Jump to content

Triumph Tiger 1050

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by InternetArchiveBot (talk | contribs) at 22:17, 6 March 2018 (Rescuing 2 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v1.6.4) (Artix Kreiger)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Triumph Tiger 1050
ManufacturerTriumph Motorcycles
Productionsince 2007
PredecessorTiger 955i
Engine1,050 cc, Liquid-cooled, DOHC, in-line 3-cylinder
Multipoint sequential electronic fuel injection
Bore / stroke79 mm × 71.4 mm (3.11 in × 2.81 in)
Compression ratio12.0:1
Power113 bhp (84 kW) @ 9,400 rpm
Torque100 N⋅m (74 lb⋅ft) @ 6,250 rpm
TransmissionX ring chain, 6 speed gearbox
SuspensionFront: 43 mm upside down forks with adjustable pre-load, rebound and compression damping
Rear: Monoshock with adjustable preload and rebound damping
BrakesFront: Twin 320 mm floating discs, 4-piston radial callipers
Rear: Single 255 mm disc, 2 piston calliper
Wheelbase1,550 mm (61 in)
DimensionsL: 2,110 mm (83 in)
W: 840 mm (33 in)
H: 1,320 mm (52 in)
Seat height835 mm (32.9 in)
Weight198 kg (437 lb) (ABS 201 kg (443 lb) (dry)
Fuel capacity20 litres (4.4 imp gal; 5.3 US gal)

The Triumph Tiger 1050 is a continuation of the Triumph Tiger motorcycle model line from the Triumph Tiger 955i produced in Hinckley, England by Triumph Motorcycles. The model name is derived from Triumph's long history of sporting motorcycles of both single and twin cylinder design and of previous capacities from 350 cc to 750 cc. This model has a three-cylinder engine derived from the previous dual purpose Tiger. The Tiger 1050 shifts more towards the sport/street-oriented use from previous models.[1] This is most easily seen with the use of cast 17-inch wheels. Radial front brakes (four-piston) and floating front discs are also indicators of the more sport orientated role of the Tiger 1050.

First launched in 2007, it was released to the press the previous November.[2] Also available with ABS.

In 2009, Triumph introduced a special edition version that includes ABS brakes, the two-box pannier kit and handguards.[3]

Tiger Models Overview

Year Model Type General
1993–1998 T400 885 cc
1999–2000 T709 885 cc, Fuel Injected
2001–2006 T709EN 955 cc, Fuel injected
since 2007 1050 1,050 cc, Fuel injected

See also

References