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The Triumph Street Triple is a standard motorcycle made by Triumph Motorcycles released the 1st October 2007. [2] The bike is closely modelled on the Speed Triple 1050 but uses a re-tuned inline three cylinder 675 cc engine from the Daytona 675 sport bike , which was released in 2006.
All-new design inspired by Moto2 and Street Triple 765 Street Triple 675: 675 2008-2016 Scaled down Speed Triple, based on Daytona 675 Chassis Street Triple 765 765 2017 on Speed Four: 599 2002-2005 Stripped down TT600 with reworked engine Tiger 900: 885 1993–1998 Dual sport with desert racer styling Tiger 900i 885 1999–2001
Triumph's best-selling bike is the 675 cc Street Triple. In 2010 they launched the Triumph Tiger 800 and Tiger 800 XC, dual-sport motorcycles, which uses an 800 cc engine derived from the Street Triple, and is designed to compete directly with the market leading BMW F800GS. [31]
The most lively performer to use this updated triple was the Daytona 955i, in this form claiming 147 bhp (110 kW), the most powerful triple to emerge from Triumph. The 900 triple in its original form lingered on until 2002 in the form of the Trophy 900, being outlived by its four-cylinder relative, the Trophy 1200.
Triumph Daytona 675; Triumph Daytona 955i; Triumph Legend TT; Triumph Street Triple; Triumph Speed Triple; Triumph Sprint; Triumph Tiger 800; Triumph Tiger 1050; Triumph Tiger Explorer; Triumph Trident 750; Yamaha MT-09 (a.k.a. Yamaha FZ-09) [15] Yamaha MT-09 Tracer (FJ-09) Yamaha XSR900; Yamaha XS 750; Yamaha XS 850
A Suzuki GSX-R1000 at a drag strip – a 2006 model once recorded a 0 to 60 mph time of 2.35 seconds. This is a list of street legal production motorcycles ranked by acceleration from a standing start, limited to 0 to 60 mph times of under 3.5 seconds, and 1 ⁄ 4-mile times of under 12 seconds.
The Triumph Speed Triple is a series of motorcycles produced by Triumph Motorcycles. The 1994 Hinckley Triumph was one of the first motorcycles produced in the streetfighter style (a modern sport bike or race replica motorcycle without an aerodynamic plastic fairing). The style originated with bikers who, having crashed their race replicas, put ...
2014 Triumph Street Triple R 1983 Honda CBR400F. Though it has its styling roots in the café racer culture of the 1950s and 1960s, the streetfighter is very much inspired by the new Japanese bikes of the late 1970s and early 1980s, [10] possibly from young riders who couldn't afford to replace damaged fairings after repeated crashes. Later ...