The ride-by-wire system ties
everything together neatly. There
are five different riding modes
of Rain, Road, Sport, Track and a
configurable Rider mode, so find-
ing your ideal throttle response is
relatively easy.
As
you can probably guess
from my opening comments,
Road mode is where I spent the
most time while I had the RS.
It provides the best mix of a
smooth throttle response and
acceleration without getting too
snatchy at the twist grip. This
is a factor the higher up you go,
with Sport and Track modes not
much use for the traffic-light GP,
but they are fun if you've got an
empty canyon road ahead of
you.
At the center of the RS is
Triumph's 1160cc inline-triple,
an engine that has quietly be-
come one of the best all-around
powerplants
in the naked-bike
category. It doesn't rely on gim-
micks or shock value but deliv-
ers an accessible, relentless
drive
that starts early in the rev
range and builds smoothly, pull-
ing hard through the midrange
before
stretching its legs up top.
Triumph claims 180 horsepower
and 94 lb-ft of torque for their
triple, and although the numbers
are indeed strong, it's the way
the engine makes its power that
really matters.
Throttle response is nicely
metered, regardless of the
rider mode you're in, and, being
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RIDE REVIEW I 2026 TRIUMPH SPEED TRIPLE 1200 RS
a Triumph, the fueling is typi-
cally lovely. Rolling on from low
rpm produces
a solid shove that
makes short work of traffic, while
aggressive riding rewards you
with a muscular surge that never
feels out of control. This is an en
-
gine you can ride lazily or brutally,
and
it works just as well either
way. It might not have the over
200 hp claimed by its Euro neigh-
bors to the south and east, but
trust me, you don't
need it. The RS
is more than fast enough for any
situation I could throw at it.
There's attitude to burn with the RS.
Akrapovic even made a sexy muffler to
get rid of that bazooka-looking thing
and give the three-cylinder engine a
microphone to sing through.