redzedx7r wrote::? i would have picked the zzr600 ahead of the zx6r for there top 10.
The ZZ-R-D, the first model, was mostly a GPz600R with an aluminium frame. Not enough of a leap compared to its predecessor despite having a redline 2,000rpm higher than the competition. It needed all that extra top-end to get past the more compact FZR.
what about the current zx636r,
Counts as a ZX6, which is already included... besides, being honest, you'd have to say that the ZX-636R-B's claim to glory is that it's the bike with which Kawasaki caught up... by the time it came out, Yamaha had been doing the sit-on-it-and-it-disappears 600 for four years.
zxr1100/1200?
Again, it didn't break any real new ground... Suzuki got people thinking with an old-school big-bore engine in a double-cradle steel tube frame with a chunky seat four years before the ZRX1100 first hit.
To my mind, they've got the list pretty spot-on insofar as what's on there, as all the bikes on it either took performance motorcycling in a whole new direction (GPz900R-first liquid cooled big bore with handling, brakes and styling, GPz600R-first sports 600) or, as is more Kawasaki's style, took an existing concept and showed everyone how to do it properly... the ZXR750 had RC30 style at a GSX-R750 price. The ZZ-R1100 split the too-bulky-to-be-sportsbikes FZR1000 and GSX-R1100 and the the-bigger-it-is-the-less-hard-you-have-to-try CBR1000 and used sledgehammer horsepower for its true purpose-firing at the horizon. The ZX-6R stopped the tippietoeing around the edges of race-derived technology the 600 class had been doing up until then and went all-out with a super-compact motor, fully-adjustable suspension, an alloy-beam frame...