Triumph Bonneville 650 T120 Make Model | Triumph Bonneville 650 T120 | Year | 1972-73 | Engine | Air cooled, four stroke, parallel twin, OHV | Capacity | 649 | Bore x Stroke | 71 x 82 mm | Compression Ratio | 8.5:1 | Induction | 2x Amal | Ignition / Starting | - / kick | Max Power | 46 hp @ 6700 rpm | Transmission / Drive | 4 Speed / chain | Front Suspension | Telescopic forks | Rear Suspension | Swinging arm | Front Brakes | Drum | Rear Brakes | Drum | Front Tyre | 3.25 -19 | Rear Tyre | 4.00 -18 | Weight | 175 kg | The 1971 Triumph Bonneville was the problem child of a shotgun marriage. It was responsible for Triumph missing that year’s U.S. sales season, and it just about bankrupted the company.
The late Sixties Triumph Bonnevilles were, and still are, considered to be the best of the lot. But a major program of standardization was underway across the BSA Group, which also owned Triumph. For the 1971 season, BSA planned to use a new oil-bearing frame for both BSA and Triumph 650 twins.
However, the new Triumph frame had been designed around the BSA 650 engine, and when the first batches of frames were delivered to Triumph’s Meriden factory, assembly line workers found they couldn’t fit the Triumph engine in the frame without removing the rocker boxes from the cylinder head first.
The 1971 Bonnies were already behind schedule because of production delays caused by a shortage of parts — the result of teething troubles with a new computer system. The cumulative result was that very few Bonnevilles were at U.S. dealers for the critical April to June sales season. Other problems with the 1971 bike included a seat height only suitable for people over 6 feet tall, major frame failures caused by the center stand being mounted on the oil-bearing “sump,” and aesthetics only a short-sighted mother could love. The 1971 model is perhaps the least popular of all Bonnies. |