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General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: steven c on January 02, 2015, 09:32:07 AM

Title: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: steven c on January 02, 2015, 09:32:07 AM
 Beside the look is there anything major different from a regular 79? Should it handle the same with the different rear tire?
 I always liked the way they looked and this seems like a good price for a 79 Bonneville.
http://newhaven.craigslist.org/mcy/4827713326.html
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: radguzzi on January 02, 2015, 09:52:24 AM


Steve,
I am not sure where the inquiry regarding the rear tire came from, I see no mention of a tire size change in the ad other than to say the tires are new...  hopefully they are the correct size.   The Triumph frame right up until the end handled great.

Now, the Lockheed master cylinders were another story.  Typically needed a rebuild every couple of years due to bad seals and pitted bores so be ready to ask about those.

Lester wheels, low miles...  what's not to like...?

I restored a 1982 TSS for a fellow some years ago, that was a gorgeous, last of the breed motorcycle.

Best,
Rob
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: drlapo on January 02, 2015, 10:06:26 AM
that's a very good price on a very good bike
my 79 T140E has been a great ride since I bought it new
parts are cheap and available and the brakes, while not great, are serivceable and need to be rebuilt every 15 to 20 years

the MKII carbs are very good but should be rejetted if  they are stock
I've experience no "deterioration" in the 35 years I've owned the bike, mines not a "Special"
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: Rough Edge racing on January 02, 2015, 10:07:55 AM
 I have been riding ,racing and working on Triumphs for 40 years. All 750's are pretty much the same except for the  stuff you see like wheels,exhaust and tire sizes.
  An original bike will 5000 miles sounds pretty good...However , all Triumph twins have a sludge trap in the crankshaft that after 35 years even with low miles will likely need to be cleaned. The engine must be completely torn down to do this. People may disagree but I have seen the lower end damge to many Triumph engines because of plugged sludge traps causing restricted oil flow.
 It's a decent price if the bike is complete.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: dilligaf on January 02, 2015, 11:38:50 AM
MY first motorcycle was a 1959 Triumph Bonneville that I purchased, used, in the Fall of 1959.  Road that thing all over the Eastern part of the United States and replaced the rings at least twice and well as the pistons.   I replaced it with a Honda Hawk (250cc, the Supper Hawke was the 305).  Not much of a motorcycle but it went ever place that Bonneville went and never-never gave me the first bit of problems.  On the other hand, anytime my wife see a Triumph, the first words out of her mouth are "that's what a motorcycle is suppose to look like".   :BEER:
Matt
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: jetmechmarty on January 02, 2015, 01:13:09 PM
I found a couple of articles that may be helpful.  I find it a lovely bike to look at.  I have a friend who rides a '77 Bonneville.  It's not near as nice a ride as a Yamaha XS650, but every time I've been given the opportunity to ride the Bonnie, I never want to get off.

http://www.motorcycleclassics.com/classic-british-motorcycles/triumph-t140v-bonneville.aspx#axzz3Nh0GFO6f
http://www.classic-british-motorcycles.com/1979-triumph-bonneville.html
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: drlapo on January 02, 2015, 02:03:06 PM
I've owned 2 Yamaha 650s: did own
I still have my 79 T140E, since new
sure I've maintained it adn rebuilt the engine at 25000 miles but it's been pretty reliable and only left me stranded when i used  sub-standard parts; an Emgo ign coil and a hardware store woodruff key.
its  35 yers old now and I would not ride it to Canada again but it would probably make it there and back again
its a good "vintage" bike
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: jetmechmarty on January 02, 2015, 03:15:06 PM
My buddy that I mentioned in the earlier post has a couple of old Triumphs.  He likes to ride and he seems to like wrenching.  He bought a new Bonnie in 2001 and still rides that, but it's rather sterile for lack of a better word.  He recently added a Yamaha XS650 standard to his fleet that is one of the later standards.  He wrenches on it too, but I think a lot less than the old Triumphs and it has more character from the saddle than the '01 Bonnie, IMHO.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: jetmechmarty on January 02, 2015, 03:24:56 PM
So... does vibration and wonky electrics = character ? ;D

  Dusty

Yes Dusty, I suppose it does.  The Yamaha doesn't really have wonky electrics other than prone to fail charging rotors due to age.  The XS650 vibrates, but when tuned, not so much that hands go numb and parts fall off.  The '01 Bonnie is silent and smooth by comparison.  What else could it be?  Can a stock '01 Bonnie have soul when compared to a 1975 Bonneville?  I think that's a good question.

(http://i1238.photobucket.com/albums/ff485/jetmechmarty/Mobile%20Uploads/2012-11/1103121404a_zpse1euahy7.jpg) (http://s1238.photobucket.com/user/jetmechmarty/media/Mobile%20Uploads/2012-11/1103121404a_zpse1euahy7.jpg.html)
The Bonnie is a '75 and the XS650 is a '77
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: steven c on January 02, 2015, 06:20:39 PM
 Thanks for the insight. I owned a 77 XS650 which I put 10K on in one year and have ridden a friends 79 and a 81 rubber mount Bonneville( pretty rare bike) and have always enjoyed ridding them, since this bike, which was kind of ironic was made to compete with the XS650 special which I also had for a short while and didn't really warm up to it.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: guzzisteve on January 02, 2015, 06:49:07 PM
Dusty,    For a bike to have soul it has to bleed, this was the norm of older Brit & HD riders where I grew up. Now I can justify my bikes leaking oil.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: tazio on January 02, 2015, 06:53:15 PM
Here's me ol' '79 bonnie (and '82 vision),
~Ran like a raped ape up until it developed a "see through" piston :BEER:

(http://i1282.photobucket.com/albums/a538/broughsuperior/09-05-2012091619PM_zpse2ff189c.jpg) (http://s1282.photobucket.com/user/broughsuperior/media/09-05-2012091619PM_zpse2ff189c.jpg.html)

Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: jetmechmarty on January 02, 2015, 07:40:37 PM
Owned a '74 XS very briefly , handling was a bit odd , but a good solid MC .
 To answer your question , does any machine have soul , or only the soul we impart to them ? Dunno . I guess to me reliability and ease of maintenance represent character as well as exhaust note . That's just me .

  Dusty

Yes, the XS650 has rear weight bias as compared to the better balanced Triumph. In 1974 the Yamaha 650 still had a flimsy frame.  I think their frames gained over 20 lbs by end of production in 1983.
Yes, it's the soul we impart to them by virtue of their quirks, at least, that's how I see it.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: Guzzistajohn on January 02, 2015, 07:55:13 PM
Steven, I vote you get the bike, run the crap out of it next summer and we can all place bets on how it lasts. Sound like fun?

John S.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: steven c on January 02, 2015, 08:41:53 PM
 More of a pipe dream at the moment.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: motoguzzibill on January 03, 2015, 12:07:41 AM
I've owned my 79' Special for at least ten years, maybe a few more. Bought it because I love the look of the wheels, paint, and exhaust system. Regarding the handling comments, I push mine quite hard in the curves and have never had a handling concern. Corners as well as any Triumph I have ridden, which is always quite good. The exhaust system may limit the top end a bit, I've found it hard to make the ton after much carb tuning. I think the dual exhaust models might do a little better. Most my riding is in the 65-70 mph range. Added a smaller rear sprocket, lowered the cruising rpms by 500 or so.

My complaints would be too soft of seat foam and the height of the footpegs. Front brake rotors are poor but it's a pretty light bike and doesn't need a lot of brake power. No holes in my pistons but I made it a point to sort the carburetion for the altitude. It does require maintenance but that's part of the experience. What can I say my first bike was a BSA Rocket 3 (still have that too). The price is good but if it's real rough be prepared for work and money.
Bill
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: Rough Edge racing on January 03, 2015, 05:52:07 AM
   Mmmm, old Triumphs are an insidious habit I have never been able to quit.....On my work bench as we speak is a  650 engine for my street bike build. Vintage Routt 750 cylinders with custom rods ,pistons and cams..
   
            (https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7570/15476669713_ac95ba2c82_c.jpg)

   And the 70 Bonneville chassis for the engine  with 92 Yamaha FRZ600 front forks ...and in the background the fastest naked stock frame modified production 650 pushrod bike in the USA, a Triumph of course...

         (https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5600/14924341924_3f26454b39_c.jpg)

  And my 650 race Triumph in action at the Ohio mile last July making a 125 record MPH run ridden by my younger friend. Three easy shifts,nothing to it.. ;D

        https://www.flickr.com/photos/75289626@N08/15430128095/ (https://www.flickr.com/photos/75289626@N08/15430128095/)

 
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: Rough Edge racing on January 03, 2015, 06:08:08 AM
MGB ,

Hmm , that's kind of ironic , MGB  ;D Yeah , they can be sorted , the MK 2 Amals were horrible from the factory due to the emission regs . The other thing was the long intake cam timing and short exhaust cam ti ;Ding of the T140 models . Both of mine had T120 exhaust cams installed which made them run a bit cooler and helped the mid range to top end . One thing about 650 AND 750 CC Triumphs was the incredibly flat torque curve , pull like a train from idle .
 
  Dusty

 Yes stock 750 had a hot intake cam retarded about 7 degrees to kill mid range power.This was done by Triumph because of main bearing failures on the 750. Triumph had a huge stock inferior main bearings and changed cam timing instead of replacing the bearings......The trick is to advance the intake cam to about a 100 degree lobe center and pick up a lot of power for a few hours work and no money spent.
 The burned pistons are from detonation and or preignition. This is caused by improper timing and or low octane fuel and or oil in the combustion chamber ..
 A fine running Triumph ridden within it's design limits is a nice piece ,one needing a rebuild and screwed up by ham fisted mechanics is a nightmare
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: Petrus Rocks on January 03, 2015, 03:57:40 PM
Something not noted is the light feel, almost bicycle-ness of the Triumph.  You feel like your riding something with little weight.  It flicks from side to side with just a thought.  They vibrate for sure but if you're riding around 50 mph it's minor.  My mirrors actually smooth out once in a while.  ;D
 My Guzzi feels like a locomotive.  My Triumph feels like a gazelle.  For longer trips I want my BMW or my Buell.  My Guzzi or Triumph I would ride far but it would be more of a challenge. 
 Really depends on how much time and effort you want to put into it. 
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: Tom on November 26, 2022, 12:50:57 PM
What were the results?  Did you buy the bike or not?
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: steven c on November 26, 2022, 04:41:03 PM
Boy that was a long time ago, no I didn't buy it.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: Tom on November 26, 2022, 05:21:11 PM
Was curious.  One came up for sell on the other side of the island.  Low mileage but has superficial rust.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: vf84pc on November 27, 2022, 03:30:41 PM
The Pre-1970 frames were so light "flick-ability" was an understatement when describing the handling. The post 1970 frames were (As described by the serious Triumph aficionados) were a BSA frame. I am not criticizing those bikes my 1977 Bonneville felt like it was was glued to the road. I love the T140 Series triumphs. The 140E has the Lucas Rita ignition (No Points) and AMAL MKII carbs (Isoelastic mounted CV type) So 90% of the maintenance is gone! I liked the Special with the black and gold paint, Lester mag wheels. The swing arm on that model was wider to accommodate a 4.25" X 18 rear tire. It is on my bucket bike list of bikes, if it has the factory 2 into 1 that is a good thing because re-pops are $$
My 15 V7 reminds me of my Bonnie it has some vibes that makes my hands buzz at the end of a days riding, it is light handles well they are both great machines. But the bonnie is a machine of it's day and will require more maintenance depending on how many miles you put on the clock.
Are you on Long Island? I saw a beautiful 79 Bonneville on FB in Jersey for $4100
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: Tom on December 03, 2022, 09:21:34 PM
I'm in Kona.  Big Island.  Hawaii where the volcano is.
Title: Re: 1979 Triumph Bonneville Special ?
Post by: nc43bsa on December 03, 2022, 10:17:59 PM
The 140E has the Lucas Rita ignition (No Points) and AMAL MKII carbs (Isoelastic mounted CV type)

The Amal MKII carb is a slide/needle carb, similar to the often-cursed Amal Concentric MKI.  The CV carb is a modified Bing.