Motorcycle Sport & Leisure

SIZE DOESN’T MATTER

To celebrate Triumph’s return to MotoGP as the engine supplier to Moto2, Triumph has produced a road-going version of their race bike. Sort of...

- WORDS: Adam ‘Chad’ Child PHOTOGRAPH­Y: Joe Dick

Its engine proudly carries the same logo and is the same capacity as the Moto2 bikes, but if you look closely the Triumph Daytona Moto 765 has more in common with the company’s super-popular Street Triple RS naked. Peak power is 128bhp, up from the Street’s 121bhp, thanks to a plethora of engine tweaks the team has carried over from the Moto2 engine. Simply put, Triumph has improved the flow, increased compressio­n, and made the engine internals lighter to move faster. All of which allows the triple to sing, revving higher than the Street Triple RS engine by 600rpm, with the redline now at 13,250rpm. Peak torque is also up slightly, to 80Nm from 79Nm.

The chassis isn’t a Moto2 replica because that would be far too stiff for the road, and also frightenin­gly expensive. Instead, Triumph has fallen back on what it knows by adopting the highly acclaimed 675R Daytona chassis. The ‘R’ chassis was, and arguably still is, class-leading. In the UK, the chassis has proven its worth, taking three national championsh­ips and winning the

2019 Supersport TT with Peter Hickman at the helm. To bring the package up-to-date for 2020,

Triumph has chosen the very latest Öhlins suspension – NIX30 forks and a TTX36 rear shock – plus the hottest Stylema Brembo radial bakes. Tyres are sticky, track-focused Pirelli Supercorsa SP.

IT COMES ALIVE

Turn the key and the new colour instrument console comes alive with a pleasing graphical ‘Moto2’ start-up screen, before leading you into a familiar Triumph dash, now with five rider mode options – Rain, Road, Rider Configurab­le, Sport and Track – all of which adjust the throttle map, traction control settings and ABS settings to the conditions and the way you ride. There’s also an up-anddown quick-shifter with auto-blipper. The rider modes are not leansensit­ive, as there is no IMU, which means normal ABS braking, not cornering ABS. Same with the traction control, which is not lean-sensitive but can be switched off.

Mode selected, a quick dab of the starter button and the Brit triple barks to life through its titanium Arrow end can. It sounds so sweet and charismati­c, but not annoyingly loud, so sneaking out for an earlymorni­ng ride without waking up the family shouldn’t be a problem.

Within just a few miles, I feel at home. The fuelling atlow speed is near-on perfect, the gears shift effortless­ly, the quick-shifter and auto-blipper work perfectly. Around town, at slow engine speeds, the power is smooth and there is enough torque to let it burble along a gear too high.

The chassis and Öhlins set up is, surprising­ly, soft and plush, with speed humps and road imperfecti­ons easy on spine and wrists. Yes, the physical dimensions are on the small side; I’m only 5ft 7in and I make the bike appear ‘normal’.

If you’re over six feet tall or opposed to exercise then you might find the Daytona too cramped.

But let’s forget about practicali­ties. Let’s tuck in behind that bubble and make this triple scream! Out on the lanes, dancing up and down on the quick-shifter, tucked in behind the screen, knee slider occasional­ly touching down on sun-drenched British roads… Hell yeah, this is brilliant.

FINDING THE REDLINE

The triple delivers more than enough mid-range torque to rapidly accelerate past slow-movingtraf­fic; you only need to tap back one gear for a brisk overtake. But who wants brisk? Revving hard, into second gear, third and fourth – getting close to the redline, having ridiculous fun while still feeling in control. You’d never ride an unfamiliar B-road hard on a 1000cc production bike unless your name was John McGuinness, but you can on the Moto2 Daytona. Make no mistake, it’s a super-quick bike, but anything but intimidati­ng, and a quick brush of the radial Brembo stoppers quickly brings the pace down to legal speeds.

The lightweigh­t chassis copes with everything I throw at it. Again, like the engine, the suspension is there to be used and transmits what’s happening perfectly to the rider. The feel is excellent, the ride is plush, bordering on soft when pushed hard, but that might be down to my weight and aggressive riding. The manually adjustable suspension will need a tweak to reduce the laden sag a little before a trackday.

Overall, the set up is forgiving and extremely stable for a short

wheelbase bike that allows you to ride with such confidence on unseen roads. The Daytona is accurate and easy to steer, lets you attack corners with confidence, and gives immense grip from its sticky Pirelli rubber. It flicks between turns with ease, lets you carve up the lanes like an expert, and rolls over its 180 section rear effortless­ly. The chassis flatters the rider, it’s that simple.

The Stylema Brembo stoppers are strong; it only takes one or two fingers on the span and ratio adjustable lever to bring the dangerous-riding competitio­n to a close. The ABS is a little intrusive when you brake hard over imperfecti­ons, but this was only noticeable when I decided to turn into an Irish road racer for a brief moment. The lack of cornering ABS was never an issue. In fact, I spent most of the ride with the traction control de-activated to make the most of the Dayton’s other trick – wheelies – which it does with nonchalant ease.

With a manageable 128bhp, perfect fuelling and feel from the sticky

180 rear Pirelli, I’d argue whether TC is even needed. However, in the colder, darker months I’ll certainly flick into Rain mode, which reduces the power and adds more TC.

The Daytona isn’t going to be for everyone. Yes, it is on the small side, while around town it will become a pain to live with. The mirrors aren’t the best, the switchgear is like jumping into a Porsche and finding it has VW switchgear. There’s no room for a pillion, and we’ve not even mentioned the price. In the UK it’s nearly £16,000, which is a lot to ask – nearly £6000 more than Triumph’s own Street Triple RS at £10,300 – and there is the small matter of this limited edition bike being sold out.

Price-wise, if we look across the market, it’s seemingly not good news for Triumph. Kawasaki’s ZX-10R is cheaper at £14,499, and Ducati’s stunning Panigale V2 is £14,999. Ouch. But, in the Daytona’s defence, it’s good on fuel, has a decent tank range and is comfortabl­e at speed, while the ride is plush on the motorway.

VERDICT

The elephant in the room is the Daytona’s price. This is a special motorcycle, one dripping in carbon fibre and quality components with the cache of being a road-legal, limited edition Moto2 replica. I enjoyed thrashing Triumph’s

Daytona, almost the perfect summer sportsbike for the road, and in that context it’s hard to fault.

How do you put a value on enjoyment? It does feel special and it is fun to ride.

On some trackdays you might crave for more power, but everywhere else in the real world this poised and beautifull­y built bike is more than enough.

But please Triumph, can we have a non-carbon version with a slightly lowerspec that brings it in at just a few bucks more than the Street RS?

 ??  ?? RIGHT: Öhlins suspension is top notch
BELOW:
High-quality adjustable levers work a treat
RIGHT: Öhlins suspension is top notch BELOW: High-quality adjustable levers work a treat
 ??  ?? ABOVE: Adjustable suspension is surprising­ly plush
ABOVE RIGHT:
Triumph dashes have been great in the recent years
ABOVE: Adjustable suspension is surprising­ly plush ABOVE RIGHT: Triumph dashes have been great in the recent years
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? BELOW LEFT: Brembo Stylema calipers are excellent, but the ABS is a little too keen
BELOW LEFT: Brembo Stylema calipers are excellent, but the ABS is a little too keen
 ??  ?? BELOW RIGHT:
Arrow titanium pipe looks and sounds great
BELOW RIGHT: Arrow titanium pipe looks and sounds great

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