1985
CZ 350 Typ 472.6 - Specifications & Review

Article Complete Info
| Articleid | 752688 |
|---|---|
| Category | Touring |
| Make | CZ |
| Model | 350 Typ 472.6 |
| Year | 1985 |
Chassis, Suspension, Brakes & Wheels
| Frametype | Steel pipe closed type |
|---|---|
| Frontbrakes | Expanding brake (drum brake). Two-side expantion |
| Frontsuspension | inverted forks |
| Fronttyre | -R18 |
| Rearbrakes | Expanding brake (drum brake). One-side expantion |
| Rearsuspension | Dualshock with swingarm |
| Reartyre | -R18 |
Engine & Transmission
| Clutch | Wet multyplate with automatic gearchange engagement |
|---|---|
| Compression | 9.2:1 |
| Coolingsystem | Air |
| Displacement | 350.00 ccm (21.36 cubic inches) |
| Enginedetails | Twin, two-stroke |
| Exhaustsystem | Two reactive scilencer chrome pipes (one per cyl.) |
| Fuelconsumption | 4.00 litres/100 km (25.0 km/l or 58.81 mpg) |
| Fuelsystem | Carburettor. Jikov |
| Gearbox | 4-speed |
| Greenhousegases | 92.8 CO2 g/km. (CO2 - Carbon dioxide emission) |
| Ignition | Mechanical |
| Lubricationsystem | 2-stroke |
| Maxrpm | 6500 |
| Power | 22.00 HP (16.1 kW)) @ 5000 RPM |
| Topspeed | 135.0 km/h (83.9 mph) |
| Transmissiontypefinaldrive | Chain |
Other Specifications
| Coloroptions | Light red, dark red |
|---|---|
| Comments | A very prolific, multifunctional and sturdy bike of the eastern block.It was also produced in vast numbers in China and India. In fact some speculate it is the most prolific bike ever made. It owes its sucsess to its simplicity, cheapness and multifunctionality. It has a simple, but reasonably reliable two cilinder, two stroke engine. Has a sidecar option. Altho simple the bike is far from primitive. It has good, modern looks, for its time, it is also fairly fueleficient. This bike was intended to fill the most important role in the Warsaw-pact market-the large engine long-distance multifunctional platform (called nowadays touring, plus a bit of offroad and heavy hauling capabilities). The CZ 350 has very simple, altho fairly frequent maintenance requirements, witch if conducted properly make it virtualy imposible for the bike to give you any seruous trouble. The engine has a short life-expectancy, witch is originaly counterbalanced by the avaylability and lo-price of spare engines. It is also intended for someone to be able to change, or repair the engine in his owne backyard with only a screwdriver, wrenches and minimal expirience. The platforme is a successor of previous CZ 350 engines from the 60´s. In fact it has little more in diferant with them than looks. The original 350 of that generation-Type 472.1 came out in the 70´s. All throu to Typ 472.6, nothing changes exept suspention, an added RPM meter, a 12V alternator instead of the 6V dinamlo and some sattle, tank and taillight details. It was in production untill 1990. Altho outdated in Europe, this model is still very popular, or at least numerous in India, China and Mongoli, being used as a workhorse in rural areas, or as fast transport in cityes. The Tyo 472.6 only came in two varyations - light red eith black pinstripes or red with white stripes. Curiously the light variant had a different front fender lead for the front brake whire than the dark version. |
| Modificationscomparedtopreviousmodel | Minor cosmetic changes over all previous models from the 472.1 to 472.5, over witch a 12V alternator upgrade and a different dashboard with anRPM gage, while all else was kept identical. |
| Starter | Kick |
Physical Measures & Capacities
| Dryweight | 180.0 kg (396.8 pounds) |
|---|---|
| Fuelcapacity | 18.00 litres (4.76 gallons) |
| Powerweightratio | 0.1222 HP/kg |
| Reservefuelcapacity | 3.00 litres (0.79 gallons) |
About CZ
Country of Origin:
Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic)
Founder:
Česká zbrojovka Strakonice (state-linked arms works)
Best Known For:
Championship-winning two-stroke motocross bikes and robust road singles
Company History
CZ, born from the industrial might of Czechoslovakia’s arms and machinery works, became a motocross powerhouse from the 1950s through the early 1970s. The company’s two-stroke racers—simple, strong, and cleverly ported—earned world titles and a reputation for surviving brutal European courses. For privateers, CZ offered the holy trinity: tractable power, frames that could take a beating, and parts that didn’t shatter hopes when a rock struck home. Road models leaned practical, supplying essential transport behind the Iron Curtain and to export markets hungry for affordable, repairable machines. The fall came as Japanese rivals unleashed light, powerful bikes with rapidly advancing suspension and materials; state planning struggled to fund modernization at the same pace. Yet the CZ legend endured, buoyed by the imagery of mud-covered factory riders and by the reliability stories told in paddocks worldwide. Today, classic MX events and restorations keep the ring-ding alive, while roadgoing CZs roll as reminders that utility and sport can coexist in honest metal. Historically, CZ stands for engineering under constraint: make it work with what you can make yourselves, iterate in the field, and let results speak louder than brochures. In that spirit, CZ helped define the grammar of motocross before long-travel suspension and liquid-cooling rewrote the rules.
