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Triumph Daytona 675
As the first three-cylinder super sports middleweight, the Daytona 675 is a force to be reckoned with in the most hotly contested arena in motorcycling. The Daytona 675 has won countless comparison tests and for the past two years has taken both the MasterBike and Supertest ‘King of the Supersport’ crowns. With its exciting, powerful engine and intuitive, razor sharp chassis the Daytona 675 has reinvented the supersports middleweight map. The Daytona IS incomparable. The Urban Sports Range - The 675cc and 1050cc triple engines that power Triumph’s stunning sports bikes are renowned for their strength and flexibility from tickover to redline. The range includes Streetfighters, Supersports, Adventure Sports and Sports Touring bikes all with unique character, real world performance and a distinctive triple roar.
FEATURES: Engine
Review
Since Triumph decided that its middle-weight
sportbike should be called the Daytona (rather than 'TT'), Hinckley has
tried three times. First came a four-cylinder model in 600cc displacement,
then a four-cylinder 650cc, and now the three-cylinder 675. All good things
come in threes these days for Triumph, and it has been decided in the
highest places that exclusivity will be connected with the make. So has
Triumph got it right this time?
The engine is the central feature around which everything else is built and designed. By 62MPH in the highest gear the dial shows 4,500rpm. From these rpm the acceleration is smooth. At 8,000rpm we start to feel the class-beating midrange, and from here it really begins to get going. The engine comes properly to life and rips through the dial right up to the redline at an indicated 14,000rpm. The fuel injection is nearly perfect and tolerates off-on throttle transitions without a jerky response. The clutch is light and precise, but the gearbox is still not up to the standard set by the rest of the running gear. The problem is that when up-shifting there is a little more resistance than you want. Instead of a progressive upward migration of the gears it feels as if there is ever so slight hindrance to your foot. A stiff feel in other words. Downshifts have good sensitivity, on a par with better gearboxes. The only reason this becomes prominent is that there is almost nothing else about the 675 to criticise.
Into the bends it feels that a little extra push on the handlebars must be
made before the 675 can lean completely on the edges of its tires. As soon
as it bites, the 675 is just as sure and stable in the middle of bends as
the Ducati 749. The standard tyres on the Daytona 675 are the absolute best
road tyre that Pirelli has, namely the Dragon Supercorsa Pro. With the
launch at the Sepang circuit in Malaysia there was no point for the Pirelli
technicians to take any special track tyres. The Supercorsa Pro tyres have
no tread on the extreme outsides, and thus work like a racing slick at
maximum lean. It is up for speculation whether Triumph chose this tire to
gain an advantage in various comparison tests on the track. Regardless, you
get a good set of tyres as standard. In the rain, however, these tires are
no picnic, and so you had best stay as upright as you can on the wet stuff.
When I was riding in the wet, there was a fair amount of grip on the treaded
part of the tires, so I just tried to avoid leaning over onto the slick
sidewall Source Motorcycle Daily
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Any corrections or more information on these motorcycles will be kindly appreciated. |