Key performance

94 ch
Power
🔧
2053 cc
Displacement
⚖️
380 kg
Weight
🏎️
190 km/h
Top speed
💺
681 mm
Seat height
21.0 L
Fuel capacity
💰
15 399 €
New price
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Technical specifications

Engine

Displacement
2053 cc
Power
94.0 ch @ 4400 tr/min (69.1 kW)
Torque
166.0 Nm @ 3000 tr/min
Engine type
V2, four-stroke
Cooling
Liquid
Compression ratio
9.5:1
Bore × stroke
103.0 x 123.2 mm (4.1 x 4.9 inches)
Valves/cylinder
4
Camshafts
1 ACT
Fuel system
Injection
Valve timing
Overhead Valves (OHV)
Ignition
TCBI with Digital Advance
Starter
Electric

Chassis

Frame
Double-cradle, high-tensile steel
Gearbox
5-speed
Final drive
Belt   (final drive)
Clutch
Wet, multidisc
Front suspension
49mm telescopic fork / 5.9 in.
Rear suspension
Triangulated steel tube swingarm with direct-action single shock, fully-adjustable spring preload, eight-way rebound damping / 3.9 in.

Brakes

Front brakes
Double disc
Rear brakes
Single disc
Front tyre
150/80-16
Front tyre pressure
2.50 bar
Rear tyre
200/60-16
Rear tyre pressure
2.90 bar

Dimensions

Seat height
681.00 mm
Wheelbase
1735.00 mm
Ground clearance
135.00 mm
Length
2535.00 mm
Width
1025.00 mm
Height
1156.00 mm
Fuel capacity
21.00 L
Weight
380.00 kg
Dry weight
349.00 kg
New price
15 399 €

Overview

Which Japanese manufacturer can boast of offering the largest parallel twin ever mass-produced on a motorcycle? Kawasaki, with its 2010 vintage VN2000 Classic, continues to wave this record like a banner. Beneath that fuel tank sits a 2053 cc V-twin, a monster of cast iron and steel whose bore-stroke dimensions of 103 x 123.2 mm betray a decidedly long-stroke character. The kind of engine that favors raw torque over sheer horsepower, and lets you know it from the very first turn of the wheels.

Kawasaki VN2000 Classic

This Classic version marks an aesthetic evolution from the original VN2000. Gone is the aggressive headlight with its menacing stare, replaced by a far more understated bullet-shaped unit, almost retro in feel. The handlebar adopts a so-called "buckhorn" shape — those cow-horn bends that invite you to rest your arms in a natural position, elbows low, shoulders relaxed. The passenger seat has been redesigned, thicker and better sculpted. Also worth noting are a restyled speedometer and a relocated ignition switch on the tank. Cosmetic tweaks, granted, but ones that give the whole package a visual coherence the first iteration hadn't quite achieved.

On the mechanical side, compliance with the Euro 3 standard has left its mark. The V-twin now delivers 94 horsepower at 4,400 rpm and 166 Nm of torque at just 3,000 rpm. Previous owners will notice the power loss compared to earlier versions — the classic toll of emissions regulations. But let's be honest: on a machine weighing 380 kg wet, nobody is chasing the upper reaches of the rev range. What matters here is that wave of torque available from idle, that fat, linear thrust that propels you effortlessly to a claimed top speed of 190 km/h. The belt final drive, paired with a five-speed gearbox, reinforces that sense of mechanical smoothness.

The high-tensile steel double-cradle frame wraps around it all with a 1,735 mm wheelbase that guarantees ocean-liner stability in a straight line. The 49 mm telescopic fork and the rear mono-shock adjustable for preload and rebound do the job without pretending to be sporty. With a seat height of 681 mm, even shorter riders will be able to plant both feet flat on the ground — a real selling point in this segment. The limited ground clearance of 135 mm, however, is a reminder to ease off in tight corners or risk scraping the footpegs. Up against a Yamaha XV1900 Midnight Star or a Honda VTX1800, the Kawasaki plays the card of mechanical excess. No rival can match such displacement in a twin-cylinder configuration.

At €15,399, the VN2000 Classic targets a very specific clientele: cruiser enthusiasts who want mechanical character above all else, those who prefer the rumble of an oversized twin to the purr of an inline four. This is neither a beginner's machine — its weight alone rules that out — nor a sporty touring tool. It is a rolling monument, an unapologetic passion choice for miles devoured to the rhythm of the most massive V-twin on the market.

Practical info

  • La moto est accessible aux permis : A

Indicators & positioning

Weight-to-power ratio
0.24 ch/kg
🔄
Torque / weight
0.44 Nm/kg
🔧
Volumetric power
45.2 ch/L
In category Custom / cruiser · 1027-4106cc displacement (2546 motorcycles compared)
Power 93 ch Top 37%
50 ch median 85 ch 154 ch
Weight 380 kg Lighter than 6%
245 kg median 310 kg 380 kg
P/W ratio 0.24 ch/kg Top 64%
0.18 median 0.26 0.52 ch/kg

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