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Triumph Bandit : ウィキペディア英語版
Triumph Bandit

The Triumph Bandit was a British motorcycle manufactured as a prototype by Triumph in 1970. Originally designed by Edward Turner (who was already retired from Triumph) as his last project but subsequently substantially modified at Triumph by a greatly critical Bert Hopwood〔'Whatever Happened To The British Motorcycle Industry ?' by Bert Hopwood (Haynes 1981)ISBN 0 85429 459 7〕 and Doug Hele.〔Bandit In The Hills (The Classic Motorcycle 11/84)〕 Despite their work, the Bandit never went into commercial production, and only five have survived, making them very rare.〔 〕 Doug Hele stated that the model was dropped because design doubts such as the rapid wear of contact breaker points, did not justify the 'real money' cost of dies for components such as cylinder heads, the company then being in 'real financial trouble'.〔Behind The Bandit's Rise And Fall (The Classic Motorcycle 12/84)〕 This was despite the fact that Hele expected full production to follow after twelve pre-production models were made. Indeed, the Bandit was included in the 1971 brochure and publicity photographs taken at Umberslade Hall and featuring British speedway rider and Triumph production tester Tony Lomas with the British model Carol Cleveland (famous for British TV comedy Monty Python) had already been produced.〔BSA/Triumph Present: Power Set '71 by Brad Jones (Spangle Publishing 2012)〕 Hopwood did note that the production release date was constantly delayed from spring 1971 with even autumn 1972 suggested gravely affecting BSA-Triumph's credibility with dealers especially in the critical US market.〔
It has also been suggested that the model name was to have been Toledo but that had been taken by the Triumph car company and that the Bandit name was intended for the equivalent BSA model instead.〔The Triumph That Nearly Was (The Biker 6/81)〕
==Description==
Launched in 1971 the 5-speed, double overhead cam twin cylinder Triumph Bandit delivered and could reach . Essentially the same motorcycle as the BSA Fury, the Bandit represented the factory's last attempt to compete against Japanese imports.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=BSA 350 Fury SS Prototype DZ75 )
The only contemporary road test was by American magazine Cycle Guide in their March 1971 issue upon a visit to the Triumph and BSA factories at Meriden and Small Heath, respectively.〔Triumph's New Radical DOHC 350 (Cycle Guide 3/71)〕 The Bandit's petrol tank colour scheme was Cypress Green (although Cycle World identified it as Jealous Green 〔The New BSA/Triumph 350 (Cycle World 2/71)〕) with white-lined black scallops above and below a metal Triumph badge with a chrome styling strip running down the top of the tank. The same paint scheme applied to the mudguards with a white-lined black stripe running down through their centre. The side panels were silver painted with black 'tombstone' style lettering stating the model name and engine size: 'Bandit 350'. The engine was all-alloy as opposed to Triumph's other twins that relied upon an iron barrel and considered by Cycle Guide to be 'beautifully finished' and 'a real thing of beauty'. Cycle Guide criticised the retention of a traditionally Triumph vertically split crankcase halves rather than adopting the Japanese practice of horizontally splitting them. Despite this, it was noted that the engine was oil tight. The small diameter instruments and foot pegs thought mounted too far forward came in for criticism as did the poor conical hub rear brake performance, unlike the 'great' front brake. Lever travel between gears was felt to be too long although the clutch operation was 'silky smooth'. The electrical system was twin coil and 12 volt and an electric starter was offered as an option. Carburetion was by two Amal 27mm carburetors. Cycle Guide were disappointed that the engine could not be expanded beyond 350cc but praised the engine's and exhausts' quietness. Two exhaust systems, a low level ('T35R') and high level (the 'T35SS' Street Scrambler version), were offered, the former offering more top speed. The low level exhaust system was finished in bright chrome, the high level system in matt black with a stainless steel heat shield. The T35SS version also came with what the brochure described as 'detachable electrics'. Tyres for both versions were the same, Dunlop K70; 3.25 x 18 inches for the front and 3.50 x 18 inches for the rear. Compression ratio was also the same for both : 9.5:1.
Overall, the review was extremely positive concluding, the Bandit 'will run at all day long' and Triumph would 'sell all they can crank out in the next 12 months' being 'a lot of machine for the money' (US$900).〔 In the United Kingdom, a retail price of £402 was cited, some £83 less than Triumph's Daytona model and £91 more than their Blazer model.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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