A triumph guy since back in the 1970s, introduced to them by my friend at the time Jeff, (RIP bro) even when everybody moved on to the bigger and more expensive Harleys I always kept a triumph or 2, yeah I got a Harley also but always had a triumph too, even today at 68 yrs old I have a 1970 TR6R, and recently pushed a 1968 650 T120R Bonneville out of a tomb it had been resting in since 1980, love the Triumph motorcycle, so proud to be the owner of such a beautiful machine, often I find myself just staring and amazed at what a awesome machine they are, long live the Triumph motor Company,
I worked at Triumph in the 70's in the Frame shop. I used to weld the main frames up on 2 build jigs. I welded up the Silver Jubilee bikes. I was also on the BBC Man Alive programme when they done a documentary on Triumph.
1968 650cc Bonneville rider here! I downsized from a Kwaka 9 back in the early 1980's and never looked back. Had Mikuni's Carbs when I bought it, but I switched back to Amal. Reliable as the best Swiss watch and easy to work on. Pre electric start. There's nothing like kicking over a Bonneville to start a ride. Fantastic motorcycle. Used to have a mate with Triumph Trophy and another mate with a Thunderbird chopped. Both fantastic motorcycles too.
I just purchased a new 2022 Bonneville T100 great bike and fun to ride. I also in joy back roads on my 1972 Dayton t100r . You can not go wrong purchasing a triumph.
I remember sitting on one in NW England, bristling with pride at a busy intersection during Phase II Mods when a whole swarm of scooters swept by in the opposite direction. That was definitely the bike to be seen on!!!
I live an hour away from Marne Iowa where a great stockist is located so I get to visit the backroom of history,, Pre-owned Brit bikes. I met Craig Vetter at the open house once. To see an Ariel square four and a 73 Trident is good fun.
My brother had a 1951 T-110. The First of several Triumphs. James Dean died in 1955 so dean didn't have a Bonneville. Once again, brother Pete bought the first Bonneville in 1959. He bought another in 1961. It was hard to get the dual cables to open the separate carbs in sync. In 1964, he bought a TR-6 with one Amal carb, which was his and my favorite. He left it completely stock, mufflers, handlebars and all. That bike was the epitome of cool.
My 1974 T140 U.S import-resto' nearly finished. Drum back brake, right foot shift. Cherokee Red and Cold White. As light as a pushbike compared to modern stuff. Keep up the good work Henry. Enjoyed your books too.
Been into the Triumps since 1980 , still have my 1st one 1971 tiger purchased in 1980, have an 825cc 72, 1959 Tigercub all orginial down to the tires and they still have nubs on them .
Sold my 71 TR6 in 73, but if I really wanted to replace it today, I would go for the RE Interceptor 650 which in my opinion is what Triumph should have produced 50 yrs ago. I sadly live in H-D land, 99.5 percent of bike owned by wababee's, but still get approval when I ride up on my 71 CB100.
very nice really, I sort of converted to the Triumph brand some 9 years ago from BMW (well I am German, you cannot blame me to start with a beemer, can you). A Tiger 800 was the first Triumph I had and it stayed with me for 90,000 kms... at some point a Bonneville Bobber was sitting next to the Tiger in my garage, and now, as the Tiger 800 retired, a brandnew Tiger 900 GT Pro is about to arrive..
Henry. You have to check out the new Bonnieville Bobber. 1200cc 76cu. Outrageously sweet. Wish it was offered in British racing green. Loving it here in the states.I always love you're stuff. Loved the uncle Bung's was it, frame find. Press on Sir.
had several Triumphs back in the 70s. The best of the lot in my view is the 1982 TR65 Thunderbird 650. A gem of a bike. Current bike a 1961 Tribsa, 1954 Tiger T110 engine in a 1961 Golden Flash chassis.
I bought a brand new T140D in 1979, I was 19years old. It looked brilliant, rode brilliantly, but it broke down every week without fail! It had a six month warranty, the kill switch was aptly named, it nearly killed me by vibrating off when I was overtaking! I swapped it for a GS550 Suzuki. That was totally reliable. I've tried to trace my Bonnie, it was last taxed in 1982, but to no avail. Where are you now, FCS50V?
@@johnniethepom7545 You were very lucky with your bike! Mine didn't leak oil, it was the electrical system that caused the problems. I eventually swapped it for a GS550 Suzuki, I could rely on it!
I owned a new 1965 TT Special, at the time the fastest product on bike in the world. It was a lightweight brutal powerhouse with 11.5:1 compression ratio pistons. I converted it to street use and eventually burned up the pistons, after putting 10;1 bonny pistons in it it was a better street bike, but it was the day of the bone rattling teeth chattering solid mount 650cc engine, you had to own one to appreciate them.
I owned two early Bonneville models during my time in England and both were troublesome pigs. More so than the BSA and Matchless twins that followed. The Bonnie benefited from good PR and was over rated against other twins of the time.. The only Triumphs I truly admired were the pre-unit alloy, 500 Tiger that provided the heart for my Rickman Metisse scramblers and the my 1955 Triumph Thunderbird.. A good video for Triumph fans covering what is a very pretty motorcycle..
Thanks Henry for a very interesting video. So pleased with my 2020 T100 bought new by me ....to me it looks like a motor cycle should look. Made a few mods to mines to loose some of the modern touches I am not to keen on. Sounds great with its peashooters.....goes great.....not that I push it....past all that.
All great looking bikes. I have what I think is the best looker of the lot. A 900 Thruxton. I just wish it had a kickstart and the sound of the sixties.
First Triumph was a 73 that had been hacked. While it was somewhat fun to ride, it was just way to hacked up. Second was a 2001 Triumph Bonneville America. Rode that bike for 11 years before getting a Harley. My latest acquisition is a 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special. It's fairly pristine other than having short open headers. It definitely turns some heads. I do have the original 2 into 1 exhaust it came with.
Thanks Henry, great story. Recently sat on a new-ish bonnie in red and they are so comfortable. I didn't ride it because I wasn't licensed to, however I hope to ride one in the future, they are great sleds. 👍
Thanks for a great trip down memory lane. Always wanted a Bonnie and when I hit my mid life crisis I was going for one, but, my wife stepped in and put an end to my dream with one comment 'I'd rather have a husband with a stiffy than a stiffy for a husband!' She knows a few of my old mates had bad crashes on bikes so that was the end of that. One good thing came out of it, instead of a bike she agreed I could get a new car, not as much fun, but it still puts a huge grin on my face, a delightful Jag S type became my new toy, now in my 6th Jag an XJ and loving it.
James Dean - he couldn't have had a Bonnie as he died in 1955 and the Bonnie was introduced in 1958 / 9. Just a comment. But YES the Bonnie is iconic. Dean was Born: 8 February 1931, Marion, Indiana, United States. Died: 30 September 1955, Cholame, California, United States
Only just found this and very interesting. A bit disappointed Henry was a bit sneery about the Les Harris Triumphs. They were built in a fairly small industrial unit in Newton Abbot Devon, my wife was in charge of all the admin and lots of other stuff. The problem was Les didn't actually buy Triumph out he just leased the license to make them for a certain number of years. And the license had stringent restrictions on making any improvements to the bike. He employed one of the chief designers and one of the chief engineers from Triumph with the idea of launching a new bike but I believe in the end it came down to lack of funds, my wife had left to have our son by that time. They were actually quite exciting times and the whole staff were very dedicated and did their best to make it happen.
I had a 1982 Meridan Bonnie and my mate bought one of the first Harris Bonnie's. Both great bikes and thanks to Les the continuation of Triumph motorcycles carries on today.
I'd like to see the very rare 1971 T120RV reviewed. They were the first run fitted with a 5 speed gearbox. Only just over 200 of them were made in order for them to be eligible for production racing in the USA. They differed from the 1972 5 speed Bonnie to the extent that the final drive ratio on the 71 5 speed was the same as the 4 speed. The 72 5 speed had a higher final drive ratio. Not all dealers could get the 1971 TR120V as there were not enough to go around, and you usually had to know a dealer well in order to buy one of those limited edition machines.
I had a 1979 Triumph 750 Bonneville black/silver I bought when I was 17 to learn on. Whoaa right out the shed almost head on to a truck, loved the bike and it was fast. Sad I sold it always had some sort of problem fouling plugs and recharging.
The other night, I watched Nowhere to Run starring Jean-Claude Van Damme, he rode a Triumph Bonneville in it. Great scene. Great movie. He is also a Triumph guy.
The first motorcycle I ever rode. A college friend had a 66, he rode up, got off and let me take it down the street. Never ridden so much as a mini bike before. Got the front wheel an inch or so off the ground going over a manhole cover. A few weeks later I was able to "wheelie" that bike.
I long toyed with the idea of getting a classic Bonneville but thoughts of drum brakes and reliability given that I already have several classic cars to keep running put me off. Never realised until I looked it up in 2017 that you could buy a brand new Bonneville with all the mod cons so I ordered one. A beautiful candy red/silver T120. Much nicer than they are now with that chrome grab handle behind the saddle and those gorgeous chrome wheels and heated grips as standard. I had not ridden a motorcycle for 16 years. It was motorcycling heaven. But then I bought a Thruxton R and that bike outshone the T120 by some margin so I traded it in for a Ducati Panigale V2 Troy Bayliss last year. Was sorry to see my T120 go but at least I still have my Thruxton.
Pushrod 360 vertical twin. The UK bike manufacturers were obsessed with an out of date engine configuration. The youth in the late 60s and early 70s bought Japanese, European ohc's and 2-strokes instead.
Fort Worth boys put together this motorcycle and called it Bonnevile cigar. They set records on the Bonnevile flats. The Bonnevile cigar currently is in England at Triumph museum. Way to go Americans....
When Triumph introduced the 1971 oil-in frame tall seat models like yours, at the time I thought they were ungainly and spoiled the classic look of the earlier oil tank models. But in the decades since they have really grown on me. These days, they're only flat English-market handlebars from perfection. IMHO.YMMV.
anyone remember Thrust petroleum a Yorkshire firm I think . My mother had a logo on her mc1 escort that they gave to good customers . It said I get Thrust Regularly lol this was in the 60s70s what a brilliant advert you will never see again
I agree it is one of the best bikes ever.The trouble is, the japanese took one look at it and said,we can do that better and came up with the CB750 and the rest is history.
@@farbeit You are missing the point of what I said.I refer to Honda etc looking at and then making better bikes.Sales around the world, in the day proved that and Triumph etc did not react to that,so cost them in the long term.
Oh,that low end torque. Take off in 1st gear and as soon as you have forward momentum dump it into 2nd and twist the throttle Feel the engine almost come to a stop as the low end torque catches up. Notice the vertical twins pistons hitting you under your ass. Pure motorbike. Soul a la Britain!
field bikes , Banton, KE100,X7 engine and from their on i just liked the engines . Electric bikes will never have the beauty of an air breathing machine. but we need to go there.
I owned a low-mileage (around 2000 miles) 1966 Bonneville in 1969. Unlike my earlier Triumphs, it handled really well. It looked very pretty too. It was let down though by its horribly vibratory engine, which broke exhaust brackets and bulb filaments, and made cruising at 70mph a misery. My pal had a 1969 Thruxton Bonneville which wasn’t quite as bad, so maybe I had a particularly bad one. I had previously owned a 1961 BSA Shooting Star, 500cc, which was a much nicer bike to ride, as well as other Triumph, AJS and Enfield parallel twins, and found that the lower capacity, lower tuned engines were much sweeter.
My Dad was a triumph Man right up to the 60's. Loved his Tigers but hated the Bonnie for some reason. I always preferred the Nortons. Now many years later my last two bikes have been Triumph but neither a Bonnie. Currently have a Speed Triple highbred that I built myself. Now getting a bit much for me. Keep looking at another old British mark in new clothing the new little Enfields.
Well I mean it's a freaking Triumph wildly considered the UK Harley and the ONLY bike you can park next to a Harley at a biker bar and get a nod of respect. So yeah hold your heads high and and be proud. The Bonny's a great looking bike I only wish Triumph would get serious and get more dealerships in the US and stop half assing it and get your factories firing on all cylinders.
I'm sorry, when you rolled out the 19/71/72 Triumph out of the shed you lost me. That bike spelled the end of Triumph dominance. BSA demanded that the oil in frame be utilized across the range and it made the Bonneville hard to build, tall in the saddle and clunky to look at. The mustard yellow and powder blue offerings were a horror as well.
Bought a Bonneville new in 1978 and 1982. Loved them but went over to Japanese for better performance and reliability when I started to holiday in Europe.
My all time favourite bike, the Trumph Bonneville, which rode better and looked better, than any other bike I owned. My old Speedtwin came second, fishtail not withstanding. But with the Bonne, I could leave sparks on opposing curbs at speed, with a chick on the back. Which makes me think... Nobody ever credited these girls for their courage and class, clinging to the chopped off DJs that was our uniform in the mid-sixties. Mothers and daughters married us with pride. Cops looked the other way. Guests dived out of party windows when I arrived, leaving the ladies to me. Was I a terrorist? Nothing, dudes. It was just a few revs and their imaginations did the rest. But no bikie gave one grief when you were sitting on this, the 2-wheel icon to beat all. Triumph Bonneville. If he were fool enough to give me the nod, it was he who the sirens and their women wailed for. And none of us wore helmets. 1%? Nothing percent, yet on the Bonne, we ruled. Today, at 80, it is a HZJ75 Toyota Landcruiser Troopcarrier that takes me on death-defying treks in Arnhem Land, North Australia. But this is the 4WD icon that echos the glory of the Bonneville. My ghost will be seen on a Bonneville.
@@fallinginthed33p The price reflects English labor just like HD reflects American labor. Same reason why I won’t buy a harley made in India for top dollar.
# Meridian...lol. # My heart sank when the worst example of a T120 came out of the shed door, the first year OIF's. But the episode got better thereafter. # why do these retro Hinkley/Chonburi models get all the racist/xenophobic hate? You never see these comments on a vlog about Tigers or Speed Triples. Strange that. Innit.
A triumph guy since back in the 1970s, introduced to them by my friend at the time Jeff, (RIP bro) even when everybody moved on to the bigger and more expensive Harleys I always kept a triumph or 2, yeah I got a Harley also but always had a triumph too, even today at 68 yrs old I have a 1970 TR6R, and recently pushed a 1968 650 T120R Bonneville out of a tomb it had been resting in since 1980, love the Triumph motorcycle, so proud to be the owner of such a beautiful machine, often I find myself just staring and amazed at what a awesome machine they are, long live the Triumph motor Company,
I worked at Triumph in the 70's in the Frame shop. I used to weld the main frames up on 2 build jigs. I welded up the Silver Jubilee bikes. I was also on the BBC Man Alive programme when they done a documentary on Triumph.
1968 650cc Bonneville rider here! I downsized from a Kwaka 9 back in the early 1980's and never looked back. Had Mikuni's Carbs when I bought it, but I switched back to Amal. Reliable as the best Swiss watch and easy to work on. Pre electric start. There's nothing like kicking over a Bonneville to start a ride. Fantastic motorcycle. Used to have a mate with Triumph Trophy and another mate with a Thunderbird chopped. Both fantastic motorcycles too.
Love em. I have a 2013 Bonneville, the wife has a 2020 street twin.
I have the 4th Bonnie to come of the production line at Hinckley. Great bike.
I just purchased a new 2022 Bonneville T100 great bike and fun to ride. I also in joy back roads on my 1972 Dayton t100r . You can not go wrong purchasing a triumph.
I love that bike and was proud to have part of my soul embedded into it long live the bonnie 😎👌🇬🇧🏍🇬🇧
I recently passed my test. After my little learner 125 my first bike is a modern Bonneville T120. It truly is a lovely bike.
I remember sitting on one in NW England, bristling with pride at a busy intersection during Phase II Mods when a whole swarm of scooters swept by in the opposite direction. That was definitely the bike to be seen on!!!
I was smiling the entire time watching this. Just amazing. Love it.
I have a new T120 and I love it 😍. Great video. Really enjoyed watching , biggest like from me 👍. Now I’m off for a ride 😁
I bought a new Bonneville in 1983. My all time favorite bike in spite it ran very hot.
I live an hour away from Marne Iowa where a great stockist is located so I get to visit the backroom of history,, Pre-owned Brit bikes. I met Craig Vetter at the open house once. To see an Ariel square four and a 73 Trident is good fun.
My brother had a 1951 T-110. The First of several Triumphs. James Dean died in 1955 so dean didn't have a Bonneville. Once again, brother Pete bought the first Bonneville in 1959. He bought another in 1961. It was hard to get the dual cables to open the separate carbs in sync. In 1964, he bought a TR-6 with one Amal carb, which was his and my favorite. He left it completely stock, mufflers, handlebars and all. That bike was the epitome of cool.
I had a 1971. A little tall but so much fun to ride !
My 1974 T140 U.S import-resto' nearly finished. Drum back brake, right foot shift. Cherokee Red and Cold White. As light as a pushbike compared to modern stuff. Keep up the good work Henry. Enjoyed your books too.
Another great episode Henry! Bless you and keep well, role on some nice dry roads…🙏
don't forget Richard Gere,and Bruce Lee,the lovely Ann Margaret,, Iconic is an understatement..
Been into the Triumps since 1980 , still have my 1st one 1971 tiger purchased in 1980, have an 825cc 72, 1959 Tigercub all orginial down to the tires and they still have nubs on them .
Sold my 71 TR6 in 73, but if I really wanted to replace it today, I would go for the RE Interceptor 650 which in my opinion is what Triumph should have produced 50 yrs ago. I sadly live in H-D land, 99.5 percent of bike owned by wababee's, but still get approval when I ride up on my 71 CB100.
The Spitfire, the 74 Ducati 900 ss and the Bonnieville are all timeless classic iconic designs.
Would love to meet the man
very nice really, I sort of converted to the Triumph brand some 9 years ago from BMW (well I am German, you cannot blame me to start with a beemer, can you). A Tiger 800 was the first Triumph I had and it stayed with me for 90,000 kms... at some point a Bonneville Bobber was sitting next to the Tiger in my garage, and now, as the Tiger 800 retired, a brandnew Tiger 900 GT Pro is about to arrive..
Fantastic clip
I had a new t120 and now a scrambler xe1200 ,triumph are the best
Regards
Dave from Scotland
I have the same grin every time I ride my T140. It’s just a wonderful machine on twisty roads.
Great video. Just got a mint 2003 and love it
Thanks for sharing! Great content.
Brilliant,thanks for the video!
Henry. You have to check out the new Bonnieville Bobber. 1200cc 76cu. Outrageously sweet. Wish it was offered in British racing green. Loving it here in the states.I always love you're stuff. Loved the uncle Bung's was it, frame find. Press on Sir.
had several Triumphs back in the 70s. The best of the lot in my view is the 1982 TR65 Thunderbird 650. A gem of a bike.
Current bike a 1961 Tribsa, 1954 Tiger T110 engine in a 1961 Golden Flash chassis.
I bought a brand new T140D in 1979, I was 19years old. It looked brilliant, rode brilliantly, but it broke down every week without fail! It had a six month warranty, the kill switch was aptly named, it nearly killed me by vibrating off when I was overtaking!
I swapped it for a GS550 Suzuki.
That was totally reliable.
I've tried to trace my Bonnie, it was last taxed in 1982, but to no avail.
Where are you now, FCS50V?
You were unlucky.
When I was 19 in 1980 I bought a very low mileage T140E . It never missed a beat and it never leaked 1 single drop of oil .
@@johnniethepom7545 You were very lucky with your bike!
Mine didn't leak oil, it was the electrical system that caused the problems. I eventually swapped it for a GS550 Suzuki, I could rely on it!
I owned a new 1965 TT Special, at the time the fastest product on bike in the world. It was a lightweight brutal powerhouse with 11.5:1 compression ratio pistons. I converted it to street use and eventually burned up the pistons, after putting 10;1 bonny pistons in it it was a better street bike, but it was the day of the bone rattling teeth chattering solid mount 650cc engine, you had to own one to appreciate them.
Thanks Henry....
That bike just makes me drool!
My Triumph makes me smile everytime I ride it also.........
I owned two early Bonneville models during my time in England and both were troublesome pigs. More so than the BSA and Matchless twins that followed. The Bonnie benefited from good PR and was over rated against other twins of the time.. The only Triumphs I truly admired were the pre-unit alloy, 500 Tiger that provided the heart for my Rickman Metisse scramblers and the my 1955 Triumph Thunderbird.. A good video for Triumph fans covering what is a very pretty motorcycle..
Aquired a ratty 76 a few months ago and got it started yesterday!
Good interesting video the new Bonnevilles 2022 in newer in the states don’t have the fort boot I think that’s a good classic look
Thanks Henry for a very interesting video.
So pleased with my 2020 T100 bought new by me
....to me it looks like a motor cycle should look.
Made a few mods to mines to loose some of the modern touches I am not to keen on.
Sounds great with its peashooters.....goes great.....not that I push it....past all that.
All great looking bikes. I have what I think is the best looker of the lot. A 900 Thruxton. I just wish it had a kickstart and the sound of the sixties.
Thanks from Portugal 👍👍👍👍
First Triumph was a 73 that had been hacked. While it was somewhat fun to ride, it was just way to hacked up.
Second was a 2001 Triumph Bonneville America. Rode that bike for 11 years before getting a Harley.
My latest acquisition is a 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special. It's fairly pristine other than having short open headers. It definitely turns some heads. I do have the original 2 into 1 exhaust it came with.
Thanks Henry, great story. Recently sat on a new-ish bonnie in red and they are so comfortable. I didn't ride it because I wasn't licensed to, however I hope to ride one in the future, they are great sleds. 👍
Thanks for a great trip down memory lane. Always wanted a Bonnie and when I hit my mid life crisis I was going for one, but, my wife stepped in and put an end to my dream with one comment 'I'd rather have a husband with a stiffy than a stiffy for a husband!' She knows a few of my old mates had bad crashes on bikes so that was the end of that. One good thing came out of it, instead of a bike she agreed I could get a new car, not as much fun, but it still puts a huge grin on my face, a delightful Jag S type became my new toy, now in my 6th Jag an XJ and loving it.
Love the man would love to meet him
You probably can for fifty quid.
You're spot on! I ride my -69 US proudly.
James Dean - he couldn't have had a Bonnie as he died in 1955 and the Bonnie was introduced in 1958 / 9. Just a comment. But YES the Bonnie is iconic. Dean was Born: 8 February 1931, Marion, Indiana, United States. Died: 30 September 1955, Cholame, California, United States
Only just found this and very interesting. A bit disappointed Henry was a bit sneery about the Les Harris Triumphs. They were built in a fairly small industrial unit in Newton Abbot Devon, my wife was in charge of all the admin and lots of other stuff. The problem was Les didn't actually buy Triumph out he just leased the license to make them for a certain number of years. And the license had stringent restrictions on making any improvements to the bike. He employed one of the chief designers and one of the chief engineers from Triumph with the idea of launching a new bike but I believe in the end it came down to lack of funds, my wife had left to have our son by that time. They were actually quite exciting times and the whole staff were very dedicated and did their best to make it happen.
I had a 1982 Meridan Bonnie and my mate bought one of the first Harris Bonnie's. Both great bikes and thanks to Les the continuation of Triumph motorcycles carries on today.
I'd like to see the very rare 1971 T120RV reviewed. They were the first run fitted with a 5 speed gearbox. Only just over 200 of them were made in order for them to be eligible for production racing in the USA. They differed from the 1972 5 speed Bonnie to the extent that the final drive ratio on the 71 5 speed was the same as the 4 speed. The 72 5 speed had a higher final drive ratio. Not all dealers could get the 1971 TR120V as there were not enough to go around, and you usually had to know a dealer well in order to buy one of those limited edition machines.
Great vid 🖖🏼🍺🏍
6.45 : "Meridian"? Harry, its Meriden mate.
Thats what I thought & only live a few miles from there
It's Henry!
"Harry"? Alistair, it's Henry mate.
I had a 1979 Triumph 750 Bonneville black/silver I bought when I was 17 to learn on. Whoaa right out the shed almost head on to a truck, loved the bike and it was fast. Sad I sold it always had some sort of problem fouling plugs and recharging.
Still rocking a `66. Love `em.
only just found this vid. what about the thruxton bobni with the extra center racing plugs
The other night, I watched Nowhere to Run starring Jean-Claude Van Damme, he rode a Triumph Bonneville in it. Great scene. Great movie. He is also a Triumph guy.
The first motorcycle I ever rode. A college friend had a 66, he rode up, got off and let me take it down the street. Never ridden so much as a mini bike before. Got the front wheel an inch or so off the ground going over a manhole cover. A few weeks later I was able to "wheelie" that bike.
Don't worry Henry I won't take your word for it.
Detector John (from the pilot) I bought one this week!
I long toyed with the idea of getting a classic Bonneville but thoughts of drum brakes and reliability given that I already have several classic cars to keep running put me off. Never realised until I looked it up in 2017 that you could buy a brand new Bonneville with all the mod cons so I ordered one. A beautiful candy red/silver T120. Much nicer than they are now with that chrome grab handle behind the saddle and those gorgeous chrome wheels and heated grips as standard. I had not ridden a motorcycle for 16 years. It was motorcycling heaven. But then I bought a Thruxton R and that bike outshone the T120 by some margin so I traded it in for a Ducati Panigale V2 Troy Bayliss last year. Was sorry to see my T120 go but at least I still have my Thruxton.
My 1st intro to motorcycles at 9 yrs old. Still got numb fingers from the autosol polishing. Ha ha Henry Essence pure Essence 😁 Happy Days Mark.
Pushrod 360 vertical twin. The UK bike manufacturers were obsessed with an out of date engine configuration.
The youth in the late 60s and early 70s bought Japanese, European ohc's and 2-strokes instead.
In Feb 77 I bought a T140V attached to a Chariot sidecar on sale in Brisbane, Australia. As a 17yr old on an outfit I was considered an oddity.
Statham was seen riding the 1966 for exactly 4 seconds at the start of the movie. Still looked pretty cool. 😎
Bonneville. A truly great Briton.
My 1st big bike 650 Bonny wish I still had it👍
Fort Worth boys put together this motorcycle and called it Bonnevile cigar. They set records on the Bonnevile flats. The Bonnevile cigar currently is in England at Triumph museum. Way to go Americans....
Long time client man 197 0 was best for me
When Triumph introduced the 1971 oil-in frame tall seat models like yours, at the time I thought they were ungainly and spoiled the classic look of the earlier oil tank models. But in the decades since they have really grown on me. These days, they're only flat English-market handlebars from perfection. IMHO.YMMV.
It looked like an oil on frame bikke, but the chrome fenders from the 68 confuses the issue.
anyone remember Thrust petroleum a Yorkshire firm I think . My mother had a logo on her mc1 escort that they gave to good customers . It said
I get Thrust Regularly lol this was in the 60s70s what a brilliant advert you will never see again
I agree it is one of the best bikes ever.The trouble is, the japanese took one look at it and said,we can do that better and came up with the CB750 and the rest is history.
How many CB 750 do you see on the road today ? Not many.
@@farbeit You are missing the point of what I said.I refer to Honda etc looking at and then making better bikes.Sales around the world, in the day proved that and Triumph etc did not react to that,so cost them in the long term.
I had a t140 back in 85, it was good but I couldn't stop oil leaks.
Oh,that low end torque. Take off in 1st gear and as soon as you have forward momentum dump it into 2nd and twist the throttle Feel the engine almost come to a stop as the low end torque catches up. Notice the vertical twins pistons hitting you under your ass. Pure motorbike. Soul a la Britain!
Original paint/bike like this looks nicer than a restored one, any day of the week....and twice as much on Sunday...
field bikes , Banton, KE100,X7 engine and from their on i just liked the engines . Electric bikes will never have the beauty of an air breathing machine. but we need to go there.
I owned a low-mileage (around 2000 miles) 1966 Bonneville in 1969. Unlike my earlier Triumphs, it handled really well. It looked very pretty too. It was let down though by its horribly vibratory engine, which broke exhaust brackets and bulb filaments, and made cruising at 70mph a misery. My pal had a 1969 Thruxton Bonneville which wasn’t quite as bad, so maybe I had a particularly bad one. I had previously owned a 1961 BSA Shooting Star, 500cc, which was a much nicer bike to ride, as well as other Triumph, AJS and Enfield parallel twins, and found that the lower capacity, lower tuned engines were much sweeter.
I like the flat tracker.
How many bikes do you personally own Henry.
My Dad was a triumph Man right up to the 60's. Loved his Tigers but hated the Bonnie for some reason. I always preferred the Nortons. Now many years later my last two bikes have been Triumph but neither a Bonnie. Currently have a Speed Triple highbred that I built myself. Now getting a bit much for me. Keep looking at another old British mark in new clothing the new little Enfields.
Meridian?
Kirk Douglas, Bert Lancaster, and Clint Eastwood had Bonneville’s.
is a legende..😍💪
Well I mean it's a freaking Triumph wildly considered the UK Harley and the ONLY bike you can park next to a Harley at a biker bar and get a nod of respect. So yeah hold your heads high and and be proud. The Bonny's a great looking bike I only wish Triumph would get serious and get more dealerships in the US and stop half assing it and get your factories firing on all cylinders.
I'm sorry, when you rolled out the 19/71/72 Triumph out of the shed you lost me. That bike spelled the end of Triumph dominance. BSA demanded that the oil in frame be utilized across the range and it made the Bonneville hard to build, tall in the saddle and clunky to look at. The mustard yellow and powder blue offerings were a horror as well.
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One of my biggest regrets was having to sell my project ‘68 650 bonnie due to being unemployed.
and i got a 2018 bonnie.
Bought a Bonneville new in 1978 and 1982. Loved them but went over to Japanese for better performance and reliability when I started to holiday in Europe.
DAVID ESSEX HAD ONE.
It wasn’t Meridian it was Meriden Henry 😳
Bonnies not bad I preferred my Norton 650ss it had some hairy after market parts
Triumph were built in Meriden NOT Meridian as he said
The guys a knob
Nice... :-)))
The old Bonneville looks like the Royal Enfield 650.
All due respect; I believe you’ve got your statement backwards mate. 🇬🇧👍🏼
My all time favourite bike, the Trumph Bonneville, which rode better and looked better, than any other bike I owned. My old Speedtwin came second, fishtail not withstanding. But with the Bonne, I could leave sparks on opposing curbs at speed, with a chick on the back. Which makes me think... Nobody ever credited these girls for their courage and class, clinging to the chopped off DJs that was our uniform in the mid-sixties. Mothers and daughters married us with pride. Cops looked the other way. Guests dived out of party windows when I arrived, leaving the ladies to me. Was I a terrorist? Nothing, dudes. It was just a few revs and their imaginations did the rest. But no bikie gave one grief when you were sitting on this, the 2-wheel icon to beat all. Triumph Bonneville. If he were fool enough to give me the nod, it was he who the sirens and their women wailed for. And none of us wore helmets. 1%? Nothing percent, yet on the Bonne, we ruled. Today, at 80, it is a HZJ75 Toyota Landcruiser Troopcarrier that takes me on death-defying treks in Arnhem Land, North Australia. But this is the 4WD icon that echos the glory of the Bonneville. My ghost will be seen on a Bonneville.
British classic, made in Thailand! 😮😮😮
It's not "even" Steve McQueen, it's especially Steve McQueen
Elvis had one
I would purchase one if they were still made in England.
Does it matter where it's made?
@@fallinginthed33p The price reflects English labor just like HD reflects American labor. Same reason why I won’t buy a harley made in India for top dollar.
Nothing is “made” in the same spot. A bike with 1000 components from around the world is just assembled. Who cares where it’s assembled?
@@IanTheEarlobe It’s awesome watching jobs flee the country so manufacturers can charge top dollar and spend shit on labor. You can pay it I won’t .
Just buy an old Hinckley Bonneville you can usually get one for about four grand.
A shame they never made a proper Thruxton for the road with the fancy internals. But left behind by the Japanese.
I still own my Meriden Triumph Bonneville. Finest ride ever. Bought new in 79 and just cant part with it. So nimble and stingy on fuel.
# Meridian...lol.
# My heart sank when the worst example of a T120 came out of the shed door, the first year OIF's.
But the episode got better thereafter.
# why do these retro Hinkley/Chonburi models get all the racist/xenophobic hate?
You never see these comments on a vlog about Tigers or Speed Triples.
Strange that. Innit.
Agreed, 1971= 34" seat height, Comical hub brakes, dodgy paint.
Still a good looking bike in the American spec and great fun great to ride. No room for Bonnie snobbery here 😉