Motorcycles


…with a side of Angelina Jolie…

…and for the role playing gamers out there, the James Bond: 007 RPG stats (for the bike, not Jolie.)

Triumph’s Street Triple R

A smaller version of the famed and powerful Speed Triple, the Street Triple R has a 675cc triple engine producing 107hp and 51ft-lbs of torque; about 20hp / 20 lbs less than the 1050cc triple of the Speed Triple.  The weight, however, drops by 100 lbs…giving it a better torque and power/weight ratio than its larger brother.  It also makes the handling of the Street Triple sublime.

PM: +2   RED: 3   CRUS:  75   MAX: 150   RNG: 200   FORCE: 0   STRUC: 1   COST: $9400

GM Information:  The Street Triple R gains a +2 quick turn and double back maneuvers.

UPDATE:  I just bought the non-R version of this bike, but kitted out with carbon fibre exhaust that gives it a bit more kick, power-wise.  The standard Street Triple has a softer ride, but about the same stats.

I bought a 2007 Triumph Speed Triple a few years back when I was celebrating my first teaching gig at the University of New Mexico.  I had been impressed with the original release, and it wasn’t until 2007 that i could afford (barely) to buy one.  Previous to it, I had been riding a 2001 Triumph Sprint RS that was my first “real” bike.  Unfortunately, the low fuel light had come on for the RS, and you know…that just meant I needed a new bike.

My local shop, PJ’s Triumph and Ducati (great shop for a bike, by the way!) set me up.  I was originally going in for something a bit more practical — the Bonneville — but if I want practical, I’ll drive me Ford!  So I got a good deal on their demo…partly because it had a few barely visible scratches, partly because it was in Roulette Green, and no one was interested in it.

I rode the motorcycle home that night with 600 miles on it.  The motor’s throaty, with that peculiar triple whine.  It was beefy, fast, and maneuverable.  I called him Dionysus — because it was tempting and likely to kill me…just like the god of inebriation.

Dionysus has been with me almost three years and the bike has performed flawlessly.  There have been no issues with it, mechanically.  I did swap the Michelin Power Pilot tires for Power Roads, which I find grip just as well, and last a whole lot longer.  Maintenance is every 6000 miles for fluids, and 12,000 for the vales, etc.  The 12k maintenance is a bit pricey — would have cost me almost $1000, but I purchased a maintenance plan with the $2000 PJ cut off the bike for her obnoxious color and “damage.”

These bikes are finely balanced, and highly maneuverable.  The weight of the bike only really comes into play in aggressive riding, when you do occasionally have to muscle the bike through the corners.  (But then again, I’m still something of a novice having ridden for eight years, and having started at the age of 34.)  Dry weight is 420 pounds, but fully loaded it’s closer to 470.

The 1050cc triple produces scads of power.  They put out about 130hp and 72 ft/lbs of torque at their peak (about 6-7000 rpm) and they redline at 10,000.  My bike dyno’d at a shade under 80 ft/lbs of torque, with a normal fuel map.  I love it.  The torque means no downshifting for a pass.  I’ve snapped the throttle at 60mph and scooted past a line of cars at the century mark in sixth gear in under 3 seconds.  the guys riding with me were banging down the gearing just to keep up.

Granted, others with Ducati 1098s make me look anemic.

The bike has a 0-60 of 2.9 seconds.  It’s not theoretical.  This cycle is, in normal British fashion, polite.  If you go easy on the throttle, it will treat you well and is very controllable.  If you want to go punk, however, it will thrash with the best of them, coming off the mark with it’s front wheel in the air.  Above 130mph, the front wants to lift badly, and when I redlined it in sixth, I was doing somewhere in the 150s.  (I wasn’t looking at the speedo…I was too busy crapping myself!)

These Triumphs are on par with Japanese motorcycles for quality of manufacture, are just as fast, and often quicker off the mark.  And they don’t look or sound like anything else on the road.

The styling on the newer Speed Triples hasn’t changed much.  The exhaust is a bit more sleek (but I like these better), and the wheels are a bit prettier.  There’s also a nice cowling around the radiators that makes the lines flow a bit better.

UPDATE: Well, I’ve run into a problem that apparently is common for the 1050 motor — the electrical system takes a dump at about 4 years/17-20,000 miles in.  I started having trouble with the battery last month.  Got back from Scotland and the bike ran for two days, before the battery died.  Replaced it.  Died two days later — it’s the rectifier.  Replaced.  Two days later it dies again — the stator.  Total cost will be about $800.

My local mechanic and bike shop guy have seen this a bunch in the Speed Triple, and on one Street Triple.  When the electrical system goes, the whole damn thing cascades.  It’s been annoying enough I’m thinking of getting rid of my Speed Triple and moving over to either a Bonneville or a Moto-Guzzi V7 Cafe.  I will wait to see if the bike is reliable for the next few months, but anymore troubles and it’s gone in favor of a used car or bike.

Back in December, my Nolan N-02 helmet from five years ago finally gave up the ghost; the faceplate snapped in half when I put the fog shield into it.  since it’s been a cold winter, I pretty much needed an immediate replacement.  I had ordered up an HJC Sy-Max II, which is reviewed here, and which had serious issues as a helmet for winter riding.  Hence why I was using the Nolan again.

I stopped at the local Cycle Gear and picked up one of the few helmets that fit me — the Scorpion Exo-1000.  Normally, I like the flip-face helmets.  It’s easier to get them on and off, since I don’t have to remove my glasses, but there were none that fit me.  (Our local Cycle Gear is somewhat lame…but it was the closest place to ride to in bitter cold.)

Appearance:  the EXO-1000 is a full face helmet.  Mine is gloss black with silver S (in appropriate “nasty”-looking font) and silver highlights around the vents.  Scorpion looks to be copying the more expensive Arai and Shoeis in their design.  Overall, it’s a good looking helmet.

Fit:  It has an inflatable air collar to lessen wind noise.  I don’t know it this works, since the medium is tight enough on me that I don’t have to pump it up for a good seal.  Did I say tight, I meant tight.  The interior is comfortable…it’s just getting the bloody thing on and off that’s problematic.  There is an air skirt against the wind, but it’s not particularly effective — I still get air up through the helmet, but it’s not uncomfortable, as it had been with the HJC.

The EXO-1000 has an integral sun shield, as the Sy-Max II had, and is controlled with a little lever on the left-hand side just behind the visor.  The fit is good and it is dark enough to cut the New Mexico sun down to size.  The main shield can be swapped out for other shields with a quick turn of the knobs on either side at the pivot points.  It’s quite easy.

There’s a collection of vents — the usual above and below the visor, two at the top where the aerodynamic-looking elements of the helmet are, and one at the back that allows through flow.  All are simple snap open/ closed types, save the rear, which has a side to side switch.  All work easily.

Road noise is peculiar:  it is more quiet than the Nolan was, and much more quiet than the Sy-Max II (if you are getting the impression the Sy-Max II was a disappointment, you’d be right.  It’ll probably be a great summer commuter helmet, when I want the air to just rush right in loud and cold.)  However, the wind noise across the helmet is there…it’s muted, but the tone is unusual.  i wish I could describe it.  It’s not annoying…just there.  The helmet’s been warm enough this winter, save around the chin.  Chin wind coverage gets a C+ at best.

The helmet is DOT and Snell rated.  Style is on par with more expensive helmets — a 4 out of 5; comfort is good once the thing is on, but the process of getting it on or off is a pain in the ass — 4 out of 5 (and only because of the tightness at the neck); overall it gets a 4 out of 5, and would be improved by either loosening up the padding a bit at the neck (especially with the inflation system to counter it) and a better neck curtain for the winter.

My old Nolan N-01 helmet is six years old, and while it’s held up remarkably well, the thing is old and the padding starting to lose it’s thickness.  I ordered up an HJC Sy-Max II flip-face helmet from PJ Triumph Ducati here in Albuquerque and took possession today.

First impressions:  it’s a bit flimsier feeling than the original Sy-Max.  Granted, the plastics technology is improved int eh last eight years, but it’s incredibly light compared to my Nolan.  The helmet does have a better chin bar release system than the Nolan, which has two tabs to push on either side of  the chin bar; the Sy-Max has one in the center.  Easy to get to, easy to manipulate.  the helmet is comfortable, but there’s a space over the ears in the padding (probably for a bluetooth sound system) that will most likely give more wind noise that the Nolan.

Another plus:  the helmet has an integrated sunscreen.  There is a small lever on the top of the helmet that lowers a sun shade over the eyes.  It is far enough out it does not impact glasses — meaning I don’t need to swap from sunglasses to normal glasses when riding.  A single button releases the shade into the helmet.  It works well.

The ventilation seems pretty good, but I’ll find out more about that tomorrow morning when I ride to work, as I will with the road noise.  The color I chose was anthracite — metallic gray.  It looks good, seems well built, and other than the slightly chintzy feel due to the light weight (which I’m sure I will like when I’m wearing the thing for extended periods of time), it seems like a quality helmet.

Not bad for $200…

Dropped into my local Triumph shop to pick up a new helmet and winter gloves, and was treated to a test ride of the new Ducati Streetfighter.  The motorcycle is essentially the 1098, stripped for the city of farings and with a very aggressive headlight/instrument cluster that sits very low and gives the bike a nasty, scrappy look that reminds me of the MV Augusta Brutale…but meaner.

The saddle is hard, like most of the Ducati sportbikes, but there is supposedly a gel seat being made for the Streetfighter.  That said, it was comfortable enough for a 20 minute jaunt through the twisties along the Manzano Mountains.  Like all Ducatis, the gearing is long and the bike is deceptive in its power.  You feel like you’re barely cracking the throttle, but the tach is reading 6000 at 55mph in second gear…but you’d swear you were only doing 30.  Fortunately, there were no police on the stretch of street I was on when I first took the machine out.

Passing is effortless.  Snap the throttle and hang on for your life.  This bike is fast — slam the breath out of you fast.  I got the Streetfighter up over 110 in forth gear in a second or two and was getting pushed backward in the saddle by the airflow over the bike.  Maneuverability is unbelievably snappy and controllable, and reminds me of the Triumph Street Triple — the Ducati is super-light, and I could steer with a little pressure from my middle fingers.  It’s like riding a cloud, and the Ducati does exactly what you want it to, no more, no less, and right away.  The brakes are very strong and there’s not a lot of play or curve to them.  And they stop the Streetfighter hard.  Stopping distance is easily on par with my Speed Triples 110 feet for a 60-0 stop.

Sound on the stock pipes is a bit peculiar:  the bike growls/purrs like a cougar, but the pitch is higher than I expected for a big bore sportbike.  The bike is powerful, but has a definite feminine quality to it.

I highly recommend trying a ride for the sportbike enthusiasts out there.  It’s a hell of a ride.

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