Tr6c / t100c / t120c opinions

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Hi everyone hope we are all good,

Doing a bit of dreaming tbh with the Commando having to go to help with the house move along with my other bikes that I’ve sold while I’m caring for my dad who’s got stage 3b/4 prostate cancer)

I’ve been thinking about what I might like to get after the house move an I’ve never had a classic Triumph,

Kinda thinking of a Tr6c, t100c or a t120c

An I’m curious anyone got any opinions between them or had one or both of the 650 or 500 Triumphs n what did you or do you think about the smoothness of them an usability for a 70mph an under riding, compared to say a 650ss hatching a bit of a trip plan at the moment for Europe to aim for next year inc some gravel roads,

Thanks in advance,
 
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Hi everyone hope we are all good,

Doing a bit of dreaming tbh with the Commando having to go to help with the house move along with my other bikes that I’ve sold while I’m caring for my dad who’s got stage 3b/4 prostate cancer)

I’ve been thinking about what I might like to get after the house move an I’ve never had a classic Triumph,

Kinda thinking of a Tr6c, t100c or a t120c

An I’m curious anyone got any opinions between them or had one or both of the 650 or 500 Triumphs n what did you or do you think about the smoothness of them an usability for a 70mph an under riding, hatching a bit of a trip plan at the moment for Europe to aim for next year inc some gravel roads,

Thanks in advance,
Become familiar with the ET ignition if you are looking at pre-1968 models. The later T100C/TR6C used conventional battery ignition and parts are much easier to source. If you are looking for a motorcycle to cruise at 70 mph, the 'C' models are not the best as they were geared lower than the road-going models.
-Dave
 
Late pre oil in frame TR6C defo !

500 will feel too sluggish compared to the big Nortons you’re now used to IMO.

As mentioned by Dave, you may wanna put the gearing to ‘standard’ if riding on the road and cruising at 70 ish.
 
Hi everyone hope we are all good,

Doing a bit of dreaming tbh with the Commando having to go to help with the house move along with my other bikes that I’ve sold while I’m caring for my dad who’s got stage 3b/4 prostate cancer)

I’ve been thinking about what I might like to get after the house move an I’ve never had a classic Triumph,

Kinda thinking of a Tr6c, t100c or a t120c

An I’m curious anyone got any opinions between them or had one or both of the 650 or 500 Triumphs n what did you or do you think about the smoothness of them an usability for a 70mph an under riding, compared to say a 650ss hatching a bit of a trip plan at the moment for Europe to aim for next year inc some gravel roads,

Thanks in advance,
My first 1966 T100C was stolen. In 1970 I bought a 67 T100C basket case which came without a head so I headed to my local Triumph Shop to buy one. They only had T100R heads so I bought one and two carbs. I kept the ET ignition for a few years but finally switched to a battery ignition since it was not fun having little to no lighting at night. I still have that bike. I was always way too big for it, but over 500 cc and the insurance doubled back then. If you're a small guy, they are a great bike especially if you'll sometimes ride in dirt/gravel/snow - but keep the K70 tires. With me onboard, it maxed out at around 70mph.

I have a 1967 TR6C that will be for sale if I ever have time to finish it. It does have a battery ignition. When Covid him people started coming out of the woodwork wanting Commandos or their Commandos fixed or rebuilt. The bike still needs wheels and tires but otherwise is close to done. https://gregmarsh.com/MC/ViewPDF.aspx?key=rfh

I have a 1970 T120R. It's a fun bike and ready to go. People keep wanting to buy it but not showing and honestly, I might keep it. https://gregmarsh.com/MC/Triumph/T120R_1970.aspx

Waiting in the wings, if I live long enough, I will have a T100D (T100R with disk front brake and turn signals) for sale. I have the parts, just not the time. I built one for a guy who was about 5'6 and weighted about 120 lbs. It is his second bike ever - he loves it. He only rides on the street so I installed RoadRiders on it and he didn't want the turn signals or proper mufflers. https://gregmarsh.com/MC/Triumph/T100R_1970.aspx
 
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Thanks guys super appreciate the replies,

That’s interesting Dave really appreciate the info initially I was thinking about a Pre Unit bike or a 1964 an doing a ISDT style’d bike

I’ll have a look at those OIF ones mate least I’ve got well over a year to research,

Very interesting Greg thanks for sharing, brilliant information that’s a good point on size hadn’t really thought about that,

I’m 6’2 and got a 32” inseam the 750 commando fits me like a glove as does my 650ss an suprisingly my 1927 16h flat tanker as they have a long wheelbase knees are perfect on the infills.

Most of the trips gonna be Norway and Denmark n from what I understand that most of the roads are 50 mph an under so motorway should only be the occasional bit,

I’m actually thinking to take the strain off dad to van us over base us in one location a week at a time ride round on the gravel roads and mountain roads, just do a really nice mix that cuts out the big motorway miles and keeps dad a lot fresher as we have to stay in hotels for his morning meds routine and so he can rest as he really feels the cold now,

Thinking that way we can just soak up the scenery and the locations a week at a time and get a feel for the place rather than just flying through it all.

The initial plan was Iceland and Nordkapp an ride over but I’ve scrapped that as I’d rather dad enjoy a trip together rather than turn it into some sort of box ticking endurance nightmare for him :)
 
Thanks guys super appreciate the replies,

That’s interesting Dave really appreciate the info initially I was thinking about a Pre Unit bike or a 1964 an doing a ISDT style’d bike

I’ll have a look at those OIF ones mate least I’ve got well over a year to research,

Very interesting Greg thanks for sharing, brilliant information that’s a good point on size hadn’t really thought about that,

I’m 6’2 and got a 32” inseam the 750 commando fits me like a glove as does my 650ss an suprisingly my 1927 16h flat tanker as they have a long wheelbase knees are perfect on the infills.

Most of the trips gonna be Norway and Denmark n from what I understand that most of the roads are 50 mph an under so motorway should only be the occasional bit,

I’m actually thinking to take the strain off dad to van us over base us in one location a week at a time ride round on the gravel roads and mountain roads, just do a really nice mix that cuts out the big motorway miles and keeps dad a lot fresher as we have to stay in hotels for his morning meds routine and so he can rest as he really feels the cold now,

Thinking that way we can just soak up the scenery and the locations a week at a time and get a feel for the place rather than just flying through it all.

The initial plan was Iceland and Nordkapp an ride over but I’ve scrapped that as I’d rather dad enjoy a trip together rather than turn it into some sort of box ticking endurance nightmare for him :)
Enjoyment over box ticking is wise mate.
 
@savingclassicmotorcycles I've owned 48 Triumphs and only 21 Nortons, so the numbers MIGHT tend to show which one I favor. BUT, the numbers don't ALWAYS tell the whole story.

I'm CHEAP, and in my lifetime, I've run across more good deals on Triumphs than I have Nortons. BUT, THAT doesn't tell the WHOLE story.

I had owned 12 Triumphs before I bought my first Norton, an original '75 MkIII Interstate. By that time, I was solidly in love with the Bonnevilles, I think 9 of the 12 Triumphs that I owned by that time were Bonnies.

Once I got familiar with the Commando, it became my "go-to" for ALMOST ALL highway riding. There is ALMOST no comparison; BUT, that doesn't tell the whole story! The MkIII is an 850, the Bonnies were mostly 650s and (2) 750s. Even a 750 Bonnie is no match for an 850 Commando except in tight, light stuff.

When it came time to decide what to build to go vintage roadracing (2007), I picked a 650 Bonneville because I had overhauled and restored many of them, and very few Commandos (I think over a dozen Triumphs and only 3 Nortons at that stage). So, confidence and familiarity figured into it, more than raw capability; I wanted it to be bulletproof.

Catching back up to today, 2025, I have put MANY hundreds, perhaps thousands more miles on classic Triumph big twins than I will ever put on Commandos, but not necessarily because they are the "best", "fastest", "coolest", or any other reason; rather it has just become PERSONAL PREFERENCE. Even then, of late, I have fallen into REALLY digging the modern (early 2000s) Triumph triple 900s. I have 3-4/5 of them, and they are really great performers while still being light enough not to be "potatoes".

Back to your original question regarding 70MPH touring (vs an 650SS), I've not owned a Featherbed 650 apart from my 650SS-framed Triton which actually has a 750 top end. I've not done ANY serious highway miles on it, that's not what it was built for.

OTHERWISE, I've had so much fun in the Texas Hill Country on my 650s, mainly because apart from a few choice sections with either long straights and/or wide sweepers, I never hold them to cruising at 70+ (not that they couldn't). They are absolutely brilliant at all-around riding, and I even used my '70 Bonnie to do one of my 100/100/100 rides, and it happily did the ton without complaint or overheating.

As far as my race bike, a '65/66/67/68/69/70 Bonnie 650+.020 scratch built stocker (electronic ignition), it only failed me twice over 4 years, 33 road races, and a pass down the Bonneville salt: once, when a muffler rattled loose on the last lap of a race (Barber's), and once when a coil wire connection grounded out on the gas tank, also on the last lap (Willow Springs). Otherwise, after my first 2 race weekends as a rank rookie, I was NEVER beaten to turn 1, always being gridded on the last row, and even against 750 triples and 4s (the class is over 500 to 750cc). I placed 5th out of 22 riders in class, racing only 1/2 of the available races in 2008. I AM NOWHERE NEAR AN EXPERT RIDER. I credit the BONNIE for that record.

It has quickness, lightness, durability, plenty of speed, and RELIABILITY (if properly fettled).

The 500 twin is also great, BUT NO MATCH FOR THE 650, especially on extended highway use.

As for single carb vs dual, I never owned a single-carb 650, but I ride a good few and restored a couple. Anywhere at highway speed and above, is right where you want that 2nd carb.

I hope this helps you make your decision...
 
By the way, if you are even "somewhat" mechanically inclined, properly balancing a pair of concentric carbs is NOT "rocket science". The 2nd carb is every bit worth it.
That is very true.

However, I learnt a while back that the stock twin pull throttle arrangement ain’t so good with US type bars, the yanking back and forth def accelerates cable stretch and subsequent out of sync issue.

A 2:1 splitter and a single pull throttle is definitely an improvement that helps longer lasting slide synchronicity.
 
That is very true.

However, I learnt a while back that the stock twin pull throttle arrangement ain’t so good with US type bars, the yanking back and forth def accelerates cable stretch and subsequent out of sync issue.

A 2:1 splitter and a single pull throttle is definitely an improvement that helps longer lasting slide synchronicity.
OK 99.9% of the time I agree with you, but I HATE 2:1 splitters and cable adjustments on the top of the carbs! None of my Triumphs have ever given me trouble with dual pull twistgrips and standard Amal/Triumph carb tops.
 
May I put in a vote for 73-74 T140 single carb Triumph Twin? You may need to make sure the balance is
done correctly they can be vibrators but they are easy to maintain and easy to ride. And they look good.
 
Cheap shot...
Tr6c / t100c / t120c opinions
 
Tr6c / t100c / t120c opinions


This'd be fine for 70 , on the dirt , desert , gravel . ! :confused:

Za twin carb alloy 56 750 . Like Bud Edkin's .

Tr6c / t100c / t120c opinions


Best bikeb Ive seen in years !

Tr6c / t100c / t120c opinions


That assumes your T100-C , was the real one . As thisisa t150 C in comparison . rather Light for that output .

" The Triumph Tiger 100C, introduced in 1953, was a fully race-kitted version of the Triumph Tiger 100, designed for competitive use. Only 560 units were produced. "

Oweva , The R was 120 & another 100 RR , in 57 . class C dirt track . Tweaked say 50 horse . So That There aluminium 750 , has gotta bitta getup & GO .
But I wouldnt even run it , without a v close inspection . Hens Teeth .

If theyre 1 1/8 , itd work . good . maybe its not . But TRIUMPH are ' mechano set ' tech . Using the best , BUT AN OLD T - Bird , of any year , will do a ton , running right .
Ands less demanding to operate and more economical . while still capeable of covering 90 miles in an hour in the mountains , if its fairly level ,horizontal rather than vertical .

Main things low time and straight . Like the rusty one . theyre all the same .
 
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