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Triumph Trophy S.E.

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Make Model

Triumph Trophy S.E.

Year

2013

Engine

Four stroke, transverse three cylinder. DOHC, 4 valves per cylinder

Capacity

1215 cc / 74.1 cu in
Bore x Stroke 85 x 71.4 mm
Cooling System Liquid-cooled
Compression Ratio 11.0:1
Oil Capacity 4.0 Litres / 1.1 US gal . 0.9 Imp gal
Exhaust Stainless steel 3 into 1, side mounted stainless steel silencer

Induction

Ride by wire, fuel injection

Ignition 

TCI (Transistor Controlled Ignition)
Spark Plug NGK, DPR8EA-9
Starting Electric
Battery 12V, 18Ah

Max Power

99 kW / 134.6 hp @ 8900 rpm

Max Torque

120 Nm / 12.24 kgf-m / 88.5 ft-lb @ 6450 rpm
Clutch Wet, multi-plate

Transmission 

6 Speed 
Final Drive Shaft
Frame Aluminum beam twin-spar, swingarm single-sided, cast aluminum alloy with shaft drive

Front Suspension

WP 43 mm upside down forks, manually adjustable rebound and damping
Front Wheel Travel 130 mm / 5.1 in

Rear Suspension

WP monoshock with remote oil reservoir, manually adjustable hydraulic preload, manually adjustable rebound damping
Rear Wheel Travel 120 mm / 4.7 in

Front Brakes

2x 320 mm floating discs, Nissin 4-piston calipers, linked brakes
(front brakes partially activated by rear), ABS (non-switchable), Front Brake Master Cylinder Nissin integrated reservoir master cylinder 14mm diameter

Rear Brakes

Single 282mm disc, Nissin 2-piston sliding caliper, ABS (nonswitchable)

Front Tyre

120/70 ZR17

Rear Tyre

190/55 ZR17
Rake 27.0º
Trail 119 mm / 4.7 in
Dimensions Length 2235 mm / 87.7 in
Width     975 mm / 38.3 in
Heigh:  1435 mm / 56.4 in
Wheelbase 1490 mm / 58.6 in
Seat Height 770 mm / 30.3in  - 790mm / 31.1in

Wet Weight

301 kg / 662 lbs

GVWR

481 kg / 1060 lbs

Fuel Capacity 

26 Litres / 6.9 US gals / 5.7 Imp gal

TRIUMPH ENTERS TOURING SEGMENT WITH THE NEW 1215cc TROPHY

Triumph Motorcycles is entering the touring market with the launch of the all-new shaft-drive Trophy. The Trophy is the third all-new model to be launched by the Hinckley manufacturer over the past 18 months, confirming Triumph’s continued investment in design, technology and engineering. The all-new Trophy is packed with a host of technology features, most of which are standard equipment.

At the heart of the Trophy is the same powerful, three-cylinder engine developed for the award-winning Tiger Explorer. The shaft driven, 1215cc triple delivers an impressive 132bhp at 8,900 revs and 89ft.lbs of torque at 6,450rpm, providing smooth, effortless power whenever it’s needed. To ensure the optimum levels of refinement, the engine features a counter-rotating balancer shaft to smooth out crankshaft vibrations.

A torsional damping system is used to transfer power from the gearbox to the shaft drive through a sprung bevel gear. In addition to this, a metalastic shaft drive is used which allows a certain amount of compliance in the shaft assembly. These combined features help to provide a refined drivetrain and overall chassis performance which ensures power is delivered in a smooth and controllable manner.

An extensive testing and development program has honed the chassis to provide true touring comfort while still connecting the rider with the road. Ride-by-wire technology provides both traction control and cruise control functionality, as well as optimizing engine efficiency and fuel economy. Great effort has been made to optimize weather and wind protection with aerodynamically enhanced fairings. The electrically-adjustable screen can raise nearly 6.5” and comes with a memory function that automatically adjusts to your last pre-set position when you restart the bike. Rider and pillion passenger comfort is further enhanced with a range of seat options including heated front and rear seats. The rider seat height can additionally be adjusted between 30.3” and 31.1”.

Two models are available: the Trophy and the Trophy SE. Either model can be selected in Pacific Blue or Lunar Silver paint schemes. Both models feature headlight positional adjustment, center stand, rider seat height adjustment, lockable cockpit storage box with 12v power socket, a 6.6 gallon fuel tank and Triumph’s unique Dynamic Luggage System (TDLS), all as standard.

The Triumph Dynamic Luggage System helps maintain chassis balance by decoupling the mass from the chassis allowing each pannier to move up to a 5 degree arc therefore optimizing stability and refinement. With 31 Litresof storage capacity per pannier, additional storage can be gained with the optional 55 liter, powered “Plug and Play” top box. The “Plug and Play” feature allows easy fitting and removal without the need to connect and disconnect cables or wires. It features a 12v socket on the inside to charge a camera, phone or any other electrical device while on the move.

The Trophy enjoys extended 10,000-mile service intervals, with major services only needed every 20,000 miles.

Triumph Trophy Features and Benefits

• Powerful three-cylinder, 1215cc engine developing 132bhp and 89ft.lbs of torque at just 6,450rpm.
• Robust, virtually maintenance-free shaft drive.
• Supreme ride comfort coupled with Triumph’s dynamic handling expertise.
• The most technologically-advanced Triumph ever, featuring ride-by-wire throttle, traction control, electronic cruise control, electrically adjustable screen and linked ABS.
• Triumph Dynamic Luggage System comes standard, providing practicality with dynamic stability.
• Extended service intervals along with two-year unlimited mileage warranty.
• Available at Triumph dealers in October 2012.

Review

BMW K1600GT vs. Triumph Trophy SE vs. Yamaha FJR1300A

For riders who love sport-touring, this has gotta be the golden age. A decade and a half ago, motorcycles that could unravel a zigzag backroad nearly as well as a sportbike yet make open-road travel almost as enjoyable as a full-blown touring rig were few and far between. But today, about a dozen bikes can fulfill those special requirements. And they’re all better in every area of sport-touring performance than the best of days gone by.

Including the three seen here. BMW’s cutting-edge K1600GT has scored top sport-touring honors in our annual Ten Best awards the past two years, but it has a couple of new challengers for 2013. Triumph just unleashed the all-new Trophy SE sport-tourer, a 1215cc inline-Triple loaded with electronics and a host of other on-the-road-again features. And Yamaha has snuck back into the picture with the 2013 FJR1300, an update of the same basic machine the tuning-fork folks have been selling here since 2003. Could either of those two knock the BMW off the top step of the podium?

To answer that question, we took this trio on a three-day excursion up through California’s central coast and valleys, covering a balanced mix of freeways, scenic country roads and some of the Golden State’s finest curvature. Accompanying me were Todd Eagan, frequent CW tester and vastly experienced ex-racer, and Jamie Elvidge, longtime motojournalist and arguably the best female rider ever to scribe a word.

By the time we reached our first night’s stop in Paso Robles, things had already begun sorting themselves out. The BMW, as always, impressed with the utter smoothness of its power, an endless river of sharp acceleration that comes to life right off idle and continues unabated as the 1649cc six shrieks its way to redline with an exhaust note that is, as Jamie described it, “entertainment in itself. I could listen to it all day.” Whether you’re in the BMW’s Rain, Normal or Dynamic power-delivery mode—all of which can be switched on the fly—throttle response and power vary slightly but always allow the 718-pound K-bike to produce dazzling acceleration.

As it should; its engine is 21 percent bigger than the FJR’s and holds a 26-percent cc advantage over the Trophy’s. The 663-pound Triumph never cuts loose with anything close to omigod acceleration but instead relentlessly doles out strong, perfectly linear power everywhere. And that, as Todd discovered, makes for a sneaky-fast motorcycle. “I often ended up going a lot faster on the Triumph than I thought,” he said. The Trophy’s engine is so manageable that the lack of any switchable power delivery system is not an issue. The Yamaha, meanwhile, uses the caterpillar-class low-end and midrange torque of its 1298cc inline-four to do an admirable job of almost matching the BMW in overall acceleration, and running several ticks ahead of the Triumph.

The engine’s excellent grunt is pushing the lightest bike (628 lb.) of the trio, helping overcome the fact that it’s the only one of the three with a five-speed gearbox. The ’13 FJR now has a two-position “Drive-mode” that lets the rider select Touring (softer throttle response and more-gradual power delivery) or Sport (completely unrestricted power) on the fly.

Our second-day route of mostly backroads solidified the three sport-tourers’ handling capabilities. We were mightily impressed with the Triumph, whose steering qualities are sheer perfection. Turn-in is magically light, and the steering remains absolutely dead-neutral regardless of corner speed, lean angle or surface imperfections. Combine those traits with superb suspension behavior, totally predictable power delivery and generous cornering clearance, and you’ve got a bike that’s a dream to push hard through the turns.

Like the BMW, the Triumph has electronically adjustable suspension; but while it’s part of a $1295 option package on the Beemer, it’s standard on the Trophy SE. It gives the Triumph three rebound-damping settings at both ends (sport, normal, comfort) and three preload choices at the rear (1-up, 1-up plus luggage, 2-up). Ride quality ranges from stiff but rock-solid-planted in sport/2-up to firm but still reasonably comfortable in comfort/1-up.

With the K1600’s system, which has very similar electronic adjustment options, the difference between full comfort and full sport is greater. At one extreme, the ride is nicely plush, and in the other, it is very taut but keeps the big K-bike stable and controllable in the fastest, deepest-lean corners. Handling, however, is where the BMW and Triumph distanced themselves from the Yamaha. The FJR’s manually adjustable suspension has plenty of options (preload, compression and rebound damping up front; rebound and preload in the rear), but it doesn’t provide as much chassis control as those on the other two sport-tourers. The ride in the softest settings is comparable; but even at full firm, as Todd described it, “The bike loses its composure when pushed hard through corners and moves around any time the road surface isn’t close to perfect.”

What’s more, the front end has so much roll-steer (the insistence of the fork to keep turning into the corner) when cornering that constant firm pressure must be maintained on the inside grip to prevent the bike from standing up. If the throttle is closed or the front brake trailed midcorner, the stand-up tendency is magnified, and as the front tire wears, the condition worsens. Only when slammed really aggressively through high-speed corners does the steering become more—although not completely—neutral.

Ergonomically, all three bikes are similar but still different. The “rider triangle” (seat-to-grip-to-peg relationship) is the most relaxed on the Triumph, the tightest on the Yamaha. All these have two-position-adjustable seats, and the Yamaha even has three-way-adjustable handlebars; but no matter how anything is adjusted, the Trophy still has the best all-day riding position. Credit some of that to the SE’s seat, the most accommodating but the widest and also the tallest, even in its lowest position. Comfort-wise, the BMW slots in between the two with ergos that are marginally tighter than the Triumph’s. The K-bike’s seat is the least butt-pleasing of the three, and an optional lower seat is a “no-cost” option.

All three machines have electrically adjustable windshields, but they, too, vary widely in coverage and range of adjustment. The Yamaha’s is the lowest, whether fully extended or retracted, and the Triumph’s is by far the highest; even Shaquille O’Neal wouldn’t be able to see over the top of it when it’s fully raised. Jamie didn’t like the SE’s shield for that reason. “I usually like to look over a windshield, not through it,” she noted, “but that’s never possible on the Triumph.”

Todd agreed, except for those times when protection from wind, rain and bugs in the teeth is desirable. In that regard, the Triumph edges ahead of the BMW. Between its wide, tall windscreen, expansive fairing and low-mount mirrors that shield the rider’s hands, the SE cradles you in a comparatively still pocket of protection. The K1600GT is a close second, the Yamaha a distant third. The FJR’s windscreen doesn’t keep as much air off the rider, and its narrow fairing provides very little hand protection.

This is just one of several reasons that, in all fairness, the Yamaha really doesn’t belong in this comparison. Overall, it’s a very good motorcycle that was the top sport-tourer on the market a decade ago. Plus, it’s $3000 cheaper than the Triumph and a whopping 10 Large less-expensive than our optioned-out K1600GT testbike. But time has marched on, and despite incremental improvements over the years, the FJR simply isn’t in the same league with new-age technowonders like the BMW and Triumph.

Those two clearly are the class of the class. The Triumph is a marvel of handling that instills rider confidence like nothing else in the sport-touring category. “More than the other two,” said Todd, “the Trophy feels like a real motorcycle, my kind of motorcycle. You get the type of feedback that makes you feel like you’re always in control. If it were my money, it’s the one I would buy.”

Nevertheless, all three of us chose the K1600GT as the winner of this comparison. Its mix of power, smoothness, handling, comfort, sophistication and user-friendliness is downright seductive. Yes, it’s more expensive, especially with the $5000 worth of options fitted to our testbike. “But most people who buy sport-tourers don’t quibble over a few thousand bucks,” said Jamie. “They’re willing to pay to get what they want.”

If what they want is the finest sport-tourer on two wheels, the BMW is—for the third straight year—the best of the best.

Source Cycle World