Archive for ‘Triumph Motorcycle’

April 26, 2011

… more gals and their Triumphs

WRENS: Womens Royal Naval Service.
Scrambler Glamour!
A Desert Rose heading onto the dusty roads of the west.

Cover Shot: only the chopper magazines get women on the cover nowadays. Though this classic pose balances well with the classic Speed Twin.

A Bobbette?

Picture Perfect.

Stylin’.

Girl Power!

70’s glamour.

April 26, 2011

Ooh those curvy Bonnie lines…

Of the Triumphs of course…
High Noon!
 
Truly the Ultimate.. still!

April 24, 2011

Nacelle

April 22, 2011

88 ate

Back in the nineties there was a BBC programme where two gastronomes travelled around the UK on a Triumph Watsonian sidecar outfit: “Two Fat Ladies”.

April 21, 2011

Doctor Who?

Here is a shot of Jon Pertwee, for it is he, aboard what looks like a late 60’s Triumph (or BSA). He was the 3rd Doctor after Patrick Troughton and before the legend Tom Baker. He was also seen in straw packed tweeds as Worzel Gummidge as well as the lip smacking professor in Carry on Screaming among other things.

April 17, 2011

Tom, Dick and Harry….

…and Hilts, the Cooler King. Taking on the Germans in his famous motorcycle escape in my favourite film. An ensemble cast topped by the great Steve McQueen.

April 16, 2011

A Century ago….

Family outings aboard two wheeled transport; let’s take Granny along too! Idyllic Edwardian times for early Coventry built machines.

Mother and daughter can come along too. Sidesaddle and cross bar comfort! Flat cap and goggles complete period look; Harris tweed the early bikers gard. Classic stuff!

These early motorcycles were basically bicycles with engines; even a well sprung Brooks leather seat adorns the frame. Think of the freedom these offered to early road users.
April 9, 2011

of Malcolm Uphill and the Triumph Bonneville

From http://www.triumphbonneville.com/ – a site dedicated to the T140 and TR7:



“The best lap could be around the 103mph mark” predicted Paul Dunstall, for whom Ray Pickrell had put in a storming circuit of the 37.73 mile course at 99.39mph on a Norton twin, but Dunstall’s favourite was Triumph’s Malcolm Uphill,on a 60bhp 650cc Triumph Bonneville…



The production TT introduced in 1967 was no reprise of the worthy but often dull Clubman’s races. Rider’s were top names and engines were tuned to last for the three laps it would take to boost sales and prestige for the coming season. British Manufacturers might have lost the battle for the smaller capacity classes, but big twins like the Commando and the Bonneville were still competitive on the track and in the showroom.



Uphill ignored the pressure and still likes to recall how he eased off once he was sure of a win.
“The 100mph lap didn’t mean much to me at the time”, he says. Far more important was the £50 prize, £70 in trade bonuses and the £300 Triumph Bonneville MAC232E-his fee from Meriden.

Hunched well forward on the howling twin,pudding basin hemet bobbing above the steering head, Uphill flew through the speed trap at the highlander pub at just under 135mph. His standing start at 100.09mph looked effortless until spectators realised the scraping sound was Malcolm cornering on the Dunlop K81’s until his fairing touched the road. A faster second lap and a ton plus race average looked certain until this cool professional throttled back to finish with 99.99mph. It was the Bonnevilles finest hour,and a feat immortalised by Dunlop on the sidewall of every K81 the ‘TT100’.


As well as the Thruxton 500 in 1969 he also dominated the NW200 road race in Northern Ireland.

Fantastic shot of him at speed, classic lines of the Triumph blurs the scenery.

February 26, 2011

Bonneville Tribute

February 20, 2011

60’s in the 70’s

In an attempt to stir nostalgic values to the 750 Bonneville in the seventies here they advertise with sixties imagery, harking to diners and hot-rods, sunsets and black & white photo’s; the chinzy 80’s airbrush look detracts fom the bike, coloured to look like the ’68 zenith Bonnie.  Note the NVT logo used for this Calirornian dealership (Norton Villiers Triumph); the conglomeration of the remnants of a once sucessful British motorcycle industry.
February 19, 2011

Rebel Yell

Punk Rocker Billy Idol, also a biker has used the triumph logo and a drawing of a twin for a concert poster.

February 18, 2011

A Triumph Scooter

Triumph short foray into the world of the runabout included the four stroke 250cc Tigress and a year or two later the  two stroke Tina; The artwork is enduringly 50’s. Just think about all those Mods and Rockers all on Triumphs!
February 13, 2011

Chicago Motorcycle Show

Triumph Motorcycles had a stand with their latest models this year (for the first time) at the International Motorcycle Show held at the Rosemont Convention Center.
That iconic logo…

The Scrambler model is upright an comfortable. I’d take one of these please sir!

A coffee and cream T100 Bonneville harks to the sixites models. Sublime.

Whereas a T100 set up to look like the later 70’s model Bonnies with cast wheels looked superb also.

The chunky tires, single seat, rear rack give the scrambler a focus. All I’d need is a Belstaff wax jacket and off I go!

The Thruxton racer model is my favorite. Drop bars, alloy rim wheels, rearsets and a stainless exhaust adorn a juicy red bike. I’d be at one with the road upon this steed. My ’72 Bonnie is going to be adapted to this style.

February 4, 2011

Toy Triumphs

A police 5TA Speed Twin – with rear ‘bathtub’ fairing.

Same Speed Twin 5TA Die-cast but this time a faired racer.

A Lesney Matchbox Triumph T110 with sidecar. Great detail of the pre-unit engine on the timing side.

And finally a modern detailed Triumph Bonneville from Altaya. Good enough to ride!
February 3, 2011

Triumph Trials Scrambler