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The original Triumph Bonneville was a 650 cc parallel-twin motorcycle manufactured by Triumph Engineering and later by Norton Villiers Triumph between 1959 and 1974. It was based on the company's Triumph Tiger T110 and was fitted with the Tiger's optional twin 1 3/16 in Amal monobloc carburettors as standard, along with that model's high-performance inlet camshaft.
Triumph Bonneville America; Manufacturer: Triumph Motorcycles Ltd: Production: 2002-2006 790 cc (carbureted) 2007 865 cc (carbureted) 2008 865 cc (fuel injected) Engine: 865 cc air-cooled, DOHC, parallel-twin, 270 degree firing angle: Power: 61 bhp (45 kW) @ 6,800 rpm: Torque: 50.9 lbf⋅ft (69.0 N⋅m) @ 4,800rpm: Transmission: 5-speed gearbox ...
The T100 Bonneville, styled by John Mockett and David Stride, was launched as an uprated version initially with the 790 cc engine, and from 2005 with the 865 cc engine introduced on the 2004 Thruxton, and fitted to all Bonnevilles from 2007.
Cruiser based on the Bonneville, the engine being at 270° instead of 360° Speedmaster 900: 865 2005- Cruiser based on the Bonneville T100, the engine being at 270° instead of 360° Adventurer: 885 1996–2001 Restyled Thunderbird 900 Triumph Bonneville America: 790/865 2002 on 2002–2006 790 cc, 2007 on 865 cc. 2008 on fuel injected Rocket ...
The 4th Bonneville to come off the line at Hinckley (November 2000) Mid-1990s Triumph Trophy tourer with the 900 cc triple engine. The small Union flag was then a standard feature on all Triumphs except the Thunderbird TT600
In 2007, a multipoint sequential fuel injection model was launched, with new design alloy wheels, a restyled chain cover, pillion footrest hanger and upper fork shrouds, as well as slash cut silencers and four new paint schemes. [2] A new Speedmaster marque was reintroduced in 2018 as the Bonneville Speedmaster, from Triumph's 'Modern Classics ...
The original Tiger 900, manufactured by Triumph Motorcycles Ltd was introduced in 1993 and remained in production with minor improvements until 1998. Known to its fans as the 'Steamer', a nickname identifying it as a Hinckley Tiger, not a Meriden Tiger, and also distinguishing it as a carburettor, not fuel injected engine, this 885 cc dual sport motorcycle sold in comparatively small numbers ...
The Speed Twin 900 offers a two-cylinder in-line four-stroke engine that has a displacement of 900 cm 3 (55 cu in), equipped with a liquid cooling system, and it runs on a multipoint electronic injection system, producing a maximum power of 55 hp (41 kW) at 5900 rpm and a torque of 80 N⋅m (59 lbf⋅ft) at 3230 rpm, which is bolted to a 5-speed transmission with front engagement.