SLOW STEADY REFINEMENT
The 1965 Triumph Bonneville T120 650 was again more or less a carry-over from 1964, which itself was a carry-over from 1963. Changes were minor and evolutionary in nature, aimed at refinement, improving reliability, performance and ease of production. Model designations were also carryovers: T120R was the road machine with down pipes; the T120C was the off-road/street scrambler (like an Enduro); and the TT Special, which wouldn’t actually get its own official model designation until 1966. For now, the TT Special was an option package for the T120C series. The color scheme for 1965 Triumph Bonneville was Pacific Blue over Silver.
ABOVE: 1965 Triumph Bonneville T120R, Roadster w/down pipes.
ENGINE
Engine refinements began with Engine # DU13375 and included a drilled hole in the crankcase behind the cylinder to facilitate finding top dead center, a new oil pressure relief valve, and a change to Champion spark plugs. The exhaust system on the T120R was restyled (more swept back) and brackets added. UK and Export models retained the long mufflers, but US models got a shorter muffler with straight-through baffles. Minor changes were made to the kickstart mechanism, clutch lining material was switched to Armstrong cork, and a longer alternator cable was added to keep it from rubbing on the primary chain.
FRAME & RUNNING GEAR
Frame and running gear also received only minor attention. The rear subframe was modified slightly to make the center stand work better, the horn was hung from a new bracket under the tank, the rear brake actuator rod’s operating arm was moved to the inside of the left engine mounting plate and the rod re-routed accordingly. The battery box received steel liners for its rubber mounts to prevent damage due to overtightening. The QD (Quickly Detachable) rear wheel swapped its taper roller bearings for ball race bearings.
PAINT & TRIM
Some US models got all-black seats, while most had the more familiar 2-tone gray-and-black seat, similar to 1964. The new paint colors continued to follow the same pattern as 1964, with the Pacific Blue top covering most of the tank, and the Silver showing only under the tank emblem. Of course the steel front and rear fenders were painted silver with a blue strip running down their center, except for the TT Specials, which sported lightweight polished alloy (aluminum) fenders.
1965 Triumph Bonneville T120C “TT SPECIAL”
TT REALLY IS “SPECIAL”
The TT Special was officially a Competition version of the T120C Street Scrambler. It wouldn’t get it’s own stand-alone model designation until 1966. But it was much more than simply a stripped-down T120C. The TT Special had bigger carbs (1-3/16″ vs. the standard 1-1/16″), hotter cams (and/or followers), higher compression (11.0:1 vs. 8.5:1) and those gorgeous, big-tube TT pipes sans mufflers. They were fast, especially at higher rpms, but could run hot, due to the high compression. Throughout the 60s, they were almost unbeatable on US scrambles tracks.
1965 Triumph Bonneville SPECIFICATIONS
Bonneville T120R Bonneville T120C Engine type Displacement Bore & Stroke Compression Carburetors Ignition Engine output Primary drive Primary drive sprockets Clutch Gearbox Ratios, overall: 1st, bottom 2nd 3rd 4th, top Final drive Final drive sprockets Frame type Suspension, front Suspension, rear Brake, front Brake, rear Tire, front Tire, rear Fuel Capacity Wheelbase Seat height Ground clearance Weight, unladen |
Roadster, low pipes Street Scrambler, high pipes Air-cooled OHV vertical twin 649cc / 40.0 ci 71mm X 82mm / 2.79″ X 3.23″ 8.5:1 (T120) / 11.2:1 (TT Special) 2- Amal Monobloc 1-1/16″ / 1-3/16″ (TT) Battery & coil (T120) / Energy Transfer (TT) 46 bhp @ 6500 (T120) / 52 bhp (TT) 3/8″ triplex chain X 84 links 29T X 58T Multi-plate, wet 4-speed constant-mesh, right-foot shift — 11.8:1 8.17 6.76 5.84 5/8″ X .400″ X 3/8″ chain X 106 links 19T X 47T Brazed lug, full-cradle, single downtube Telescopic fork, hydraulic damping Swing arm, 2 Girling dampers 8″ SLS drum, full width 7″ SLS drum 3.25″ X 19″ Dunlop 4.00″ X 18″ Dunlop 2.5 Imp gal (US) / 4 Imp gal (UK & export) 54.5″ / 140.3cm 32.5″ / 77.5cm 5.0″ / 12.7cm 363 lbs / 165 kg |
No Comment