1960 Triumph T100 Tiger
“Bathtub”
1960 TRIUMPH T100 TIGER BATHTUB STYLING
Bathtub styling was part of a brief flirtation with enclosed bike that infected England from the mid-50s to the mid-60s. After WWII, Brits were in dire need of basic transportation, and most couldn’t afford cars, so they commuted on bikes to and from work. The problem is the weather. Every night after getting home from work, the owner had to wipe his bike down of all the wet road grime to combat rust. Enclosing the bikes seemed like a good idea, until you realize that the moisture still found its way into these new enclosures, you just couldn’t see it, or dry it off. So rust became a bigger problem in some cases. Triumph wasn’t the only one to flirt with enclosed bikes. Norton, Velocette and even Vincent all tried their hand, with similar results. Triumph actually faired better than most. Their first Bathtub bikes were the 1959 Twenty-One (3TA 350 twin) and it’s big-sister, the 1959 5T Speed Twin (500), and by 1960, it had spread to the 6T Thunderbird (650) line. While the Bathtub bikes sold reasonably well in England (their intended market), by now the US was the Brits’ biggest motorcycle market by far, and Americans hated bulky, enclosed bikes. In fact, Yanks were famous for stripping every non-essential bit off their bikes already. Those unfortunate few who ended up with a Bathtub Triumph often swapped out the bulbous bodywork for more conventional fenders, side covers and headlight. Triumph quickly realized this and began cutting back on the Bathtub’s bulkiness year-by-year, until it all but disappeared by 1965, and the Bathtub-era was over.
Special thanks go out to Bonham’s Auction Co. for giving us use of these pictures of this lovely 1960 Triumph T100 Tiger.
1960 Triumph T100 Tiger
SPECIFICATIONS
Engine type Displacement Bore & Stroke Compression Carburetor Ignition Engine output Primary drive Clutch Gearbox Ratios, overall: 1st, bottom 2nd 3rd 4th, top Final drive Frame type Wheelbase Seat Height Ground Clearance Suspension, front Suspension, rear Brake, front Brake, rear Tire, front Tire, rear Fuel capacity Curb weight |
Air-cooled OHV vertical twin, non-unit 498cc / 30.5 ci 63mm X 80mm / 2.48″ X 3.15″ 7.6:1 1- Amal Monobloc, Type 276 Lucas magneto 32 bhp @ 6500 rpm 1/2″ X .305″ chain Multi-plate, wet 4-speed, non-unit, right foot shift
12.20:1 8.45:1 5.95:1 5.00:1 5/8″ X 3/8″ chain Brazed-lug, full cradle 55.75″ / 141.6 cm 30.5″ / 77.5 cm 5.0″ / 12.7 cm Telescopic fork, hydraulic damping Swing arm, 2 Girling dampers 7″ SLS drum 7″ SLS drum 3.25″ X 19″ Dunlop 3.50″ X 19″ Dunlop 4 gal / 18 liters 375 lbs / 170 kg |
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