Trophy 900/1200 | |
Manufacturer: | Triumph Motorcycles Ltd |
Production: | 1991 - 2003 |
Assembly: | Hinckley |
Class: | Touring motorcycle |
Engine: | 885cc (1200: 1180cc) four-stroke triple/four |
Bore Stroke: | 76 x 65 mm |
Compression: | 10.6:1 |
Power: | 100PS at 9,000 rpm (1200: 141PS at 9,000 rpm) |
Torque: | 79.9Nm at 6,500 rpm (1200: 114.1Nm at 8,000 rpm |
Ignition: | Electronic |
Transmission: | Six-speed |
Frame: | Tubular high-tensile steel |
Suspension: | 43 mm telescopic forks, gas-pressurised rear monoshock |
Tires: | 120/70R17 front, 160/60R18 rear |
Wheelbase: | 1490mm |
Seat Height: | 800mm |
Dry Weight: | 900: 489lb, 1200: 529lb |
Wet Weight: | 900: 549lb, 1200: 589lb |
Fuel Capacity: | 25L (includes 5L reserve) |
Related: | Triumph Trident |
Sp: | UK |
Footnotes: | 1991 specifications [1] |
The Triumph Trophy (model codes T336 and T340) is a three or four-cylinder touring motorcycle of either 885 cc or 1,180 cc capacity. These bikes were produced from 1991 to 2003 at Hinckley, Leicestershire, England, by Triumph Motorcycles Ltd, the successor business to the defunct Triumph Engineering at Meriden Works, Warwickshire, England.
A range of new 750 cc and 900 cc triple-cylinder bikes and 1,000 cc and 1,200 cc four-cylinder bikes were launched at the September 1990 Cologne Motorcycle Show.[2] The motorcycles used famous model names from the glory days of Meriden Triumph and were first made available to the public between March (Trophy 1200 being the first) and September 1991.[3] The range had been revealed to the press in June 1990 at the Hinckley Factory and were introduced to the public in December at the International Motorcycle Show at the National Exhibition Centre, Birmingham.[4]
The Trophy uses a modular liquid-cooled double overhead camshaft (DOHC) engine design in a steel frame with a large-diameter backbone design. The modular design ensured that a variety of models could be offered whilst keeping production costs under control.[5]
The high-tensile steel tubular frame has a large diameter spine based on that of the Triumph Bonneville T140, though engine oil is not held in the frame. Japanese companies supplied cycle parts including Nissin (hydraulic disc brakes) and Showa or Kayaba for the front telescopic fork suspension.[6]
In 1996 a wind tunnel tested twin-headlight full fairing was added along with optional hard luggage.[7]