The 1964 Triumph Bonneville was the second year for unit construction. Up until this point, every Triumph 650 twin utilized non-unit construction, which meant that the engine, gearbox and primary chain case were all separate components held together by a system of brackets. Unit construction melded all three components into one unitized casing, hence the name. It not only gave the engines a more modern look, the new unit-construction engine was smaller, lighter, stronger, quieter, leaked less oil, was easier to manufacture and to maintain and repair. Triumph started the conversion to unit-construction back in 1957 with the Triumph Twenty One which was Triumph’s smallest twin. The Triumph 5T Speed Twin followed in 1959. Until this point, all of Triumph’s twins shared basic architecture. In other words, the 350 twin used the same crankcases and many other components as the 500 and 650 twins. But during the conversion to unit-construction, Triumph split their twin-cylinder machines into two engine families. The 350 and 500 twins shared architecture, but were completely different than the 650 twins.
The 1964 Triumph Bonneville was the culmination of a long line of Triumph vertical twins, starting with the 500cc 1938 Speed Twin. Designed by genius Edward Turner, it was the world’s first ‘modern’ vertical twin. It took the British motorcycle industry and the entire motorcycle market by storm and every other brand wanted one for themselves. But before they could do anything about it, Triumph did it again. One year after the launch of the game-changing Speed Twin, Triumph hot rodded their new twin and created a high-performance version of the bike called the Triumph T100 Tiger in 1939. World War 2 came along and put everything one hold until 1946, but when civilian production ramped back up Triumph was back in front and leading the way.
By 1949, five competing brands, BSA, Ariel, Norton, Matchless/AJS and Royal Enfield, fielded their own 500cc vertical twins. No sooner than they got caught up, Triumph upped the ante again by boring and stroking its 500 twin out to 649cc and introduced it as the 1950 Triumph 6T Thunderbird Again, the industry was stunned, and once they recovered, once again put their noses to the grindstone to try to catch up. As all five punched out their own 500 twins, some built 600cc twin, some 650cc, and Royal Enfield even out-trumped Triumph with their 700cc Super Meteor. It didn’t help, Triumph just continued to forge new ground and lead the market in innovation and sales. In 1954 Triumph gave their new 650 twin the ‘Tiger-treatment’, ie: hotter cams, higher compression ratio and a bigger carburetor for more power. The result was the 1954 Triumph T110 Tigerand it was hot! Two years later, Triumph developed a new aluminum “Delta Head” that not only added more power but enhanced engine cooling. With it, a new bike was born, the 1956 TR6.
Up until this point, all these vertical twins, from all six brands producing them now, had used only one carburetor to feed both cylinders. This was made possible by the even firing pulses of the vertical twin, thanks to its 360-degree crankshaft. One carb worked well and kept things simple, and cheap. There is a saying in the motorcycle business that goes: “Too much is never enough.” Hence, if one carb is good, two would be better. Today putting two carbs on a twin-cylinder engine seems like an obvious improvement to make, but in 1959 it was revolutionary. Triumph reworked the Delta Head to accommodate two carbs, by splaying the intake ports outward instead of closer together and parallel as they were on the TR6. The result was the 1959 Triumph Bonneville.
Once again, the Triumph Bonneville took the world by storm and Triumph wasted no time in setting several top speed records with the new bike, justifying the slogan “The Best Motorcycle in the World”, and until the Norton Atlas came out in 1962, the “Bonnie” was probably the fastest bike that money could buy. But once again, Triumph was ahead of the pack with their 650 twins’ conversion to unit construction. Norton and all the other manufacturers who built vertical twins were still stuck with non-unit engine packages and by this time, few had the money to do anything about it. The exception was BSA, who owned Triumph, and was also the largest motorcycle manufacturer on the planet going in the 1960s. They certainly had the money and so they too made the conversion of their 650 line to unit construction in 1963. The new unit construction engine had been completely redesigned, and while it followed the design of the non-unit engines, virtually no internal components were interchangeable between the two. The crankshaft, rods, pistons, cylinders, head, cams, timing gears, primary drive and oil pump were all new, albeit incredibly similar.
But the 1963 Triumph Bonneville got more than a new engine, everything else got redesigned also and it all carried over to the 1964 Triumph Bonneville. A new single down tube frame was introduced that stayed in service through the 1970 model year, until it was replaced by the oil-bearing frames of 1971. It was not truly state-of-the-art back in 1963, that title would be taken up by Norton's iconic 'Featherbed Frame' with it's welded steel construction, but it was a very good frame, rigid enough, and it certainly handled well.. The new frame used brazed lugs to hold it together, an ancient practice that goes all the way back to the steam era. It worked, but it was heavy and not nearly as rigid as a welded frame. The 1963 Triumph Bonneville also got new bodywork, a new seat and much of the running gear. Brakes, forks and fenders remained more or less unchanged, but the front rim went from 18-inches to 19. Overall it was a handsome machine that worked well and was well-received by the market. The 1964 Triumph Bonneville was practically mechanically identical to the 1963 model, with the exception of the paint color. In 1964 all was right with Triumph, however storm clouds were gathering and the winds were building, blowing in from Japan. At this time, the Japanese were building small, lightweight bikes, few above 250cc and most, other than Honda, were 2-strokes. But that would all change in 1965 when Honda introduced it’s own game-changer, the 450cc twin-cylinder ‘Black Bomber’. It was very sophisticated engineering-wise, compared to the ancient British machines. The Honda had DOHC (dual overhead cams), a die cast aluminum engine, a 5-speed gearbox, a twin leading shoe (TLS) front brake and an electric starter. And they didn’t leak oil, and the lights always worked! It made 45 hp which was about what the 650cc 1964 Triumph Bonneville made (46hp actually). That would be the first volley in a lopsided war that Britain couldn’t possibly win. But for now the 1964 Triumph Bonneville was at the top of its game, and resting comfortably at the top of the heap.
Model Designation Model Year Engine size Cylinders Bore & Stroke Compression Ratio Power output Fuel system Ignition system Electrical system Valve configuration Primary drive Clutch type Gearbox Shifting Final drive Frame type Front suspension Rear suspension Front tire Rear tire Front brake Rear brake Wheelbase Seat height Ground clearance Dry weight Fuel capacity Color scheme |
T120R / T120C Bonneville 1964 649cc 2 - vertical/parallel twin 71mm X 82mm 8.5:1 46 hp @ 6500 rpm 2 - Amal Monoblock 1-1/16" carbs Points, 2 coils 12-volt, Lucas MA6 alternator, battery OHV, 2 valves-per-cylinder Duplex chain Multi-plate, wet 4-speed constant mesh Right foot shifting Chain, 106 links Single downtube, twin cradles Telescopic forks, hydraulically damped Swing arm, 2 shock absorbers 3.25 X 19 Dunlop 4.00 X 18 Dunlop 8-inch SLS (Single Leading Shoe) drum 7-inch SLS drum 55.2" 30.5" 5.0" 363 lbs 3.6 US gal / 13.6 L / 3 Imp gal Gold & White |
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By Brooklands Books, 172 pages Reprints of motorcycle magazine road tests, racing, new model releases, tech data, specs & more. |
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1959 T120 Bonneville
1960 T120 Bonneville
1961 T120 Bonneville
1962 T120 Bonneville
1963 T120 Bonneville
1964 T120 Bonneville
1965 T120 Bonneville
1966 T120 Bonneville
1967 T120 Bonneville
1968 T120 Bonneville
1969 T120 Bonneville
1970 T120 Bonneville
1971 T120 Bonneville
1972 T120 Bonneville
1973 T140 Bonneville
1974 T140 Bonneville
1975 T140 Bonneville
1976 T140 Bonneville
1977 T140 Bonneville
1977 T140J Silver Jubilee
1978 T140 Bonneville
1979 T140 Bonneville
1980 T140 Bonneville
1981 T140 Bonneville
1982 T140 Bonneville
1983 T140 Bonneville
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