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16 inch rear tire
- geobass
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- 75 Z1-B
I know that they originally had 18 inch tires but I think somewhere along the line an owner wanted an LTD. I am of short nature myself but wondering of the shortcomings from a smaller diameter wheel.
I would also like to know what sprockets would have been original and if it is possible to get the final drive ratio with different sprockets. If at all feasible.
Thanks
George
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- elfmagic17
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Kenny
Kenny Hicks
74 Honda CB550
75 Honda CB360 (runs and rides good but not a show bike)
77 KZ650B1 (Runs Great, but needs painted and a little work.)
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- RonKZ650
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321,000 miles on KZ's that I can remember. Not going to see any more.
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- wireman
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posting from deep under a non-descript barn in an undisclosed location southwest of Omaha.
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- wireman
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A 130/90/16 which has been a common tire size since Ronkz650 stamped the first one at the Carlisle plant back in the 60s falls in at right around 25.2" while a 130/80/18 falls in at 26.2 according to metzeler,which would make the bike 1/2" lower with the 16" rim if all other things are equal.
Although I think 18" tires tend to handle better with the lower profile ,less rubber/sidewall to flex.
posting from deep under a non-descript barn in an undisclosed location southwest of Omaha.
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- geobass
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wireman wrote: Did a little checking on metzeler sizes between 16-18" tires.
A 130/90/16 which has been a common tire size since Ronkz650 stamped the first one at the Carlisle plant back in the 60s falls in at right around 25.2" while a 130/80/18 falls in at 26.2 according to metzeler,which would make the bike 1/2" lower with the 16" rim if all other things are equal.
Although I think 18" tires tend to handle better with the lower profile ,less rubber/sidewall to flex.
130/90/16 it is... you amaze me! DO you have an 18 in the bunker under the barn?
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- wireman
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Youll have to mount a new tire on it though,I don't trust old dry rotted tires.
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- Patton
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1976 KZ900-B1 LTD 24.95" or 25.70"
1976 KZ900-A 25.51"
When both bikes have the same rear axle height, the overall tire diameters should also be equal.
The 24.95" LTD tire is shorter than the 25.51" standard model.
0.56" difference = 0.28" difference in axle height.
The 25.70" LTD tire is taller than the 25.51" standard model.
0.19" difference = 0.095" difference in axle height.
Good Fortune!
1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD
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- RonKZ650
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321,000 miles on KZ's that I can remember. Not going to see any more.
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- Patton
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OEM rear tire on 1976 KZ900-B1 LTD was Goodyear Eagle A/T MT90-16T.Patton wrote: Overall diameter of stock replacement rear tire per Dunlop:
1976 KZ900-B1 LTD 24.95" or 25.70"
1976 KZ900-A 25.51"
When both bikes have the same rear axle height, the overall tire diameters should also be equal.
The 24.95" LTD tire is shorter than the 25.51" standard model.
0.56" difference = 0.28" difference in axle height.
The 25.70" LTD tire is taller than the 25.51" standard model.
0.19" difference = 0.095" difference in axle height....
It has been obsolete for a long time, and I don't know the overall diameter.
For 1976 KZ900-B1 LTD rear tire, Dunlop recommends
GT501 130/90B16 overall diameter 24.95"
Optional Elite 3 Bias MT90B16 overall diameter 25.70"
For 1976 KZ900-A rear tire, Dunlop recommends
D404 110/90-18 overall diameter 25.51"
With reference to overall tire diameter determining axle height, not wheel size:
Kawasaki's marketing and promotional advertizing of the 1976 KZ900-B1 LTD doesn't mention anything about it riding any lower than the standard model. And had such design feature existed, one would think that it would have been highly touted.
Good Fortune!
1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD
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- roy-b-boy-b
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1979 LTD Street Fighter.1977 KZ1000
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- Patton
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"Slugs" were also available that were used as an inexpensive way to extend the forks. These short extensions in various lengths could be used to screw into top of the fork tubes (where the caps usually went), and the slugs were threaded to receive the caps.roy-b-boy-b wrote: This was a fad of the era. About everyone I knew at the time had a 750 Honda with a 16 rear,6 inch over on forks,and the pipes were four shorties. Most didn't change sprockets.
Using the slugs was frowned upon as being dangerous, because they were reportedly subject to breaking apart where they connected to the original fork tubes. :pinch:
As to the LTD's seat height, here's an excerpt from the original marketing brochure:
Good Fortune!
1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD
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