BSA Rocket 3/Triumph Trident

Rocket 3 / Trident

T160 Triumph Trident
Manufacturer BSA/Triumph
Parent company Triumph Engineering
Production 1968–1975
Predecessor none
Successor none
Engine air-cooled 740 cc OHV transverse triple
Power 58 bhp (43 kW) @ 7,500 rpm
Transmission chain
Brakes 1968–1971: 2LS drum/drum
1972–1975: disc/drum
1975: disc/disk T160
Weight 468 lb (212 kg) (dry)
Fuel consumption 30–40 mpg

The BSA Rocket 3/Triumph Trident was the last major motorcycle developed by Triumph Engineering at Meriden, West Midlands. It was a 750 cc air-cooled unit construction pushrod triple with four gears and a conventional chassis and suspension. The motorcycle was badge-engineered to be sold under both the Triumph and BSA marques. The Rocket 3/Trident was part of Triumph's plan to extend the model range beyond their 650 cc parallel twins. Created to meet the demands of the US market, the smooth 750 cc three-cylinder engine had less vibration than the existing 360° twins. Although BSA experienced serious financial difficulties,[1] 27,480 Rocket 3/Tridents were produced during its seven-year history.

Development

Although the Trident engine was developed in 1962 by Bert Hopwood and Doug Hele, this three-cylinder design was derived from Edward Turner's 1937 parallel twins, the 500 cc Triumph Speed Twin and its sportier sibling, the Tiger 100; but the Trident has an extra cylinder and a longer stroke than the Tiger 100 engine. Following Triumph practice, the OHV pushrod triple has separate camshafts for the inlet and exhaust valves.[2]

Blue-and-white motorcycle, parked on grass
Prototype Triumph Trident P1, now on display at the London Motorcycle Museum

Unlike the later Honda CB750 and other Japanese superbikes which had horizontally split crankcases, the Trident engine was essentially a vertically split parallel twin with a separate central chamber to accommodate the third cylinder. Whereas the Speed Twin was a traditional British twin with a 360° crankshaft, this new triple had crankpins offset 120° and so inherently had much smoother primary balance, albeit with a rocking couple. Although most British motorcycles used a wet multiplate clutch, this triple had a dry single-plate clutch in a housing between the primary chaincase and the gearbox. Mounted on the end of the gearbox mainshaft (where the clutch would be expected) was a large transmission shock-absorber.

Test engineers developed the chassis' handling characteristics by affixing lead weights on a standard 650 Bonneville. The first prototype (P1) was running by 1965, and it seemed that Triumph might have a machine in production by 1967. However, the decision to produce a BSA version with sloping cylinders and employ Ogle Design to give the early Tridents/Rocket 3s their "square tank" added bulk and 40 lb (18 kg) of weight, delaying production by 18 months.[3] In 1966 a P2 prototype was produced with a more production-based Trident engine, different bore and stroke dimensions and improved cooling. Hele got 90 bhp (67 kW) from a Trident engine, leading to speculation that further development might have led to a 140 mph (230 km/h) British superbike.

All the three-cylinder engines (and the Rocket 3 motorcycles) were produced at BSA's Small Heath site, but final assembly of the Triumph Trident model was carried out at Meriden in Coventry. The major differences were the engine and frame: the BSA had an A65-style double-loop cradle frame (with engine mounted at a slant), while the Triumph had a Bonneville-style single downtube frame with vertical cylinders. Other differences were cosmetic. Triumphs sold better in the US, despite BSA's Daytona racing successes during the early 1970s. Sales did not meet expectations; for the 1971 model year a fifth gear was added, creating the BSA A75RV and Triumph T150V. BSA were having financial difficulties, and only some 205 five-speed Rocket 3s were built before production of the BSA variant ceased. Production of the five-speed Triumph T150V (with a front disc brake replacing the original drum) continued until 1974. For the 1975 model year, the Trident was updated to the T160 (with electric start).

Reception

First Triumph T150 Trident: drum brakes, four-speed gearbox and kick-start only; styled by Ogle, the box-like petrol tank and "ray-gun" silencers departed from the traditional Triumph look and were unpopular in the US.

The prototype triples had the "Triumph look", with a teardrop-shaped tank. BSA/Triumph then commissioned Ogle Design for a redesign, leading to an 18-month delay. The new motorcycle had a squarer fuel tank and a less-traditional look, with sloped cylinders and "ray-gun" silencers.

The Rocket 3/Trident was introduced in summer of 1968 to critical acclaim,[4] but was eclipsed four weeks later by the Honda CB750. Compared to the British triple, the CB750 had a five-speed gearbox, overhead camshaft, oil-tight engine, electric start and disc brakes. The Honda outsold the Triumph in the US market; in 1970, to revive sales Triumph restyled export versions with the "classic" look.

Red motorcycle
BSA Rocket 3, restyled for 1971

In 1968 the new triples disappointed the American BSA-Triumph management, who knew that Honda had a motorcycle under development. They felt the price of $1,800 (£895)[5] was too high, and technical details (like vertically-split crankcases and a pushrod OHV valve train were too conventional. However, they acknowledged that the bike was fast and the US sales team launched it by setting speed records at Daytona (which were only broken in 1971 by the Kawasaki Z1).

Yellow-and-black motorcycle, parked with others
1973 domestic Triumph T150V Trident, with front disc brake and five speeds (indicated by the "V" suffix) but without electric starting. This bike has retro-fitted "ray-gun" silencers from the 1968 model; by 1971, tapered "megaphone" silencers were standard.

Triumph X75 Hurricane

Orange motorcycle in museum
Triumph X-75 Hurricane

US BSA vice-president Don Brown felt that the BSA/Triumph triples needed a different look to succeed in the US. He commissioned designer Craig Vetter to redesign the BSA A75 (making it sleeker and better balanced) and disclosed the Vetter project to Peter Thornton (president of BSA/Triumph North America). In October 1969, Vetter displayed his customised A75. The bike was then sent to the UK, where it received a lukewarm reception from chief designer Bert Hopwood (but a favourable public reaction); the Vetter BSA Rocket3 became the Triumph X75 Hurricane.

Model T160

In November 1974, the T150V was succeeded by the modified T160. Some changes were due to market response to the earlier Tridents; others complied with American safety legislation. With forward-sloping cylinders (like the BSA Rocket3), electric start and a left-hand gearshift, NVT made a final effort to save large-scale production and reduce the gap between the Trident and the Honda CB750. The T160 was manufactured for a little over a year, with production ending in early 1976 (when NVT collapsed).[6] Around 7,000 T160 models were built for the 1975 model year; due to slow sales some were still being sold as late as the end of 1977.[7]

Red-and-white motorcycle, parked on fallen leaves
1975 Trident T160V with electric starting, front and rear disc brakes and left-foot gear change

New features of the T160 were:

Cardinal

In December 1975 final shipments of 288 and 224 motorcycles were destined for Australia and the US, respectively, but NVT diverted them to fill an order from the Saudi Arabian police force. Most UK police had switched to BMW motorcycles, but a few (such as the Yorkshire Constabulary) still used the Trident. About 450 bikes were sent to Saudi Arabia; the last 130 were still in the UK when the Saudis cancelled the remainder of the order, and NVT Motorcycles sold them as the Triumph Cardinal. At the time, the list price of a stock T160 was £1,215;[8] although the "police accessories" were worth only £150, NVT listed the Cardinal for £1,522.80. In 1982, European dealers imported about 180 low-mileage Tridents from Saudi Arabia; the poorly maintained, sand-encrusted machines were restored and sold as standard T160s.

Quadrant

The Triumph Quadrant was designed and built by Doug Hele in 1973.[9] It was a 1,000 cc four-cylinder motorcycle made from Trident parts (although the camshaft was sourced outside the factory). The fourth cylinder resulted from grafting an extra mid-crankcase unit; since the primary chaincase and final drive sprocket could not be moved, the fourth cylinder protruded from the right side of the bike.

Why Hele developed this machine is unknown, since the lopsided design could never compete with Japanese motorcycles such as the Honda CB750 or the Kawasaki Z1. An inside view is that Hele's efforts were a waste of resources that, with NVT's precarious finances, should have been directed to marketing the 900 cc triple Thunderbird III.[10]

Model T180 Thunderbird III

In 1975 an NVT prototype 900 cc triple, the T180 Triumph Thunderbird III, was developed but it did not reach production. NVT passed on the prototype to the Meriden co-operative, which also did not proceed to production (despite experimenting with the engine in an oil-bearing frame).[11]

Racing achievements

Green-and-white racing motorcycle in museum
Rob North framed BSA Rocket 3 F750 class at the Sammy Miller Museum
Main article: Slippery Sam

Doug Hele continued to develop the engine, and in 1971 joined frame expert Rob North to produce the Formula 750 racing machines. At the 1971 Daytona 200 the British three-cylinder bikes took the top three places; Dick Mann won on a BSA Rocket 3, followed by Gene Romero on a Triumph Trident and Don Emde third on another BSA Rocket 3.[12] John Cooper rode a BSA Rocket 3 to an upset victory over 500 cc world champion Giacomo Agostini in the 1971 Race of the Year at Mallory Park.[13] Cooper finished three-fifths of a second ahead of Agostini's MV Agusta.[14]

Slippery Sam, a roadster prepared for production-class road racing to controlled specifications using selected adaptations only, available from the factory as part-numbered inventory, seen exhibited at a UK Classic Car and Bike Show in 2009 wearing a Dunlop TT100 rear tyre

The best-known bike was Slippery Sam, a production-class Trident prepared by a team led by Les Williams. Slippery Sam won consecutive 750 cc production races at the Isle of Man TT for the five years between 1971 and 1975, and in the new F750 event for race-specification machines, Triumph and BSA machines with Rob North frames placed first and second.[15] Bert Hopwood recommended a production version of the racing triple, producing 84 bhp (63 kW) at 8,250 rpm, but his suggestion was not adopted. Further racing development was done in Duarte, California under racing manager Dan Macias.

Tom Mellor set four world speed records at the Bonneville Salt Flats in September 2008 with a 1969 Triumph Trident T150.[16]

End of production

Financial and management problems at BSA and the disintegration of the British motorcycle industry during the early 1970s led to a government-sponsored merger in July 1973 with Norton. However, the restructuring plans announced by the newly formed Norton-Villiers-Triumph (NVT) triggered a strike at Triumph's Meriden factory in mid-September. Production of the Trident was eventually transferred to BSA's Small Heath factory in March 1974, but the long disruption resulted in the production of few 1974 Tridents.[17][18]

Continued use of the names

After Triumph at Meriden collapsed, a new firm, Triumph Motorcycles Ltd, was established at Hinkley. The new firm manufactured from 1990 a new range of motorcycles with a modular engine design. Some of these bikes were called "Triumph Tridents"; and much later a "Triumph Rocket III" was produced.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Bacon, 1995. p.114.
  2. Bacon, 1995. p.108.
  3. Margie Siegal (September–October 2009). "1971 BSA Rocket 3". Motorcycle Classics. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  4. Phillip Tooth (May–June 2010). "Triumph Trident 150". Motorcycle Classics. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  5. Bacon, 1995. p.115
  6. Bacon, 1995. p.115-116.
  7. Roland Brown (January–February 2006). "Triumph T160 Trident". Motorcycle Classics. Retrieved 19 August 2009.
  8. Bacon, 1995. p.192.
  9. Motorcycle Classics article on George Poole's home-made Triumph Quadrent
  10. "BSA – Born 1861, Died 1973" Bill Murray July 1984
  11. Save The Triumph Bonneville ! The Inside Story of the Meriden Workers' Co-op by John Rosamond (Veloce 2009)
  12. "Icon: 1971 Daytona 200". motorcyclistonline.com. Retrieved 9 January 2013.
  13. "Mallory Park history". mallorypark.co.uk. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
  14. "John Cooper". motopaedia.com. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
  15. IoM TT official site, 1971 overview Retrieved 7 March 2015
  16. Alan Cathcart (July–August 2009). "Tom Mellor's Record Breaking Triumph Trident T150". Motorcycle Classics. Archived from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  17. "Meriden-a few ad hoc observations" Bill Murray 24 March 1983
  18. "BSA – Born 1861, Died 1973" Bill Murray July 1984

Bibliography

  • Bacon, Roy (1995). Triumph Twins and Triples. Niton Publishing. ISBN 1-85579-026-2. 
  • Davies, Ivor (1991). Triumph-The Complete Story. The Crowood Press. ISBN 1-86126-149-7. 
  • McDiarmid, Mac (1997). Triumph-The Legend. Parragon Publishing. ISBN 0-7525-2080-6. 

External links

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