The Triumph Scrambler is essentially a dressed up Bonneville, designed with 60s desert racing nostalgia in mind. Other than cosmetic changes, such as the high pipes, it has a slighter higher riding position and—most notably—a 270-degree firing interval to give it a unique feel and exhaust note.
Those seemingly minor changes have made the Scrambler an instant classic and a hard bike to customize, mostly because it looks amazing out of the box. Here we’ve rounded up our five favorite Scrambler customs, from builders who have taken an already great bike and made it even better.
Flat track specialists Co-Built fabricated the stainless-steel exhaust system, while Spirit shortened the subframe and added a one-piece electronics tray and rear mudguard combination. A striking silver and black paint scheme compliments S6′s brawny stance perfectly. [More about this bike | Spirit of the Seventies]
Image by Grant Robinson.
LSL were mainly responsible for performance upgrades: Öhlins suspension, Pirelli tires, a Magura Supermoto brake system, and custom triple clamps to tweak the geometry. The headlight, fenders, side panels and seat were all courtesy of JVB-Moto. There’s also a high-performance exhaust from Arrow. [More about this bike | LSL | JvB-Moto]
The stainless-steel exhaust system was built by Mark McDade, and includes Snuff-Or-Nots—a popular accessory in the 60s that cut down on noise when the washers inside the pipes are flipped to the closed position. Robert named the bike ‘Catalina Scrambler’ after the famous dirt race held on Santa Catalina Island in the 50s. Rather befitting, don’t you think? [More about this bike | Mule Motorcycles]
The ‘Off Road’ model (pictured here) is dripping with retro dirt-bike style, thanks to the enduro-inspired fenders and taillight, high Zard exhaust system and distinctive Mr Martini Scrambler seat. It’s built to ride as well as it looks—with a short gear ratio kit, Öhlins shocks, a cartridge kit in the front forks and Continental off-road rubber.
There’s also an ‘On Road’ version, with lower fenders, an under-slung exhaust system and different shocks. Only 10 of each model are being built, to commemorate Mr Martini’s 20th year of working with Triumph. [Mr Martini]
It’s a great example of how good a Scrambler can look with minimal styling changes—the matte khaki green paint job is stock, save for the obvious BC logo on the tank, as are the exhaust headers. The silencers and low profile seat are the most noticeable changes—both are new items that will soon be available for purchase. Custom fenders and BC’s own headlight, taillight and turn signals round things off.
The bottom line: if you have a Scrambler of your own, a build like this is well within reach. [British Customs]
The article apeared first on Bike Exif By Wesley Reyneke | Rather Be Riding
No comments:
Post a Comment