Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 08 February 25 2014

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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2014 TRIUMPH THUNDERBIRD LT AND COMMANDER FIRST RIDE P66 It'll pull cleanly away wide open from 40 mph in the overdrive top gear, which in the absence of a tach we'll have to believe is just 1500 rpm as Triumph declares. This makes it an easy bike to ride slowly, although it would have been nice if the clutch and brake levers were adjustable. Feet-up U-turns are improb- ably feasible in spite of the long 65.5-inch wheelbase, thanks to the Triumph's good balance, tight turning circle, and the smooth, controllable take-up of the cable- operated clutch. But you'll find yourself riding the ultra-flat torque curve that comes on strong at what, ac- cording to the dyno chart, is a little over 2000 rpm, then holds on until later in the rev range. It then peaks at 3550 rpm with that substantial claimed 151Nm of torque. And although you end up short-shifting in the gears most of the time instead of exploring the upper reaches of the rpms (where claimed peak power of 94 hp at the crank is delivered at 5408 rpm), there's no real sense of those big, heavy pistons seem- ingly firing every lamp-post as on many other big twins. But there is an unmistakable sense of power and grunt down low. Although - thanks to its 270-de- gree crank - it still has the feeling of such a V-twin, the Thunderbird motor seems quicker revving and more responsive when you twist the light-action throttle hard. The effect is really satisfying, even exhilarating, for the parallel-twin engine has loads of personality, with the trademark lilt and offbeat melody that you expect from a V- twin motor. Thanks to the effective coun- terbalancing, there's minimal vibration at any engine speed, even if you deliberately rev it up to somewhere near what is ap- parently the 6500 rpm rev-limit- er. The fuel mapping is also ex- cellent, with the transition from a closed throttle especially refined The LT.

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