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Triumph Tiger 800

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Make Model

Triumph Tiger 800

Year

2012

Engine

Four stroke, transverse three cylinder, DOHC, 4 valve per cylinder

Capacity

799 cc / 48.7 cu-in
Bore x Stroke 74 x 61.9 mm
Compression Ratio 12.0:1
Cooling System Liquid cooled
Lubrication Wet sump

Induction

Multipoint sequential electronic fuel injection

Ignition 

Digital CDI
Starting Electric
Exhaust Stainless Steel, 3 into 1, high-level stainless steel silencer
Clutch Wet, multi-plate

Max Power

69.1 kW / 93.9 hp @ 9300 rpm

Max Torque

79 Nm / 8.1 kgf-m /58 ft.lb @ 7850 rpm

Transmission 

6 Speed
Final Drive Chain
Frame Tubular steel trellis frame. Swingarm: twin-sided, cast aluminum alloy wheels

Front Suspension

Showa 45mm upside down forks
Front Wheel Travel 180 mm / 7.1 in

Rear Suspension

Showa monoshock with remote oil reservoir, hydraulically adjustable preload, rebound damping adjustment
Rear Wheel Travel 170 mm / 6.7 in

Front Brakes

2 x 308 mm Floating discs, Nissin 2-piston floating caliper (ABS available), Nissin master cylinder, 14mm diameter

Rear Brakes

Single 255 mm disc, Nissin single-piston floating caliper (ABS available)

Front Tyre

110/80 ZR19

Rear Tyre

150/70 ZR17
Rake 23.9°
Trail 92.4mm / 3.6 in

Dimensions

Length  2215 mm / 87.1in

Width      795 mm / 31.3 in

Height  1350 mm / 53.1 in

Wheelbase 1530 mm / 60.2in
Seat Height 810 mm -830 mm / 31.9 in- 32.7 in adjustable

Wet Weight

209.6 kg / 462 lbs

Fuel Capacity 

18.9 Litres / 5.0 gal / 4.2 Imp gal

 

Rugged, practical and great fun. Tiger 800. Long awaited, ready to appeal. At home in the city. Loves the open road. Ultra maneuverable. Classic Triumph style. Load up with luggage and watch it go. Built for the journey. Built for your lifestyle. Tiger 800. Your bike, your way.

Tiger 800 comes highly-specified as standard. Take a look and you’ll find neat touches all around. Two-piece adjustable seat, suspension and levers combine with hand guards to ensure your comfort, while a built in immobilizer and switchable ABS option are designed with you and the bike’s safety and security in mind.

Practicality is key with the Tiger 800. Superb agility comes as standard thanks to wide, tapered aluminum bars and lightweight cast wheels (19” front and 17” rear). A well appointed rear rack doubles up as a passenger grab rail while up front the comprehensive instrumentation gives you all the vital information you need to know on your journey.

The Tiger 800 also comes with high capacity generator to allow the fitment of multiple electrical accessories for even greater practicality. Over 60 bespoke accessories have been developed for the Tiger 800 series, including rugged hard and soft luggage solutions, heated grips and tire pressure monitoring sensors.

TRIUMPH TIGER 800
- Class-leading 95PS 799cc three-cylinder engine
- Adjustable seat height and handlebar position
- Switchable ABS option
- Coded key immobiliser for added security
- 645w generator allows fitment of multiple electrical accessories
- Wide range of official accessories available even more practicality

Designed from the ground up to meet the demands of some of the most discerning motorcyclists, the Tiger 800 comes highly specified and delivers a unique experience for the adventure-minded rider.

This unique experience comes courtesy of the new three-cylinder 799cc powerplant, delivering a class-leading 95PS and an extremely accessible 79Nm of torque. With its flat torque curve and smooth power delivery, the Tiger 800 has been designed to be
easy to ride in all conditions, including off-road.

The Tiger 800 features a tough steel frame capable of carrying large amounts of luggage and coping with the rough and tumble of off-piste riding. Ten-spoke alloy wheels, 19” at the front and 17” at the rear, allow for the fitment of a wide range of tyres, from dirt-biased dual purpose items to pure road rubber for those who wish to take advantage of the Tiger 800’s qualities as an excellent bike to commute and tour on. A class-leading 19 litre fuel tank ensures infrequent stops for the Tiger 800 rider.

Triumph has given the Tiger 800 a high specification direct from the factory. Inverted 43mm front forks are graced with twin 308mm floating brake discs and two-piston floating calipers. A sophisticated anti-lock braking system is available as an option and can be turned off when riding on tricky terrain.

At 210kg including a full tank of fuel, the Tiger 800 is very manageable machine. The rear shock is adjustable for preload and the Tiger 800 can be tailored to meet the rider’s personal taste through the adjustable aluminium handlebars and seat, which can be set at 810mm or 830mm, with lower and higher seat options available as official accessories. A rear rack with generous pillion grab handles also comes as standard, while a coded-key immobilizer prevents theft through ‘hot wiring’.

The comprehensive instrumentation includes a fuel gauge and trip computer, while a high-specification 645w generator is fitted to allow riders to safely fit electrical accessories such as heated grips, auxiliary lights and satellite navigation equipment. A huge range of official Triumph accessories have been developed for the Tiger 800’s launch, these include numerous hard and soft luggage solutions, tyre pressure monitor sensors, adjustable touring screen, centre stand and off-road style hand guards, bash plates and high level front mudguard.

Three colour options are available for the Tiger 800: Crystal White, Phantom Black and Venom Yellow, with the adoption of a graphite coloured frame for the 2012 model year.

Triumph Tiger 800 Features and Benefits
Engine

New long-stroke 800cc triple produces class-leading power and torque with super smooth delivery for precision riding on difficult terrain

Brakes
Twin 308mm discs are gripped by two-piston sliding caliper brakes for powerful and progressive stopping power. Optional ABS system adds additional braking security and can be switched on and off by the rider.

Adjustable Riding Position
Rider seat has two settings as standard for 31.9in to 32.7in seat height. Optional accessory saddle further reduces seat height by a further .8in, making the Tiger 800 the most accessible adventure bike on the market. Adjustable handlebars further enhance rider comfort.

High power electrical system
Class-leading 645w generator ensures that you can fully load your Tiger 800 with those essential electrical accessories required for year-round, go anywhere riding.

Fuel Efficiency:
41 MPG City / 63 MPG Highway

Engine:
799cc Liquid-cooled, 12 valve, DOHC, in-line 3-cylinder

Frame:
Tubular steel trellis frame

Exhaust:
Stainless steel 3 into 1, high level stainless steel mufflers

Front Wheel:
Cast aluminum alloy 10-spoke 19 x 2.5in

Front Suspension:
Showa 43mm upside down forks, 180mm travel

Review

We motorcyclists are a lucky lot. The source of our passion is, in most cases, inexpensive, fuel efficient, reliable and a fount of endless joy and fascination. Vintage machines, racebikes and customs may or may not fulfill any of these criteria, but street-legal motorcycles that rolled off the production line in the last decade or so are a pretty safe bet.

Unlike boats or airplanes, we don’t have to tow them on expensive trailers behind expensive trucks or pay exorbitant fees to store them behind barbed wire fences. Unlike RVs, we save time and money and have fun commuting to work or running errands with them. Unless we’re blessed (or cursed) with a burgeoning stable, they don’t take up much room in the garage. And thanks to modern engineering and manufacturing, maintenance and repairs are often minimal.

Triumph ’s new-for-2011 Tiger 800 is all of these things and more. With a sub-$10,000 price tag, gas mileage as high as 50 mpg, exemplary build quality and more versatility than MacGyver with a Swiss Army knife, this middleweight adventure bike will keep you away from the poor house, gas station, repair shop and shrink’s couch. Playful as a puppy but less likely to leak on your carpet (or help you meet girls down at the local park), the Tiger 800 is a faithful companion ready for any adventure.

My first tryst with the Triumph Tiger 800 was last fall, at Triumph’s world press introduction in Spain (Rider, March 2011). I logged about 150 pavement miles on the street-oriented Tiger 800, about half of which were spent fighting strong winds on cold, wet, unfamiliar mountain roads, and nearly as many miles—with about 30 offroad—on the dual-sporty Tiger 800XC. My initial impression of both bikes was favorable, but the true measure of a motorcycle is logging more miles, weighing it fully gassed on our own scale, running it on a reliable dyno and, if possible, comparing it with a worthy competitor. We’ve done that with the Tiger 800 (see our 2011 Triumph Tiger 800 vs. Suzuki V-Strom 650 ABS comparison), and my appreciation for its all-around practicality and high-caliber fun factor has deepened.

During the Tiger’s development, Triumph took a great engine—the Street Triple’s Daytona-derived 675cc in-line triple—and reengineered it for adventure-touring duty. It retained the overall layout, used the same cylinder head and throttle bodies and left the cylinder bore unchanged at 74.0mm. Displacement was increased to 799cc by lengthening stroke from 52.3mm to 61.9mm, and cam timing was relaxed, valve overlap was reduced and compression ratio was lowered from 12.7:1 to 11.1:1. The result is a more user-friendly powerplant that runs on regular-octane fuel. On Jett Tuning’s Dynojet dyno, the Tiger 800 churned out 83.9 horsepower at 9,900 rpm and 51.2 lb-ft of torque at 7,700 rpm. As the dyno chart shows, power is delivered in a smooth, linear fashion with no dips or irregularities. And the torque curve is remarkably flat, with over 90 percent of peak torque available between 3,700 and 9,400 rpm. With flawless fuel injection, immediate throttle response and no unwelcome buzziness, the Tiger is a real pussycat.

A rugged tubular-steel trellis frame holds the engine in place as a stressed member, and the dual-sided cast-aluminum swingarm attaches directly to the rear of the engine. Clutch pull is light and the six-speed transmission shifts well except for a slight hitch between first and second gear. Cost, complexity and weight are saved with the X-ring chain final drive. With the 5-gallon tank full, the Tiger 800 tips our scales at a respectable 481 pounds. Also respectable is the generous 478-pound load capacity—more than you’ll find on many touring bikes. The Tiger’s strong chassis, moderate curb weight, narrow tires (110/80-ZR19 front,

 150/70-ZR17 rear) and wide handlebar contribute to responsive handling. With 23.7 degrees of rake and 3.4 inches of trail, steering geometry is sharp. Light pressure on the bar easily directs the 19-inch front wheel’s course, but not at the expense of stability. ZR-rated Pirelli Scorpion Trail tires provide good grip and turn-in on the street, and aired down they offer commendable bite and bump absorption offroad. The long-travel suspension found on adventure tourers is a key aspect of their overall comfort, though it usually necessitates a tall seat height.

The Tiger offers a Goldilocks happy medium, with moderate seat height (as low as 31.9 inches) and 7.1/6.7 inches of front/rear suspension travel to deal with pockmarked pavement and ferocious fire roads. Tuned for firmer damping in the initial part of the stroke to mitigate squatting and diving but adjustable only for rear spring preload, the Tiger 800’s Showa suspension performs quite well. During a spirited blast on a rutted and rocky goat path known as Goodenough Road, the Tiger 800 took the ground-pounding in stride, keeping the tires from skipping or breaking loose and doing well to prevent bottoming out. My only real complaint about the suspension is some chatter over irregular pavement when really pushing it in the twisties. The bike never got badly out of shape, but it reminded me not to ride the Tiger like a Daytona.

The Tiger is slowed down by triple-disc tranquilizer darts from Nissin. Most of the stopping power comes courtesy of twin two-piston floating calipers that squeeze 308mm floating discs in front, with the balance handled by a single one-piston floating caliper that squeezes a 255mm fixed disc. There’s quite a bit of front lever travel that creates a sense of numbness, but a deliberate squeeze gets the job done. Our test bike was not equipped with ABS, an $800 option. On Tigers so equipped, ABS can be disabled for offroad riding or parking lot shenanigans.

Comfort is one of the Tiger 800’s real strengths. A small, nonadjustable windscreen provides decent wind protection without obstructing the view. The two-piece seat is firmly but generously padded, and the height of the rider’s seat can be easily changed from 31.9 to 32.7 inches—a welcome feature that’s become increasingly common. Naturally, the higher position better suits my 34-inch inseam. For even more legroom, I removed the rubber inserts from the footpegs which lowered my feet another half-inch. The cleated metal pegs provide more grip but less vibration damping.

The rise, width and position of the tapered aluminum Neken-made motocross-style handlebar feels just right, allowing a natural reach to the grips while sitting comfortably upright. The handlebar can be rotated and offset bar risers can be reversed to position the bar higher and farther forward. The only glitch with the stock setup is that the clutch and brake cables rub on the upper part of the fairing at full-right lock, though it doesn’t affect handling.

The offroad-oriented 800XC has taller bar risers, which give it more steering lock and prevents the cables from rubbing. I wished for the XC’s setup during my ride on Goodenough Road. Though the cut-outs below the sharp edges of the gas tank provided good purchase for my knees while standing up, I had to bend awkWardly to reach the handlebar and operate the hand controls.

Many Tiger 800 buyers will never take it offroad, but it was designed to accommodate those who chose to do so. The tail section has no plastic that could break in a tip-over, the tank is encased is rugged black plastic that resists damage and a standard hard-plastic skid plate protects the oil sump and header pipes. Nonetheless, with just 6.5 inches of unladen ground clearance, serious rock hopping should be avoided. Dig into Triumph’s accessory catalog and you’ll find added protection such as handguards (standard on the XC), an aluminum skid plate and guards for the engine, radiator and dual headlights. You can also add a centerstand, taller adjustable windscreen, gel rider/passenger seats, heated grips, tire pressure monitoring system and more.

The Tiger 800’s oil-cooled 645-watt alternator will power a GPS, auxiliary lights and heated gear, and a 12V socket is standard. A toolkit is located under the seat, and there’s room for an accessory U-lock, tire repair kit or other essentials. Normal maintenance seems straightforward, with the bigger job of adjusting the shim-under-bucket valves only surfacing every 12,000 miles, though the owner’s manual lacks detail on common chores such as servicing the air cleaner.

All the bits and details that make up the Tiger 800’s mosaic make sense, but it helps to zoom out and shift the focus to the overall picture. As I mentioned in my earlier report, the Tiger 800 was easy to ride from the first time I let out the clutch, and its reassuring and user-friendly nature has made it a pleasure to ride in all but the most challenging conditions. Triumph has jumped into the middleweight adventure segment with a capable, versatile, fun machine that’s priced right. Should your styling or riding tastes lean toward the more rugged end of the spectrum, then consider the taller, beefier XC model. Either way, anyone would be lucky to own one.

Source Ridermagazine.com