KRC Fox - Specifications & Review

Fox

Article Complete Info

Articleid195691
CategoryScooter
MakeKRC
ModelFox
PriceEuro 7950. MSRP depends on country, taxes, accessories, etc.
Year2023

Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels

FrametypeSteel underbone
FrontbrakesSingle disc
FrontsuspensionTelescopic fork
Fronttyre130/60-13
RearbrakesSingle disc
RearsuspensionDual shock
Reartyre130/60-13

Engine & Transmission

CoolingsystemAir
EnginedetailsBruchless
EnginetypeElectric
GearboxAutomatic
Power15.0 HP (10.9 kW))
Topspeed100.0 km/h (62.1 mph)

Other Specifications

ColoroptionsWhite/green, Grey/green, white/black, grey/black
CommentsLithium Battery 72V, 50ah. Range 150 km. Charging 4-5 hours. Internal charger. KRC is short for Keep Roads Clean. Italian brand.
StarterElectric

Physical Measures & Capacities

Overallheight1180 mm (46.5 inches)
Overalllength2010 mm (79.1 inches)
Overallwidth705 mm (27.8 inches)
Seatheight750 mm (29.5 inches) If adjustable, lowest setting.
Weightincloilgasetc154.0 kg (339.5 pounds)

About KRC

Country of Origin: Europe
Founder: Boutique engineering consortium (public details limited)
Best Known For: Short-run specials, race parts, and lightweight chassis components

Company History

Under the KRC label, small European workshops produced limited-run frames, suspension links, and intake/exhaust kits aimed at sharpening mainstream platforms for road and club racing. The ethos favored coherent packages over peak dyno numbers: geometry that communicates, lever efforts that stay friendly at hour three, and fueling that pulls cleanly from corners. KRC’s customers were tinkerers—riders who log track days and value clear setup notes. Accordingly, documentation mattered: torque specs, shimming guidance, and baseline suspension settings that helped owners reproduce results without a race truck. While volumes were tiny and marketing quiet, the impact was durable—countless well-sorted twins and singles that owe their poise to smart, reversible KRC tweaks. Historically, KRC represents Europe’s workshop culture, where incremental, evidence-based improvements make ordinary bikes feel like instruments, proving that craft and data can outshine catalog hype.

Other Years

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