J.A.W. wrote: ↑15 Jun 2018, 10:57
Sorry B-T.. but the Honda 450 was a 'clean sheet' design.. it needed, & ought to have received..
5 gears at a minimum.. & not just because the last 'true school' British 500's were stuck with 4..
( due to Edward Turner's minimalist/cheapo ethos)..
& they still steered & handled way better than the Honda, plus..
the Triumph was fast enough to win the 200 at Daytona, while the BSA won an MX World Championship..
I had a bit of fun - slotting a Triumph Daytona mill into a BSA SS OIF chassis - light, strong & good handling..
(& tuned it up to 'Boyer' production race specs - but alas absent the Quaife 5-speed cluster - it too, needed)
http://www.classic-british-motorcycles. ... GINE-R.jpg
http://www.classic-british-motorcycles. ... 8appoS.jpg
Never a Triumph fan, but they tended to be quick. My brother rode a Honda 2 speed for may years and would not change it. It was a torque converter (i think) no clutch 400cc.
I had one of the very last BSA DBD34 with a
3 speed box, but it would almost exceed the UK national limit in First
It was an ex track bike before I had it. The RRT 'box was quite close so swapping down the engine cog meant I did not have to slip the clutch up to 30 mph but lost me a slice off the top.
Putting Avon tyres on the bomber made a huge difference. Where I was living was very steep with sharp bends and hilly so it was the ideal bike for the area. I also have short legs and back (well, short everything really) so was a perfect fit for me.
The only bike I fond as good was the Virago, much later. I usually tended to have several bikes at the same time so did not necessarily choose the best performing, just the one that I liked. It is still one of my favorites in my mind, what it would be if I rode it today I don't now I currently have a BMW R11RS which is very much inthe same ethos. Or maybe I have changed.
Edit. Sorry, it just struck me this thread is images. Apologies to all
When arguing with a fool, be sure the other person is not doing the same thing.