1969 Triumph TR6

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1969 TRIUMPH TR6 BY THE NUMBERS
For the first time ever, a Triumph TR6 was called a “Tiger”. In fact the entire 1969 Triumph TR6 model lineup were all Triumph Tigers & would remain so for the rest of its life. Interestingly however, Triumph workers at the Meriden factory continued to refer to the TR6 as a Trophy for many years. The individual 1969 Triumph Tiger models were the standard TR6, TR6R roadster, TR6C street scrambler with high pipes & the TR6P for Police work. Engine & Frame Numbers ran from DU87124 to DU88524, built from July 29, 1968 to August 14, 1968; then NC02352 to HC2434, built from October 26, 1968 to July 15, 1969. This first batch was the last to use the “DU” engine number prefix, in use since 1963. Henceforth, engine numbers would be preceded by a 2- or 3-letter prefix indicating the month & year of manufacture.

ENGINE CHANGES
Along with the entire motorcycle, all threads in the engines were now converted from British Standard to “American” (UNC & UNF) threads. New connecting rods, dimensionally unchanged, now with UNF bolts & nuts, too 28 lb/ft of torque instead of 22. Hepolite pistons were made shorter, thicker at the crown & gudgeon pin (wrist pin). The oil pump feed plunger was enlarged to increase oil volume. Crankshaft flywheel weight was increased but the balance factor remained at 85%. Pushrod tubes were revised again, this time with Viton O-rings top & bottom in the never-ending quest for oil-tightness. To this end, the primary & gearbox filler caps were given O-rings as well. The alternator cable was repositioned to exit the top of the primary case. To improve long term durability, both cams were now nitrided, ending the premature wear problems once & for all.

69TriTR6R-LR.jpg


1969 TRIUMPH TR6 BY THE NUMBERS
For the first time ever, a Triumph TR6 was called a “Tiger”. In fact the entire 1969 Triumph TR6 model lineup were all Triumph Tigers & would remain so for the rest of its life. Interestingly however, Triumph workers at the Meriden factory continued to refer to the TR6 as a Trophy for many years. The individual 1969 Triumph Tiger models were the standard TR6, TR6R roadster, TR6C street scrambler with high pipes & the TR6P for Police work. Engine & Frame Numbers ran from DU87124 to DU88524, built from July 29, 1968 to August 14, 1968; then NC02352 to HC2434, built from October 26, 1968 to July 15, 1969. This first batch was the last to use the “DU” engine number prefix, in use since 1963. Henceforth, engine numbers would be preceded by a 2- or 3-letter prefix indicating the month & year of manufacture.

ENGINE CHANGES
Along with the entire motorcycle, all threads in the engines were now converted from British Standard to “American” (UNC & UNF) threads. New connecting rods, dimensionally unchanged, now with UNF bolts & nuts, too 28 lb/ft of torque instead of 22. Hepolite pistons were made shorter, thicker at the crown & gudgeon pin (wrist pin). The oil pump feed plunger was enlarged to increase oil volume. Crankshaft flywheel weight was increased but the balance factor remained at 85%. Pushrod tubes were revised again, this time with Viton O-rings top & bottom in the never-ending quest for oil-tightness. To this end, the primary & gearbox filler caps were given O-rings as well. The alternator cable was repositioned to exit the top of the primary case. To improve long term durability, both cams were now nitrided, ending the premature wear problems once & for all.

69TriTR6C-l.jpg


ABOVE: This 1969 Triumph TR6 Tiger is a TR6C model with high pipes. Note the chromed-wire heat shield. Most were removed & lost years ago.


1969 Triumph TR6 SPECIFICATIONS


Model Designations:

TR6

TR6C

TR6R

TR6P

Engine Type

Displacement

Bore & Stroke

Compression

Carburetor

Ignition

Engine output

Primary drive

Primary sprockets

Clutch

Gearbox

Ratios, overall:

1st, bottom

2nd

3rd

4th, top

Final drive

Final sprockets

Frame type

Suspension, front

Suspension, rear

Brake, front

Brake, rear

Tire, front

Tire, rear

Fuel Capacity

Wheelbase

Seat height

Ground clearance

Dry Weight

Standard

Competition/Off-road/Enduro

Roadster

Police

Air-cooled OHV vertical twin

649cc / 40.0 ci

71mm X 82mm / 2.79″ X 3.23″

8.5:1

1- Amal Concentric, 30mm

Battery & coil, Lucas

42 bhp @ 6500 rpm

3/8″ triplex chain X 84 links

Engine 29T X Clutch 58T

Multi-plate, wet

4-speed constant-mesh, right-foot shift

11.8:1

8.17:1

6.76:1

5.84:1

5/8″ X .400″ X 3/8″ chain X 106 links

Gearbox 19T X Rear 47T

Brazed lug, full-cradle, single downtube

Telescopic fork, hydraulic damping

Swing arm, 2 Girling dampers

8″ SLS drum, full-width

7″ SLS drum, one-side

3.25″ X 19″ Dunlop

4.00″ X 18″ Dunlop

2.5 Imp gal (US)/4 Imp gal (UK & export)

54.5″ / 140.3 cm

32.5″ / 77.5 cm

5.0″ / 12.7 cm

380 lbs / 173 kg

The post 1969 Triumph TR6 appeared first on webBikeWorld.

Source...
 
More disappointingly poor research ... :(

The individual 1969 Triumph Tiger models were the standard TR6, TR6R roadster, TR6C street scrambler with high pipes & the TR6P for Police work.
the entire 1969 Triumph TR6 model lineup were all Triumph Tigers
They were not. Afaik, the TR6P was not named anything. Both the UK & General Export only "standard TR6" and the US only TR6C were still called "Trophy", as they had been since the first unit 650's for 1963. 69 onwards, only the US market TR6R was called "Tiger", to differentiate if from the US market TR6C. Is probably why "workers at the Meriden factory continued to refer to the TR6 as a Trophy" ... :rolleyes:

"standard TR6" and TR6R are very similar, only differences were fuel tanks and handlebars.

Tire, rear (sic) 2.5 Imp gal (US)/4 Imp gal (UK & export)
... is unnecessarily imprecise. Only the TR6C tank is either 2.3 Imperial gallons or 2.8 US gallons (same tank as the US T120R). TR6R tank is 3.8 Imperial gallons or 4.5 US gallons, UK&GE TR6 tank is 4 Imperial gallons or 4.8 US gallons (same tank as the UK&GE T120). TR6P was always based on the UK&GE "standard TR6".

Engine & Frame Numbers ran from DU87124 to DU88524, built from July 29, 1968 to August 14, 1968; then NC02352 to HC2434, built from October 26, 1968 to July 15, 1969.
This is simply regurgitated from Harry Woolridge's "The Triumph Trophy Bible", without even acknowledgement; it even replicates the book's misprint of the 'last' engine/frame number.

The out of context quote does not reflect that "numbers would be preceded by a 2- or 3-letter prefix indicating the month & year of manufacture" are for all twins made by Meriden; while NC02352 might be the first of the first batch of TR6's with that format and HC24342 might be the last of the last batch, the format and number range also covered batches of T120's, T100's and T90's built in between batches of TR6's.

:oops: Appears to be a 'customised' TR6 of some description. The image at the top of the copied webpage appears to be a more standard TR6R?

69TriTR6R-r.jpg
 
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