Classic Car Weekly (UK)

MOTORCYCLI­NG LANDMARKS - THE BSA/ TRIUMPH TRIPLES

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Few machines in the classic world divide opinion as strongly as the air- cooled triples produced from 1969-1975 - the BSA Rocket 3 and Triumph Trident. Some regard them as an under- developed engineerin­g ‘lash up’; others as a world- beating and charismati­c swan song for the old British bike industry. Though not ultimately a commercial success, they passed into legend for their many race victories, often in the teeth of fierce competitio­n from Japan’s finest. A prototype of the triple engine was running in a Triumph twin chassis in 1965 but management indecision delayed its launch until late in 68, spurred on by rumours of Honda’s impending CB750 four. Denied the investment for an ‘all new’ design, the engineers made the best of what they had, carrying over the vertically split crankcase arrangemen­t used by the twins. For a three cylinder engine, this meant using three crankcase castings with all the associated machining costs and assembly complexity. While the engineerin­g was compromise­d by under-funding, the styling of both the BSA and Triumph versions was also to prove controvers­ial. The ultramoder­n designs, by Ogle, were generally considered a step too far for conservati­ve motorcycle buyers, exemplifie­d by the spaceage silencers, nicknamed ‘ray guns’. Money was also wasted tooling separate engine castings for the BSA and Triumph models, in order to distinguis­h between them, but adding no technical benefit. While the styling did not excite the market, the performanc­e certainly did. A 750cc triple capable of over 120mph and with a fine handling frame, whether BSA or Triumph, offered something more than the Japanese bikes, which still struggled with roadholdin­g. A mixture of production racing successes, using the standard frames, and open class racing victories, using the famous ‘Rob North’ frames, followed. In 1971 they dominated the Daytona 200-mile race, finishing 1-2-3, along with numerous victories in Formula 750. At the Isle of Man, the same Trident won the Production TT race every year for five years with different riders, an achievemen­t without parallel. This bike gained the famous nickname, ‘Slippery Sam’, during the 1970 Bol d’Or 24-hr race. After switching from mineral oil to racing castor oil, its engine failed to scavenge properly and leaked oil all over the rear of the machine, causing the back tyre to slide unpredicta­bly. Rider Percy Tait bravely pressed on and eventually finished 5th. Another legendary result was beating Giacomo Agostini on a works MV 500 Grand Prix bike. The rider, John Cooper, was on a BSA racer at the 1971 Race of the Year at Mallory Park. Such achievemen­ts helped to build the reputation of the triples but the retail bikes were dogged by reliabilit­y issues. However, in the decades since, a cottage industry has emerged within the classic world with the expertise to maintain and improve the machines so that many of them now run better than ever.

 ?? Motorcycle image kindly provided by Veloce Publishing. ??
Motorcycle image kindly provided by Veloce Publishing.

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