Cycle News

Cycle News 2016 Issue 07 February 23

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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2016 TRIUMPH SPEED TRIPLE R FIRST RIDE P64 that's made such a key contribu- tion to the profitability of John Bloor's company over the past two decades. However, while they'd much rather you didn't call the result evolutionary, Triumph management has resisted both spending lots of money by com- pletely binning everything that's gone before and starting over again—a as they've essentially done with the Bonneville, albeit retaining the same overall archi- tecture—and at the other end of the scale just splashing on a few pounds of sterling merely making a few minor touch-ups to the ex- isting model to try to wreak a little more revenue from it in the face of its recently launched rivals. Instead, what Triumph has done is to radically upgrade the existing Speed Triple, and when you ride the new bike back to back with the current model, as I was able to do, you pretty soon realize this make- over is so transformational that it essentially amounts to creat- ing an all-new model. That's an impression confirmed by the morning I spent aboard a Speed Triple R chasing Triumph test rider Felipe Lopez through the great hillside roads inland from Tarragona on the sunny Span- ish Mediterranean coast close to Triumph's R&D HQ, followed by an afternoon session at the Calafat racetrack—Spain's oldest permanent circuit, and a great track for exploring the maneu- verability and rideability of any motorcycle. Add in the much sleeker, sharper styling of the new model, which thanks to positioning the front end hard- ware—new DRL lights, dash, handlebar—notably lower so that the fuel cap is now the high- est part of the bike, definitely regains most of the in-your-face visual attitude that went missing with the 2011 restyling job. It's a generational change that was partially triggered by the need to meet the tough new Euro 4 noise and emissions regulations. (Far left) A newly designed tank is far more angular and encompassing than before. (Left) Beautiful red stitching—the attention to detail is marvelous. (Right) It's still got that brutish stance the Speed Triple is known for; it's just a little more refined.

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