Difference between revisions of "Triumph T140ES 750 Bonneville"
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{{Motorcycle | {{Motorcycle | ||
|name = | |name = Triumph T140ES 750 Bonneville | ||
|photo=Triumph-Bonnie-T140-01.jpg | |photo=Triumph-Bonnie-T140-01.jpg | ||
|aka = | |aka = |
Latest revision as of 22:30, 23 November 2019
Triumph T140ES 750 Bonneville | |
Manufacturer | |
---|---|
Production | 1979 |
Engine | Four stroke, parallel twin, OHV, 2 valves per cylinder |
Compression ratio | 8.6:1 |
Top Speed | 190 km/h / 118 mph |
Ignition | Battery / dual coil / dual points / Lucas |
Transmission | 5 Speed |
Frame | Tubular steel, double front downtubes, oil bearing large tube backbone |
Suspension | Front: Telescopic forks Rear: Swingarm, Girling shocks, 3-way spring preload adjustable |
Brakes | Front: Single 254 mm disc, 1 piston caliper Rear: Single 254 mm disc, 1 piston caliper |
Front Tire | 3.25-19 |
Rear Tire | 4.00-18 |
Wheelbase | 1422 mm / 56 in |
Seat Height | 813 mm / 32.0 in |
Weight | 200 kg / 441 lbs (dry), |
Fuel Capacity | 18.2 Liters / 4.8 US gal / 4.0 Imp gal |
Manuals | Service Manual |
It could reach a top speed of 190 km/h / 118 mph.
Engine[edit | edit source]
The engine was a Air cooled cooled Four stroke, parallel twin, OHV, 2 valves per cylinder. The engine featured a 8.6:1 compression ratio.
Drive[edit | edit source]
Power was moderated via the Wet, multiplate.
Chassis[edit | edit source]
It came with a 3.25-19 front tire and a 4.00-18 rear tire. Stopping was achieved via Single 254 mm disc, 1 piston caliper in the front and a Single 254 mm disc, 1 piston caliper in the rear. The front suspension was a Telescopic forks while the rear was equipped with a Swingarm, Girling shocks, 3-way spring preload adjustable. The T140ES 750 Bonneville was fitted with a 18.2 Liters / 4.8 US gal / 4.0 Imp gal fuel tank. The bike weighed just 200 kg / 441 lbs. The wheelbase was 1422 mm / 56 in long.
Photos[edit | edit source]
Overview[edit | edit source]
Triumph Bonneville 750 T140E
Road Test 1978 The Triumph Bonneville has traditionally been held responsible for everything from keeping Harleys out of winner's circles to keeping small-town daughters locked up. But nowadays a new kind of fantasy surrounds the well-known curves of the Bonnie the fantasy of a machine from an earlier, simpler age. And even if those over 25 can hardly consider the Fabulous Fifties an age of simplicity, whenever the conversation turns to Triumphs the talk inevitably turns nostalgic. It's too bad. The Bonneville is more than a cartoon of a Fonz-bike, more than simply an oil-leaking hunk of prehistoric British iron. It is as legitimate a motorcycle as can be found anywhere, one whose character is instantly apparent in the bluff honesty of its upright cylinders, and one which deserves the attention of all serious riders, allegations of outrageous anachronism notwithstanding. But so overwhelming is the flood of techno marvels from Japan that most enthusiasts probably think that even this latest Bonnie is simply the old one dolled up in new powder and paint. No so: In the biggest single change since the bike got its 747cc engine in 1970, the Amal concentric carburetors have been chucked out, to be replaced with a pair of far more modern Amal Mk IIs. Mikuni-like, they eliminate much of the hassle of the old Bonnies, since they have a single lever-type choke and excellent flow characteristics enhanced by parallel intake tracts. Other changes include the use of "inverted" Girling gas shocks, Dunlop K81/ TT100 tires front and rear (in place of the old squarish K70s) and redesigned side covers. The list price is one of the few things that hasn't changed much. The improvements and inflation in the two years since we last tested a Bonneville have only raised the price $300, to $2299. Given that price, the potential buyer might well ask (since it's remarkably low for a 750) what he gets, besides a conversation piece. As our test Bonneville showed me all over again, quite a lot. First there's the phenomenal Triumph handling, a thing so unique it's been a cornering yardstick used by motojournalists for over a decade. Indeed, it's that very familiarity with the Bonneville's handling that's bred a certain contempt for it, especially among Triumph marque freaks, who maintain that the post-'71 bike was never as good as the "old" Bonnie. So it's probably worthwhile to examine the roots of the whole thing.
What makes Bonneville handling so special todayin the era of monsterbikesis its effortless precision. This is a motorcycle whose pegs your grandmother could drag, not because they're too low (and they are, a bit) but because the bike combines magic qualities of suspension geometry, frame stiffness and mass placement in such a way that no steering input seems to require much effort. This is something we tested further than normal, since we replaced the standard handlebaran egregious cryptochopper affair totally incongruous among the clean lines of the bikewith an optional ($16) European handlebar with which all domestic Triumphs are equipped. And riding efforts with either bar were precisely the same: so low you only need think the bike through a corner. This spectacular ability of the Bonneville to dazzle its rider with instant response is matched by the road-holding of its suspension and tires. Dunlop's H-rated (130-mph) K81s have a justly-won reputation for stickiness that finds a perfect match in the compliant front fork and firmly sprung rear shocks. Although the Girling folks claim about a half inch less travel with the new gas emulsion shocks than with the old air/oil types, the damping is superb, and we simply left the shocks on the softest of their three spring-preload positionseven for two-up riding. There are only two limiting factors in how far and how hard you can ride the Bonneville: the dragging point of the undercarriage and the fatigue imposed by the mild but ever-present vibration of the big twin. The first factor is something all Triumphs within recent memory have shared, and the culprits are easily identifiable: the huge, rubber-booted footpegs, the left-side stands and right-side exhaust pipe. Mind you, it's not like you ground these items when turning into the supermarket parking lot; you have to be trying for the limit with some energy before the pavement rushes up to the unyielding bits. And even when the bike thunks gently onto the ground with one of its appendages, the fantastic stability of the Bonneville allows the rider either to simply ignore the peeling rubber and trailing sparks or back offall without necessitating a change in line. Or, for that matter, a rise in the adrenaline level.
Similarly, the loping thunder of the vertical
twin (muffled but still satisfyingly present even with the too-long exhaust
pipes) finds its way into the handlebar and footpegs in the form of a gentle
throb. This is not the feared and often invoked Eyeball Death Rattle used to
scare young riders away from British bikes, but an insistent reminder that the
motorcycle you're astride is a product of the technology of three decades ago,
when engine counterbalancers were quite simply not to be thought ofespecially
in motorcycle engines. But it doesn't require a hopeless Anglophile to recognize
that the vibration is low-frequency and only intense enough to rate about a
three on the Vibro-Scale (on which the Yamaha XS Eleven is a zero and the BSA
Victor is as close to ten as anyone can bear).
Nonetheless, despite the excellent ergonomics of
the bikefootpegs, grips and controls occasioned no gripes even from this
gripe-prone staffthe vibration will eventually tire even the sturdiest Belstaff-suited
Bonneville rider. And long before that will have occurred, the blurred mirror
will have irritated the rider enough to vary his pace. The convex Stadium
bar-end mirror fitted to the low bar is a vast improvement over the standard
flat Harley-style mirror, but even it couldn't clear up the fuzzies.
And that lack of effective rear-view vision could
be of some concern to the Bonneville rider, because the handling of the bike is
matched perfectly to the power of the enginea certain recipe for full-throttle
back-road riding. Capable of 100 mph inside a half mile and of thrashing through
a quarter-mile in 13.41 seconds at 96.2 mph, the Triumph is clearly no slug.
Indeed, this year's MK-II carbureted bike, with no other performance changes
(including gearing) was .79 seconds and 3.5 mph faster than our '76 test bike.
No threat to the Honda
Six, to be sure, but respectable enough to keep
the men in the black-and-whites alert. After all, they're used to thinking of
Porsches as about the quickest things around.
None of this, of course, adds up to a bike that
could be thought "modern" in the same way a Suzuki GS1000 could. We expect our
motorcycles to be indestructible today, demanding even zero-maintenance from our
chains, and in those terms the Bonneville is a hopeless antique. It requires its
owner to understand everything about it, from the way the people at Meriden gave
its slick-shifting five-speed gearbox a left-hand shifter to the secret cure for
a leaking countershaft seal (ours didn't have the cure). It is a
high-maintenance machine, in both the mechanical and emotional senses. You
cannot buy a Bonneville simply to ride and park in your garage; you must, if you
are to expect any enjoyment from it, become its psychologist, doctor, riding
master and slave. Anything less will find you advertising it within the first
month of your purchase.
If this all seems a bit much to pay for a
motorcycle, consider this: Lack of techno-marvels and all, Triumph has slid
virtually unnoticed back into sixth place in American sales (behind Honda,
Yamaha, Suzuki, Kawasaki and Harley-Davidson), relegating BMW to seventh. This
is the first time since Triumph's glory days of 1973-74 (when 25,000 Trumpets a
year went out onto our streets) that such a thing has happened. That means that
more than 7000 riders will walk into Triumph showrooms this year, point at
blue-and-silver, black and-red or brown-and-gold Bonnevilles and ride out on
them, having been sold not by Fonzie, fads or flashy ads, but by the special
qualities of the bike: its simplicity, stability, styling and unexcelled
performance of the fundamental kinesthetics of motorcycling.
Rumors persist that next year's Bonneville will
see even more substantial changes than this year's: electronic ignition, radical
styling alterations and triple-disc brakes with Morris mag wheels. Whether or
not that will change the elemental character of the Bonneville remains to be
seen; after all, since its introduction in 1959 it has prevailed through a
history that would have killed most devices. But it has remained the beguiling
Bonnie, a ride unique in the two-wheeled world.
It's a ride that every motorcyclist should enjoy
at least once.
Source Cycle 1978
Make Model | Triumph Bonneville 750 T140E |
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Year | 1979 |
Engine Type | Four stroke, parallel twin, OHV, 2 valves per cylinder |
Displacement | 744 cc / 45.4 cu in |
Bore X Stroke | 76 x 82 mm |
Compression | 8.6:1 |
Cooling System | Air cooled |
Induction | 2 x 30 mm Amal carburetors |
Ignition | Battery / dual coil / dual points / Lucas |
Starting | Electric and kick |
Max Power | 40.3 kW / 54 hp @ 6200 rpm |
Max Torque | 56.6 Nm / 5.77 kgf-m / 41.8 ft-lb @5500 rpm |
Clutch | Wet, multiplate |
Transmission | 5 Speed |
Final Drive | Chain, 106 links |
Gear Ratios | 1st 12.25 / 2nd 8.63 / 3rd 6.58 / 4th 5.59 / 5th 4.70:1 |
Frame | Tubular steel, double front downtubes, oil bearing large tube backbone |
Front Suspension | Telescopic forks |
Rear Suspension | Swingarm, Girling shocks, 3-way spring preload adjustable |
Front Brakes | Single 254 mm disc, 1 piston caliper |
Rear Brakes | Single 254 mm disc, 1 piston caliper |
Front Tire | 3.25-19 |
Rear Tire | 4.00-18 |
Rake | 28o |
Trail | 109 mm / 4.3 in |
Wheelbase | 1422 mm / 56 in |
Dimensions | Length: 2220 mm / 87.5 in Width: 840 mm / 33.0 in |
Seat Height | 813 mm / 32.0 in |
Dry Weight | 200 kg / 441 lbs |
Fuel Capacity | 18.2 Liters / 4.8 US gal / 4.0 Imp gal |
Consumption | 5.5 L/100 km / 18 km/l / 42 US mpg / 51 Imp mpg |
Top Speed | 190 km/h / 118 mph |