I didn't think the Scrambler would push my buttons before I rode it, but instead it smacked them with a sledge hammer. High-swept pipes, carb-mounted choke, fork gators, knee pads - it could have stepped straight out of a 60's hill climb - or a 'scramble' for that matter, as motocross was once referred to in its early days (hence - cue lightbulb overhead - the Scrambler's name). It's a bare-bones thing, as you'd expect, but then this bike is all about style. The single-disc front and rear brakes are more than adequate for this package, while its basic suspension - non-adjustable front forks and twin pre-load adjustable rear shocks - though plush, will still carry through a corner at a pace and lean angle you never would have thought possible. Its handling thoroughly benefits from today's technology too. In fact in top of its five-speed gearbox at 100km/h you'll only be pulling a lowly 3500rpm - and even from here there's still a good amount of stomp left for highway overtakes. It'll still pull willingly to its 7500rpm redline, but there's just no need to take it there. Its wide bars, low seat and upright ride position immediately place you in control, while its engine is chock-full of low-down and mid-range grunt. After sampling one myself, I'd say it's a blast on either, although you're heading outside the bike's design parameters if you take it on anything rougher than a smooth dirt road.īasically a Bonneville frame and a Bonneville engine, the Scrambler might be faithfully styled after bikes of 40 years ago, but the fun it delivers is truly modern-day. Bearing in mind that there really wasn't such a massive gulf between dirt bikes and road bikes back then, it's not so hard to see why the Scrambler is - in today's terms - much more road oriented than off-road oriented. ![]() In essence, it's styled after the 60's dirt bikes made famous by the likes of American actor Steve McQueen. Several incarnations followed, including the T100, then the café racer style Thruxton and then a whole host of cruisers, and then at the start of 2006 came the Scrambler. Triumph released the Thunderbird back in 1995, but it was after the Bonneville debuted at the start of 2001 that the marque soon realised it was on to something big. The retro theme seems to be all the rage these days - sure bikes like Kawasaki's Zephyr were introduced in the early 90's, but since the turn of the millennium there's been a flood of 'Back to the Future' options, like Suzuki's GSX1400, Yamaha's XJR1300, Honda's CB1300, Kawasaki's ZRX1200 - the list goes on.īut Harley aside, who I guess you could argue has made retro machines its very lifeblood, there's one marque that's really always been leading the charge in this respect - and that's Triumph.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |