British motorcycle
Type of motorcycle
Triumph Tiger Sport 660 Manufacturer Triumph Motorcycles Production 2022- Class Sport touring motorcycle [ 1] Engine Water-cooled , 660 cc (40 cu in), DOHC , triple Bore / stroke 74 mm × 51.1 mm (2.91 in × 2.01 in) Compression ratio 11.95:1 Power 81 PS (60 kW) @ 10,250 rpm (claimed)[ 2] Torque 47 ft⋅lb (64 N⋅m) @ 6,250 rpm (claimed)[ 2] Transmission wet clutch, 6-speed, chain Frame type Steel perimeter Suspension Front Showa 41 mm USD telescopic separate function fork (SFF) Rear Showa monoshock with preload adjustment Brakes Nissin two-piston sliding calipers, twin 310mm discs Nissin single-piston sliding caliper, single 255 mm disc Tyres 120/70 ZR 17 Michelin Road 5 (front) 180/55 ZR 17 Michelin Road 5 (rear) Rake , trail 23.1 ° / 97.1 mm (3.82 in) Wheelbase 1,418 mm (55.8 in) Seat height 835 mm (32.9 in) Weight 206 kg (454 lb)[ 2] (wet ) Fuel capacity 17.2 L (3.8 imp gal; 4.5 US gal)
The Triumph Tiger Sport 660 is a middle-weight Sport touring motorcycle launched in 2022 by British manufacturer Triumph Motorcycles Ltd [ 1] and using many of the components of its naked sibling, the Triumph Trident 660 .
Front details
Features
The motorcycle features:
Riding modes (rain/road)
Switchable traction control
Non-switchable anti-lock brakes
Hybrid LCD/TFT instrument pod
Full LED lighting
Remote preload adjustment for the rear shocks
Optional quickshifter and autoblipper
A2 Licence restrictor kit
LAMS Restricted (39 kW) model for Australia / New Zealand market
Adjustable windshield
An optional Bluetooth connectivity system is available, which allows mobile phone connection, navigation, music control, and GoPro control. This system is driven by the My Triumph app, and available for both Android and Apple iOS.
References
External links
Four-cylinder motorcycles
1,180 cc 998 cc 646 cc 599 cc
Three-cylinder motorcycles
2,458 cc 2,294 cc 1,215 cc 1,160 cc 1,050 cc 955 cc 888 cc 885 cc 799 cc 765 cc 749 cc 675 cc 660 cc
Two-cylinder motorcycles
1,700 cc 1,600 cc 1,200 cc 900 cc 865 cc 790 cc
Single-cylinder motorcycles
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Triumph motorcycle timeline, 2010s–present