Classic Triumph Bonneville

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David
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by David »

About 33,000 according to Roy Bacon.
JackyJoll
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by JackyJoll »

That’s 1400 a year.

More than I expected. I never saw one until some time in the 1980s. Their sales talk must have failed to convince the cops in the north of Scotland.
David
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by David »

Too many hills!
They started in 1948 and finished in 1971 .
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

Last night I took a look at the right HT lead. It was deffo wobbling a bit in the coil, but not super drastic. I have put a single turn of electrical tape around the outside of the lead so the terminal has a fatter thing to bight into, seems much more secure now.

I've also put the needles back to the middle clip position. By the time I finished it was too late to start her up.

I've just had a go now. The right plug still isn't firing properly. It idles roughly and stutters a bit. Pulling the left cap off (wearing thick gloves!) while it's running kills it instantly, pulling the right one off makes it run worse but not die.

I did however discover by accident that when the right cap is only half on, so put loosely on but not 'clicked', it idles way better...like a sewing machine. A very loud sewing machine. Blips of the throttle are met with a proper perky snap of engine revs.

So there just be something up with how the cap is actually fitting on the plug. They're both pretty much brand new genuine NGK bits. It doesn't make a huge amount of sense though, when I was messing with the HT lead yesterday I checked the resistance from the coil end terminal to the plug centre electrode - 5kOhm, exactly as it should be.
Last edited by Mr. Dazzle on Fri May 13, 2022 10:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Le_Fromage_Grande »

Could be a duff plug cap
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

That would seem the obvious conclusion, but I measured the plug-cap-lead-terminal combo on the bench and got exactly the right resistance. Also seems weird that if you don't "click" the cap onto the plug it works.

Could also maybe be a duff plug which is broken inside, so moving the cap changes which part of the terminal it connects with? Clutching at straws really.
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Le_Fromage_Grande »

Either sound possible, I'd replace the plug cap, and then the plug, but you could also have a plug lead with an internal break and moving it is making the connection better
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

Plug cap is brand new.

But then again, so is the plug :lol:

And the wires :D

I do seem to recall I dropped the plug at some point though...
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by KungFooBob »

Swap the plugs between cylinders, if the issue follows then you know it's the plug.
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

Yeah that's this afternoon's job :D

Pretty sure I've got some spare plugs too.
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Big Red »

My money is on a faulty plug, current will rise the further the spark has to jump. Properly clipped on will be weaker spark need to reach the plug.
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by David »

A new double ended coil with bonded wires will help, too!
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

David wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 11:19 am A new double ended coil with bonded wires will help, too!
Fitting a couple of extra cylinders, CV carbs and Japanese electrics would work wonders too, but that's what my CBR is for :D
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Le_Fromage_Grande »

Mr. Dazzle wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 11:31 am
David wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 11:19 am A new double ended coil with bonded wires will help, too!
Fitting a couple of extra cylinders, CV carbs and Japanese electrics would work wonders too, but that's what my CBR is for :D
Don't bet on it, I ended up binning the wiring loom, electronic ignition, coils, leads and plugs on my 1982 Kawasaki, 40 year old Japanese electrics are no better than any other countries, I've got a 1983 YPVS 350 waiting for me to get the enthusiasm to rewire it as it's existing wiring loom is a rat's nest of bodges.
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

I needed to make an urgent journey recently, but Mrs. D had the car....so I went out to the garage and thumbed the starter on my 1998 CBR, a bike which has just been abandoned in the garage for 5 months.

Started straight away :D
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Le_Fromage_Grande »

Mr. Dazzle wrote: Fri May 13, 2022 11:48 am I needed to make an urgent journey recently, but Mrs. D had the car....so I went out to the garage and thumbed the starter on my 1998 CBR, a bike which has just been abandoned in the garage for 5 months.

Started straight away :D
My 1990 65,000 mile FZ750 does the same, but the wiring has never been "repaired" there's a definite improvement in the quality of bikes that happened in the mid 80s.
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

I just tried swapping the plugs and the problem did indeed swap sides.

I had a spare plug in the garage, so I chucked that in and all seems well now. At idle at least!

It's the wrong grade of plug though, s'one "number" too cold. Enough to make the point though.
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Mr. Dazzle »

I went for a quick spin at lunchtime, incorrectly graded spark plug and all.

It's miles better than it ever has been, in all the times I've ridden it. Just to recap where I am, I've put the carbs back how they were following the rebuild, I've reset the float heights (were massively rich before) and replaced the duff spark plug and HT lead. The carbs are now set quite a bit richer than stock, but this bike also has open carbs and pipes, plus racier cams.

Starts first kick no problem at all now. Idles just fine. Flicks off the throttle give snaps of revs, previously there was a 50/50 chance you'd kill the engine instead. The really big difference is coming back down to idle though - it doesn't die!

Power is hugely increased. Low and mid range revs are massively better behaved too. You still need a little bit of finesse to get up through the revs, you can't just crack throttle, but by and large it's a straight relationship between throttle and engine now. It's got so much bottom end it's ridiculous, you have to recalibrate your riding. The engine is super long stroke and tops out at 7000rpm (if you're brave enough), but the low down torque is nuts for anyone used to riding a modern ~600cc bike.

Saw an indicated 90mph, no problem at all. Full throttle is really well behaved, pulls really strongly.

Just need to do the finer points of pull chops etc. now hopefully. Oh and get the right spark plug.

EDIT: Just been and whipped the plugs out now the engine has cooled and I don't risk 2nd degree burns on the exhaust headers.

This is not based on any attempt to ride at a set throttle, just 10-15 miles of general tooling about. Theyre not too bad, there is still some tuning to so but previously they got covered in black fur within 5 miles.

Image
Last edited by Mr. Dazzle on Fri May 13, 2022 3:50 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by Le_Fromage_Grande »

The cold plug won't hurt it, it'll just make it harder to start, on two strokes we always tried to run the coldest plug we could get away with as it made them les likely to hole pistons, on race bikes it wasn't unusual to start the bike on a hot plug and then change to a cold once it was warmed up.
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David
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Re: Classic Triumph Bonneville

Post by David »

Result!