OVER the years Triumph’s Tiger has evolved from a pseudo-adventure bike – more show than go in off-road ability – to the bike we have today, a half-faired sports-tourer with no dirt pretensions at all. Not that that is a bad thing: Tiger buyers were always looking for a comfortable all-day ride, with good torque produced by the motor and all-round ability considered more important than outright performance.
In recent years the Tiger has been one of those ‘all roads’ machines – able to take on poor secondary roads through its long travel, plush suspension without being an adventure bike – with a 17-inch front cast wheel, wide tyres and tipping the scales at over 230kg, you wanted a well-formed gravel road to feel comfortable off the bitumen.
But times change and Tiger owners – and potential new owners – were telling Triumph to make the bike more road-oriented, sharper in the twisties and a bit more comfortable. The most famous of the British marques has delivered.
Updates and changes
Motive force
Who’s buying?
Tigers are typically bought by 47 year old men – shit, that’s me! Seriously though, I do see the attraction: comfortable (my minor gripe about the seat notwithstanding), fast, economic (the price is unchanged the new bike is the same as the outgoing model, $15,990) and versatile, the Tiger certainly ticks a lot of the boxes I want ticked in my wish list for sports-tourers. Owners of earlier Tigers had a few beefs, including the clunky gearbox (a feature of all Triumph 1050s) so the company has done some work there, and a firm left foot never misses anything. It still a bit noisy, but we were told during the launch they bad in and get quieter with a few kilometres on the odometer. Another beef was pillion accommodation. The outgoing model put the passenger up high behind the rider, where they caught a bit more of the wind blast than many liked, so a redesign of the back of the motorcycle has dropped the passenger seat 40mm. Motorcycles built for two are often also called upon to carry the kitchen sink, too, so Triumph has made panniers and a top box avaialble (although they hadn’t arrived in the country at the time of the launch). The top box is available with a 12 volt power socket and passenger backrest).
Super versatile
The Tiger Sport is a really versatile mount. Through the Gold Coast morning traffic it threaded its way without fuss, the upright riding position giving a great view over most tin-tops and the wide, flat-ish ‘bars allowing easy manoeuvring in traffic. In winding roads the Sport moniker made sense, especially when compared to earlier models, and when you hit the freeway the fairing blocks enough of the blast to make a transport section an inconvenience rather than a chore.
Who’s it for?
The old Tiger sat between the 1200 Explorer (a serious Adventure machine) and the Sprint GT (sport tourer) in the Triumph range. I’m surprised Triumph chose to move it closer to the Sprint, rather than Explorer – it’s now competing for interest with a host of capable machine, whereas it was firmly in the ‘Any Road’ category. Unlike machines like the Kawasaki Versys and Ducati Multistrada, the Tiger doesn’t come with dual-purpose rubber. It’s now firmly a road bike, a versatile sports-tourer at a competitive price.