2012 Street Triple

2012 Street Triple


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What's that you say? Such a machine doesn't exist? Well, until it does we're keeping Triumph's Street Triple R on our Sexiest Bikes of the Decade list. Selected as Motorcycle of the Year 2009 here on Motorcycle.com, Triumph's Street Triple R has remained a staff favorite since its introduction in that same year.

The up-spec R iteration brings fully adjustable front and rear suspension, along with radial-mount front brake calipers, to the standard Street Triple – making a smart, entertaining bike we liked into a bike we loved instantly. The R's brakes and suspension are carryovers from the supersport Daytona 675, while the Daytona's donor 675cc inline-Triple was retuned and remapped with a low-end torque bias for service in the Street Triple models.

2012 Triumph Street Triple 675R

Only a few months ago Troy Siahaan informed us that the Street Triple R's bigger brother, the venerable 1,050cc Speed Triple, lost what was perhaps its most distinctive visual feature: twin round headlights. The iconic dual headlight look is retained but now the lights are pentagonal in shape, and for 2012 the Street Triple R gets the same style lamps.

2012 Triumph Street Triple 675R

Triumph has taken a humble approach to touting other updates for the STR, as press materials are light on details with respect to changes for the fresh-faced middleweight streetfighter. However, we learned that a number of subtle, as well visually unnoticeable, refinements join the redrafted headlamps as updates for the 2012 STR.

According to freelance journalist Alan Cathcart's report, Triumph remedied an issue with the detent spring in the transmission, ostensibly making the 2012 model a smoother, more precise shifting bike. Additionally, the R's fueling was recalibrated. Triumph's Simon Warburton explains in Cathcart's article that the new fuel maps resemble a two-mode mapping (Sport and Leisure), with the EFI system automatically applying different ignition maps depending on how rapidly the throttle is opened rather than just the throttle's position.

Warburton says, in essence, the end result is a more refined throttle response during tamer, slower riding, while aggressive throttle inputs are rewarded with snappy, quick-revving power.

2012 Triumph Street Triple 675R

Anticipating the Next Great Naked Middleweight Streetbike Bout

The Street Triple has obliterated any class-competitive contenders daring to step into the ring. But for 2012 the naked middleweight funster Triumph has some serious competition in the form of Ducati's all-new Streetfighter 848.

Just as the Street Triples are stripped down, retuned versions of Triumph's Daytona 675 supersport, so too is the Streetfighter 848 a repurposed, friendlier-for-the-street model born from Ducati's middleweight supersport, known simply as the 848 EVO. However, the Streetfighter boasts something that neither the Street Triple nor even the 848 offers: rider-manageable traction control.

But factor out that handy rider aid for a minute, and the Streetfighter still brings some serious punch in the form of its powerful, torquey 849cc Twin and potent radial-mount Brembo brakes. The SF 848 also wears sticky Diablo Rosso Corsa tires.

2012 Triumph Street Triple 675R

Our most recent dyno result for the supersport 848 EVO saw a little less than 119 peak hp joined by 62.0 ft-lbs of torque. The Streetfighter's street-tune biased Twin will likely churn out something closer to 110 hp. Detuning aside, that's still a considerable advantage to the 95 hp and 44 ft-lbs we saw from a 2011 Street Triple R during our 2011 Naked Middleweights Shootout.

At the moment it seems the Triumph's biggest advantages are its 23-pound (wet) weight savings and $3400 less costly MSRP.

Of course, this is a battle between paper lions. We won't know the whole truth for a few months yet while we await our chance to get a stateside Streetfighter 848 in our hands. In the meantime, here's a comparative chart to see how they match up on specs.

By the Numbers
Triumph Street Triple R Ducati Streetfighter 848
MSRP $9599 $12,995
Engine Type Inline-Triple V-Twin
Displacement 675cc 849cc
Bore & Stroke 74.0 x 52.3mm 84.0 x 61.2mm
Compression NA 13.2:1
HP (crankshaft) 105 bhp 132 bhp
Torque 50 ft-lbs 69 ft-lbs
Frame Aluminum beam twin-spar Tubular-steel trellis
Wheelbase 55.5 in 58.1 in
Rake/Trail 23.9 degrees/92.4mm 24.5 degrees/103mm
Front Suspension Fully adjustable 41mm inverted Kayaba Fully adjustable 43mm inverted Marzocchi
Rear Suspension Fully adjustable Kayaba monoshock Fully adjustable Sachs monoshock
Front/Rear Wheels 120/70 x 17 front; 180/55 x 17 rear 120/70 x 17 front; 180/60 x 17 rear
Tires Pirelli Diablo Rosso Corsa Pirelli Diablo Rosso Corsa
Front Brakes Dual four-piston radial-mount Nissin Dual four-piston radial-mount Brembo
Rear Brakes One single-piston Nissin One dual-piston Brembo
Seat Height 31.7 in. 33.0 in.
Fuel Capacity 4.6 U.S. gal 4.4 U.S. gal
Curb Weight 416 lbs 439 lbs

Cathcart, riding a Euro-spec model, points out the switch from Dunlop to Pirelli rubber on the '12. But where he says his bike was shod with dual-compound Diablo Supercorsa Pros, our U.S.-spec test unit wore the Diablo Rosso Corsa tire. (Interestingly, the static images in Cathcart's review show the tires on his bike are also the Rosso Corsa.) Regardless of which Pirelli Diablo model is on your 2012 STR you're rewarded with excellent grip within minutes of starting your ride thanks to the tire's quick warm-up time. Handling performance is steady at speed with responsive but predictable turn-in for cornering.

2012 Triumph Street Triple 675R

The softer, satiny look of brushed steel replaces the gleaming chrome surfaces of the exhaust (now with thinner-walled headers) and footpeg heel guards. The clutch and alternator covers now sport a Triumph logo, while the name badge on the fuel tank has taken on a simpler, more contemporary look. Additionally, the cam cover is now magnesium for weight savings and new cylinder liners are said to help reduce engine noise.

This latest iteration of the STR remains a familiar beast, as none of the upgrades and changes altered the bike's open, upright ergonomic layout. The 31.7-inch saddle height is retained, as is the seat's thin padding near its front edge. This thin seat complaint is one of our biggest gripes with the STR, so in the scheme of things, that says a lot about the bike's near-perfect state.

2012 Triumph Street Triple 675R

The improvements to the transmission that Triumph says it implemented seem transparent to us since the STR's gearbox is as smooth as it's always been in our experience. We've rarely taken issue with switching cogs on the Street Triple models. Same goes for the smooth throttle response. The 675cc inline-Triple's predictable, linear power curve has always been one the bike's best attributes – thankfully nothing here has changed for the worse.

The mill spins up aggressively, starting around the 8K rpm mark, when grabbing a healthy amount of throttle. This is perhaps the newly calibrated EFI in play. But fueling on this Trumpet model is generally seamless, so we'd need to ride a 2011 against the new 2012 to fully suss out if the new bike's throttle response is markedly different than last year.

Stainless-steel brake lines as standard equipment help the dual four-pot radial-mount Nissin calipers provide communicative feedback and plenty of stopping force to reel in the STR's 416-pound wet weight.  Last, but most definitely not least, the raspy exhaust note – with appealing burble and occasional Pop Pop on overrun – that we've come to love continues to sing its song on the 2012 bike.

The Street Triple R's notable styling changes and modest mechanical updates, while not earthshaking, nevertheless keep this awesome streetbike at the forefront of a list of bikes we can't get enough of.

2012 Triumph Street Triple 675R

An unexpected bonus in light of Triumph's efforts to keep this bike fresh is an MSRP unchanged from 2011 pricing: The 2012 Street Triple R retails for $9599 ($8899 for the standard Street Triple) and is available in Crystal White, Phantom Black or Diablo Red.

Related Reading
2012 Ducati Streetfighter Review
2011 Triumph Speed Triple Review
2011 Naked Middleweights Shootout
Best of 2009: Motorcycle.com's Motorcycles of the Year Awards
2009 Triumph Street Triple R Review
All Things Triumph on Motorcycle.com

2012 Street Triple

Source: https://www.motorcycle.com/manufacturer/triumph/2012-triumph-street-triple-r-review-91177.html

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