Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

1981 Kawasaki Kz750 Low Miles $1500 Obo on 2040-motos

$1,500
YearYear:0 MileageMileage:11
Location:

Phoenix, Arizona

Phoenix, AZ
QR code

Kawasaki Other description

12th street at Thomas Less than 11k miles, been garaged most of its life, some aesthetic damage (Seat is wearing out a little, some scratches, and front right turn signal is busted) but overall in good condition. Just had a new regulator and battery put in, runs good. Has been a great commuter bike but am moving and cannot take with me. $1500 gets you the bike and a motorcycle jacket and two helmets and any gloves i can find. Clear title on hand, can show the bike anytime from Sunrise-Sunset any day of week as long as you give notice, you can test drive as long as you leave a $1500 alarm deposit. Text works best or email

Moto blog

Kawasaki Sponsoring World Superbike Viewing Party May 26 At Dainese D-Store Orange County

Mon, 20 May 2013

If you’re a motorcycle racing fan in Southern California, be sure to come to the Dainese D-Store Orange County on May 26 to watch the World Superbike races from Donington Park on the D-Store’s giant 9-foot TV screen. Kawasaki will be sponsoring the event and will be bringing former factory racebikes to display.   You’ll also get the chance to chat with former Kawasaki factory AMA race tuner Joey Lombardo, and get your photo taken with Kawasaki racebikes, complete with umbrella girls!

2014 AMA Supercross – Houston Results

Tue, 08 Apr 2014

Ryan Villopoto ran mostly unchallenged for his fourth win of the 2014 AMA Supercross season, taking advantage of an early spill by Ryan Dungey. The win strengthens Villopoto’s hold on the points lead as the Kawasaki rider seeks his fourth-consecutive championship. Villopoto took the holeshot in the Houston main event and never looked back, leading all 20 laps for the win.

Kawasaki J Electric Three-Wheeler Concept Revealed in Tokyo

Wed, 20 Nov 2013

Kawasaki revealed a new concept at the Tokyo Motor Show that appears to combine a rowing machine, a Tron Lightcycle and Yamaha‘s Tesseract leaning four-wheeler concept. Dubbed the Kawasaki J, the concept vehicle is an electric-powered three-wheeler that can change its shape to suit either a sportier or a more comfortable riding position. Instead of handlebars, the rider grabs a pair of hand grips that each connect directly to one of the two front wheels via two long levers.