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Class Act: A Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycle

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
Few custom motorcycles have the cachet of the legendary Triton. The mash-up of a Norton featherbed frame and Triumph twin motor has become a demigod icon of the café racer movement.

As we all know, back in the 60s the idea was to combine the best chassis with the best motor. But half a century later, you can buy showroom machines that’ll run rings around most Tritons. And for a fraction of what it would cost to build one.

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
So we were surprised to learn that the owner of this beautifully crafted, English-built Triton has a well-stocked garage of modern bikes. It currently houses a Honda RC30 and RC45, a Ducati Panigale R and Desmosedici RR, and a Triumph T120—all of which see regular use.

Even so, he just had to have a Triton. So he reached out to Tom Simpson and Alex Chesson of Foundry Motorcycle, based near the small cathedral city of Chichester, West Sussex.

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
“Our customer David came in brandishing a printout of the Bike EXIF feature on Loaded Gun’s Triton from a few years back,” explains Alex, “which we discussed (favorably) at length.”

“He’d always wanted a Triton, but didn’t really like the ‘traditional’ bikes. So we worked out how to make one that looked a little more modern, whilst retaining the classic essence of the bike. It had to be less ‘cobbled together’ than so many of the traditional machines, and hold its head up in the company of the rest of his collection.”

Sketch: Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
“We don’t use Photoshop here—just drawings with pens and paper. After a few different ideas were sketched, we had a starting point, and went in search of the suitable donor machine.

“Triton buying can be somewhat of a minefield, with price and condition varying massively, but eventually a usable bike was found.”

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
The donor they eventually found had a 1963 Triumph T120 Bonneville engine, wedged into a 1961 Norton Dominator Slimline featherbed frame. Tom and Alex’s first job was to finetune the frame—starting with a de-tab.

They wanted sharper lines out of the subframe, so they redesigned it, and added mounts for a new seat unit. They then built new rearset and rear engine mounting plates, so that they could ditch the ugly Converta plates that came with the bike.

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
The swing arm was scalloped to fit a 110 wide rear tire, and a new side stand was built.

The brief called for a disc brake up front, so the guys swapped the Norton forks for a set of Triumph T140 units. That meant fitting new yokes—so they reached out to Danny at Fastec Custom Racing, who whipped up a set to Foundry’s design. The top yoke includes an integrated housing, to hold a Motogadget Chronoclassic tacho.

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
A new front wheel was built around the T140’s hub and brake setup, and a new rear on the stock Norton hub. Both feature Morad alloy rims and Avon Cobra tires, with a 19” up front and an 18” out back. The rear end’s held up by a new set of YSS shocks.

Next up was the aluminum bodywork—with the seat unit being the toughest bit.

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
“We wanted the oil tank to be part of the seat and cowl combination,” says Alex, “to help keep the middle of the bike as clean as possible. We had other ideas there, which didn’t include the original fiberglass oil tank and Tetley tea bag tin battery box.”

The final execution is minimal and elegant. A bolted-in undertray keeps the tail tidy, with a proprietary Foundry LED taillight hiding underneath the rear cowl. Follow the plumbing, and you’ll spot a nifty oil cooler mounted lower down in the frame.

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
“It’s really more about looking good and increasing oil capacity, rather than significantly lowering oil temperature,” says Alex. “And it gave us another opportunity to indulge in one of our favorite processes: sand casting aluminum.”

The cooler was eventually cast using melted down small block Moto Guzzi crankcases. “We’re big Guzzi fans, and the cases were definitely past use.”

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
Hiding underneath the cooler is an electronics tray, and underneath that, the battery. Everything’s been rewired and hooked up to a Motogadget m.unit, complete with a keyless ignition.

Moving to the motor, Tim and Alex stripped it right down, and rebuilt it with new seals and bearings, plus a Routt 750 big bore kit. Even though the guys were happy with the original Amal carbs, they’re big Dell’Orto fans—so they installed a set of Dell’Orto PH36 pumper carbs.

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
The stainless steel exhaust system was fabricated in house, right through to the lightly-baffled mufflers, and custom hangers.

Up front, they’ve fitted a 5¾” Bates-style light and adjustable Tarozzi clip-ons. They’re dressed with mini switches, Biltwell grips, Kellermann bar-end turn signals, and Honda CBR600R levers. The rear-set foot controls are also from Tarozzi, and are hooked up with custom brake and gearshift linkages.

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
The final finishes are as simple as they are delightful. S Jago Design treated the frame to Jaguar Italian Racing Red paint, A M Metal Polishing made the aluminum shine, and Trim Deluxe handled the seat and tank strap.

“We spent countless hours designing and making small (and hidden parts) for this bike,” says Alex. “There are probably large chunks of the build I’ve intentionally erased from memory. But along with our very patient customer, we are very proud of the end result. It rides well, sounds awesome, and looks great—and is incredibly shiny!”

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles
This Triton now shares a garage with some seriously impressive machines. But we know exactly which one we’d pick, come Sunday morning.

Foundry Motorcycle | Facebook | Instagram | Images by Gary Margerum

Triton cafe racer by Foundry Motorcycles

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Mr Purnell’s magical Triton cafe racer

A stunning modern-day Triton cafe racer built by Wheelie Motorcycles of British Columbia.
Most builds we feature start out as a ‘donor bike.’ This Triton cafe racer started out as an idea—turned into reality by a builder with the chops to execute it.

Wheelies Motorcycles is a workshop, restaurant and retail space nestled in an industrial area of Victoria, British Columbia. Joel Harrison is the guy turning wrenches—handling everything from engine rebuilds to fabrication and upholstery with supernatural skill.

A stunning modern-day Triton cafe racer built by Wheelie Motorcycles of British Columbia.
Joel specializes in vintage bikes. So when a customer (Mr Purnell) walked in looking for a Triton, he was in his element.

For the uninitiated: a Triton is typically a Triumph engine wedged into a Norton frame. So there’s no single donor bike. “It took about six months to find all the important parts and rebuild the engine,” says Joel.

A stunning modern-day Triton cafe racer built by Wheelie Motorcycles of British Columbia.
Joel pieced the engine together from parts he sourced locally, and bits he had kicking around his shop. The bottom end is from a 1967 Triumph TR6R, matched up to a 1970 Bonneville head. Extra grunt comes from an Airco 750cc big bore kit and MegaCycle cams.

The top end’s been treated to Kibblewhite valves and guides, and there’s a new magneto from Joe Hunt too.

A stunning modern-day Triton cafe racer built by Wheelie Motorcycles of British Columbia.
The frame’s a 1968 Norton Slimline Featherbed unit. Joel sourced it from a local shop specializing in British bikes, along with a Norton Commando front end. He then set about modifying the frame—re-tabbing it, adding new engine mounts and fitting a center stand.

The forks have been upgraded with progressive springs, and shortened by 1¾ inches. They’re mounted via a custom triple clamp, made “the old-fashioned way—with a grinder and files.” Out back, a set of Hagon shocks keep things in check.

A stunning modern-day Triton cafe racer built by Wheelie Motorcycles of British Columbia.
For the wheels, Joel laced up a new set of 19-inch rims with Dunlop rubber. The front hub is a Commando piece, equipped with a dual leading shoe drum brake, and the rear hub’s from an Atlas.

Legendary Motor Parts in Florida supplied the bodywork: a Lyta-style aluminum fuel tank and oil reservoir, with a matching tail unit. Joel modded the tail section to be shorter and narrower—to better suit the tank—and added a simple, pleated leather pad. The bodywork is mounted on rubber grommets, with quick release pins making maintenance a breeze.

A stunning modern-day Triton cafe racer built by Wheelie Motorcycles of British Columbia.
Turning his attention to the wiring, Joel hid an AntiGravity four-cell battery in the tail unit and set about building a simple, cloth-wrapped harness. Highlights include a Sparx high output regulator and a Wassell alternator.

The headlight’s an original 5¾-inch Triumph item, complemented by a simple tail light and license mount arrangement at the rear. And those gorgeous sweeping exhausts are TT-style Triumph pipes, cut and welded to hug the frame’s lines and capped with simple reverse cone mufflers.

A stunning modern-day Triton cafe racer built by Wheelie Motorcycles of British Columbia.
The foot controls are handmade, fitted with British rubber as an added touch. And the cockpit is super-clean, with clip-ons, minimal switchgear and a single dial sunken into the hand-made triple clamp.

Joel calls the Purnell Triton “a very simple bike.” But it’s also “very fast, and handles like it’s on rails.”

Mr Purnell is already putting his new steed to good use—tearing up the country roads of Dawson Creek, BC. We’re jealous.

Wheelies Motorcycles | Facebook | Instagram | Images by Jason Schultz

A stunning modern-day Triton cafe racer built by Wheelie Motorcycles of British Columbia.

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Custom Bikes of the Week

Bikes of the Week: Fairings worth sharing
There’s a theme to our latest selection: customs with fairings. From Madrid to the south of France to Japan, here’s the sexy bodywork that caught our eye this week.

Studio Motor's Ducati Monster
Studio Motor Ducati Monster One look at those super sticky Diablo Corsas (especially the shredded one out back) and you know this Ducati Monster 795 can easily run the ton. What you wouldn’t glom onto, however, is that this is only the second cafe build to roll out of Studio Motor. Sophomore efforts are rarely this clean.

The Jakarta, Indonesia-based workshop was quick to shed the Ducati of all its plastics. A new tank, tail and cowl were hand crafted out of 1.2mm steel to deliver a timeless stance, while not taking anything away from the iconic trellis frame. The rear subframe was modified slightly using a 1-inch seamless pipe, ensuring the spine was flat and true. Then the original mag wheels were swapped for spoked units.

The most striking piece of ingenuity, though, is the routing of the in-house devised exhaust, with its MotoGP-inspired symmetrical tail cowling exits. [More]

Flatmaxx Atelier's BMW cafe racer
Flatmaxx Atelier BMW This R1100 cafe racer hails from the Bouches-du-Rhone region in the south of France. The styling is smooth and almost restrained in profile, anchored by an impeccably executed bone line and tightly balanced cut-offs.

There are eighty angry German horses motivating 440-pounds of style, making this machine as swift as the Mistral that blows through the French Riviera. But although this Beemer was built to juke and jive, rider comfort was of the utmost importance too. The suspension was kept compliant, and the seat has a touch more foam than most cafe racers receive. You’ll also notice that proper bars, instead of clip-ons, adorn the cockpit.

It’s a stunning custom that’s way more than somebody’s garage queen. [More]

Yoshida Machine's Triton
Yoshida Machine Triton Sometimes a subtle touch is all that’s needed when creating a masterpiece. Here, the Japanese bike builder (and parts manufacturer) Yoshida has captured the spirit of the shed-built hybrids of the 60s with this (slightly) modern interpretation.

True to the original recipe, the Norton Featherbed frame houses a 650cc Triumph twin. But there are also modern updates throughout, to achieve optimal performance without compromising on rider comfort. Carburetion has been updated to use Mikuni units, the rear suspension is a piggyback Öhlins set-up, and the primary belt has been upgraded for reliability too. The cowl was purposely mounted taller than on traditional Tritons; it permits a less-than-full-tuck approach, but doesn’t spoil the silhouette.

In my eyes the attention to details like that creates a true modern classic that might even give Dresda legend Dave Degens pause for thought. [More]

XTR Pepo's Interceptor Mk 2
XTR Pepo Interceptor Mk 2 When the checkered flag drops on a build and your starting point was a BMW F800 S, this is not what you’d expect. But then again, Jose “Pepo” Rosell isn’t your typical builder.

Before the Interceptor MK 2 there was a MK 1. It was Rosell’s swansong BMW R80 with the now defunct Radical Ducati—a punctuation mark on a very impressive resume. Thankfully Rosell didn’t hang up his spanners; this F800 comes to us under the XTR Pepo banner, because Jose has continued right where he left off.

The tank is a modified unit from a GSX-R 750—complete with dual aluminum caps—and aside from the Tommaselli clip-ons, everything else was tackled in-house. The subframe, seat, fairing, bracketry, lighting; all of it. If this were the standard issue bike for the Gendarmerie, the recruitment line would start in Madrid. Bienvenido de vuelta, Pepo. [XTR Pepo]

ClassicCo's 'Round Head Racer' Moto Guzzi
ClassicCo Round Head Racer This heavily modified Moto Guzzi Le Mans II comes from Madrid, and it’s an apex hunter in the truest sense. Because racing is what drives ClassicCo: it’s in the blood of Mauro Abbadini and his team, and you can see it in their every creation.

To shed weight, the Tonti frame has been scrapped in favor of a CroMoly unit, fabricated in-house. It eliminates the need for downtubes and turns the 1100cc V-twin into a stressed member. The swingarm is also CroMoly; crafted for strength and lightness, it’s an inch longer than stock and widened to accept 160-series slicks. The suspension is by fully adjustable Marzocchi units at both ends.

The curvaceous, multi-part bodywork is resplendent in Moto Guzzi’s traditional green, and finished off with a perfect half-fairing. [More]