In 2010, the Japanese motorcycle manufacturer launched the Kawasaki Z750, a naked motorcycle packing the same technical, visual, and performance specifications as the previous model without significant modifications, except for color changes.
The Kawasaki Z750 was a sports, adventure, or cruiser motorcycle made by Kawasaki from 2004 to 2012. The bike took its power from a 750cc four-cylinder engine and was the smaller version of the Kawasaki Z1000.
Compared to the Kawasaki Z1000, born in 2003, the smaller Z750 model was an economy model with a sleeved-down version of the Kawasaki Z1000 engine, a conventional exhaust system, and a cheaper front suspension.
The bike was built around a tubular backbone high-tensile steel frame, wearing a 41 mm adjustable telescopic fork on the front with 120 mm of travel and a four-way rebound and seven-way preload-adjustable shock absorber on the rear providing 124 mm of travel.
The braking system comprised two 300 mm semi-floating petal discs with dual-piston calipers on the front wheel and a 250 mm petal disc with a single-piston caliper on the rear wheel.
The 2010 Kawasaki Z750 had installed a 748cc four-stroke four-cylinder liquid-cooled engine that delivered an output power of 106 hp with a peak force at 10,500 rpm and 79 Nm (58 lb-ft) torque at 8,300 rpm.