati Streetfighter V4 S or Aprilia Tuono V4 Factory. It isn’t based on a superbike, doesn’t have a hard focus and still hasn’t the outright handling potential of these racier rivals.
But what these rivals don’t do is offer the Kawasaki’s sense of luxury, day-to-day usability or, of course, it’s astonishing and addictive supercharged engine. The SE is a road bike for road riders, and the way it delivers smooth, comfy progress punctuated by hilarious spurts of shocking acceleration is of far more use than chassis feel around Misano. And when I do want to crack on it has as much handling as I’ll ever use on the road.
Like the cooking version, the Z H2 SE is easy to ride and accommodating. Its chassis rolls and turns with fluidity (once the front tyre is up to temperature, before which the steering drops in a touch like an old Z1000SX), and it’s friendly and pleasingly usable.
The SE retains the secure and inspiring feel of the less expensive version on wide, fast A-roads too, sweeping cleanly through turns. Where it differs is in ride quality. While not quite as plush as the sports touring H2 SX SE, the semi-active Showa forks and shock give the upgraded naked a slightly more supple ride; you sense the superior damping.
And the difference is pronounced on dancing B-roads and bumpy backlanes, the SE dealing with imperfections and retaining its poise and steering accuracy where the regular Z H2’s rear end becomes crashy and the handling a little vague.
They call it KECS, or Kawasaki Electronic Control Suspension. It’s a Skyhook system with chassis position continually referenced to an imaginary point above the bike. Damping changes are made using data on wheel travel, road speed, acceleration and braking.
Suspension settings are tied to three riding modes – Sport, Road and Rain. The SE is noticeably firmer in Sport, the chassis gathering itself ready to get down for business, while Rain mode puts it at its softest. Road, predictably, is where the handling has the best all-round feel and behaviour.
Any difference from the uprated front brake calipers is harder to detect, but this doesn’t matter as there’s certainly no shortage of bite or stopping power.
The merest hint of gas and, seemingly in any gear and at any revs, the supercharged 998cc inline four instantly turns your surroundings into a smeared blur. Its midrange response and dimension-shifting thrust are unequalled, the Zed wasting everything with each whoop-inducing taste of forced induction torque. The rush is so addictive…
Yet despite this nuclear potential the blown motor is super-smooth and extremely well-mannered. The abrupt fuelling step that plagued the first H2 is nothing but a fading memory, the twistgrip on the Z H2 SE delivery predictable response, and the engine is a pussy cat in town and whirrs soothingly on a motorway.
Dawdling gets decent economy, but normal use sees consumption in the low 30s to a gallon – but you’ll forgive iffy fuel figures every time the blower supplies boost.
The gearbox is light and features ratios that extract the most from the engine in road conditions, rather than being configured for hot laps of a track you’re never going to visit. A two-way quickshifter gives clutchless upshifts and downshifts anywhere above 2500rpm.
It’s not the slickest system – the action is fine, but unless you’re riding briskly the shift feels a tad too long in the lower half of the revs. Doesn’t stop you using it all the time, though.
It’s quite a classy thing, the Z H2. And it feels more sumptuous in SE form with its spangly green paint and suspension with wires dangling out. Switchgear feels good quality and works well, the colour dash is easy to read and loaded with data, and the finish gives a sense of quality, especially with the Kawasaki River Mark badge proudly sat on the nose. Ooh, special.
There are one or two cheap looking fasteners, and owners of Z H2s report that some chassis parts are prone to corrosion if not smothered in ACF-50 or similar. One or two riders reckon the paint is a bit thin too, but the overriding opinion is that the Zed is well made. No concerns over the dependability of the supercharged motor, either.
Eighteen-and-a-half bags of sand is a lot of money. It’s the same as Aprilia's exotic Tuono V4 Factory and nearly £3000 more than KTM’s benchmark super naked, the 1290 Super Duke R.
The same outlay could also get you Ducati’s fabulously capable Multistrada V4 all-rounder, or Suzuki’s new Hayabusa with two thousand left over to pay for speeding fines.
The Kawasaki is up there on value, though. First, it’s got just as many whizzbang trinkets and glimmering features, and quality is on the money. Second, this green torquemonster is every bit as exciting as the super-naked opposition but also friendly, easy to use and practical in a way that others aren’t. And third, despite other Kawasakis being a little prone to depreciation the H2 models have pleasing residuals.
But fourth, and most importantly, the Z H2 SE is fitted with a supercharger – and so wins hands-down every time.
Every widget, toy and gizmo box has a big, fat, green tick in it. As well as the new semi-active suspension, the SE is adorned with cornering ABS and traction control, cruise, a two-way quickshifter, colour TFT display showing a myriad of data, phone connectivity, LED lighting… oh, and of course a supercharger.
There’s also a high-quality two-tone perch, that deep sparkly metallic paint, and a neat ‘Z’ shape to the front brake caliper mounts. This last feature might be purely accidental, but it looks cool all the same.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
No they haven't.weeksy wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 8:01 am I already rate the regular Z H2; I’ll take proper engineering over gizmos any day, and its supercharged engine is a modern marvel. And in SE form it’s better still. With improved suspension action, ride quality and, crucially, handling prowess when pushed, Kawasaki have fixed the only real flaw with their blown naked.
The reviewer obviously hasn't consulted with his assistance dog.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
I hope we start getting supercharged small bikes. Nowadays you get small 1 litre turbo cars that have really good instant poke. My brother has a 1.4t Octavia and despite being the size of a small house it really goes rather nicely. A lightweight 400cc bike with a 100 horses and instant torque sounds quite nice.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
YOu were in my dream last night ! Buying some absolute POS Ducati Monster.... i made you not buy itSupermofo wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:32 am I hope we start getting supercharged small bikes. Nowadays you get small 1 litre turbo cars that have really good instant poke. My brother has a 1.4t Octavia and despite being the size of a small house it really goes rather nicely. A lightweight 400cc bike with a 100 horses and instant torque sounds quite nice.
Weird.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
Sounds like I had a lucky escape Although TBF that situation is never gonna happen! A GSXS750 maybe but not a POS Monster.weeksy wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:38 amYOu were in my dream last night ! Buying some absolute POS Ducati Monster.... i made you not buy itSupermofo wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:32 am I hope we start getting supercharged small bikes. Nowadays you get small 1 litre turbo cars that have really good instant poke. My brother has a 1.4t Octavia and despite being the size of a small house it really goes rather nicely. A lightweight 400cc bike with a 100 horses and instant torque sounds quite nice.
Weird.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
Me too- exactly this.Supermofo wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:32 am I hope we start getting supercharged small bikes. Nowadays you get small 1 litre turbo cars that have really good instant poke. My brother has a 1.4t Octavia and despite being the size of a small house it really goes rather nicely. A lightweight 400cc bike with a 100 horses and instant torque sounds quite nice.
I'd be first in the queue for a 100hp RC390 or 300 Ninja
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
I can see me getting the belly pan in green and a few of the other green accent parts and yes the rear shock isn’t the greatest on a stock ZH2.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
I'm not really interested in very rapid bikes for all sorts of reasons, so a bike sold on a performance edge leaves me pretty cold.
It's pretty fecking ugly though isn't it? Those metallic green accents are awful
It's pretty fecking ugly though isn't it? Those metallic green accents are awful
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
The looks are always going to be a conversation piece,but whether you think it's ugly or not,I like the fact it looks different. Remember the days when you could name a bike from it's silhouette? I do. For most bikes now,if you took off the brand badge,they could be any marque.
Kawasaki have made a supremely useable bike here,it's very fast if you want and very docile and traffic friendly if you want. No peakiness or lack of grunt normally associated with a high performance engine,it's a big pussycat until you grab a handful past 8k,that's a rush!
I've never owned a Kawasaki that didn't need/benefit from an aftermarket rear shock and sometimes fork work too. Probably the ZXR750 was the only stock bike with a great front end,for it's time.
If I was to buy a ZH2,I'd go for the non active suspension and use the money I saved to spend on suspenders.
Once you lose the stock can,it tidies the looks up dramatically.
Two things I disliked about the bike,one is the weight and the other is the eyewatering cost of replacing the fuel pump as part of the 'big' service. Kawasaki needs to do better on those two things. I reckon you'd get a ZH2 at good money if the mileage is approaching the main service.
I greatly enjoyed the time I spent on the demo bike last year. If I hadn't already bought my own Zed,I may have stumped up the extra cash for the ZH2.
Kawasaki have made a supremely useable bike here,it's very fast if you want and very docile and traffic friendly if you want. No peakiness or lack of grunt normally associated with a high performance engine,it's a big pussycat until you grab a handful past 8k,that's a rush!
I've never owned a Kawasaki that didn't need/benefit from an aftermarket rear shock and sometimes fork work too. Probably the ZXR750 was the only stock bike with a great front end,for it's time.
If I was to buy a ZH2,I'd go for the non active suspension and use the money I saved to spend on suspenders.
Once you lose the stock can,it tidies the looks up dramatically.
Two things I disliked about the bike,one is the weight and the other is the eyewatering cost of replacing the fuel pump as part of the 'big' service. Kawasaki needs to do better on those two things. I reckon you'd get a ZH2 at good money if the mileage is approaching the main service.
I greatly enjoyed the time I spent on the demo bike last year. If I hadn't already bought my own Zed,I may have stumped up the extra cash for the ZH2.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
How spendy is the fuel pump and when does it need changing?
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
I'm not positive,but I think it's around the 25k mark. Price is somewhere north of a grand.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 4:06 pm How spendy is the fuel pump and when does it need changing?
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
You could buy a whole new bike for that!!!Skub wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 4:21 pmI'm not positive,but I think it's around the 25k mark.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 4:06 pm How spendy is the fuel pump and when does it need changing?
EDIT:
D'oh you edited it!
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
I'm a slow reader!
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
Is it made of unicorn bones or something? The place I worked for built a 600bhp Evo and the fuel pump was something like 135 quid and flowed 450 LPHSkub wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 4:21 pmI'm not positive,but I think it's around the 25k mark. Price is somewhere north of a grand.KungFooBob wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 4:06 pm How spendy is the fuel pump and when does it need changing?
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
The problem will be getting a turbo small enough that that a 400 will spool up quick enough, a supercharger won't have the problem but it'll be heavier, less efficient and more complicated. I'd love to see wee tiny turbos for bikes.Supermofo wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:32 am I hope we start getting supercharged small bikes. Nowadays you get small 1 litre turbo cars that have really good instant poke. My brother has a 1.4t Octavia and despite being the size of a small house it really goes rather nicely. A lightweight 400cc bike with a 100 horses and instant torque sounds quite nice.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
Bigjawa wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 8:08 pmThe problem will be getting a turbo small enough that that a 400 will spool up quick enough, a supercharger won't have the problem but it'll be heavier, less efficient and more complicated. I'd love to see wee tiny turbos for bikes.Supermofo wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:32 am I hope we start getting supercharged small bikes. Nowadays you get small 1 litre turbo cars that have really good instant poke. My brother has a 1.4t Octavia and despite being the size of a small house it really goes rather nicely. A lightweight 400cc bike with a 100 horses and instant torque sounds quite nice.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
I like the look of it, I like the fact that it is alleged to be a pussycat to ride slowly, but I really cannot see the point of a naked bike with a top speed of 166 mph. I have no objection to the speed, but if it goes much over 100 - 110 mph I want a fairing and screen please. It is also too heavy and probably too tall for my personal comfort, and waaaay too expensive.
100 bhp in a small light 400 would be much better.
100 bhp in a small light 400 would be much better.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
Amen brotherCousin Jack wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 8:15 pm I like the look of it, I like the fact that it is alleged to be a pussycat to ride slowly, but I really cannot see the point of a naked bike with a top speed of 166 mph. I have no objection to the speed, but if it goes much over 100 - 110 mph I want a fairing and screen please.
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Re: MCN KAWASAKI Z H2 SE (2021 - on) Review
I like the idea of 100 bhp in a small light 400 too,but bikes aren't always about what's sensible or practical,so it's cool to have options.Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 8:15 pm I like the look of it, I like the fact that it is alleged to be a pussycat to ride slowly, but I really cannot see the point of a naked bike with a top speed of 166 mph. I have no objection to the speed, but if it goes much over 100 - 110 mph I want a fairing and screen please. It is also too heavy and probably too tall for my personal comfort, and waaaay too expensive.
100 bhp in a small light 400 would be much better.
Silly bhp with a naked bike means you can hit a big number sometimes,but then say to yourself,"I'm not doing that again for a while".
It keeps me half sensible on the road.
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