Missile: An elegant Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit

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Custom Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit

Tamarit Motorcycles has enough plug-and-play parts in their catalog to turn any Triumph modern classic into a passable café racer. But the Spanish shop also knows how to take a bike like the Triumph Thruxton, and turn it into something truly spectacular. With over 100 custom Triumph builds in their portfolio, they’ve learned a thing or two about how to make them click.

This Triumph Thruxton 1200 R is one of the most radical café racers that Tamarit has built yet. Its aggressive stance and exaggerated proportions are what catch your eye at first. But once you’re drawn in, you’ll spot an interesting set of mods—and some deft part swaps.

Custom Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit

The Triumph Thruxton 1200 R is about as good a donor as you can get for this type of build. It’s one of few factory café racers currently on the market, with enough go to match its show. With 97 hp from its 1,200 cc parallel twin mill, and a mix of Showa, Öhlins and Brembo components, it’s no slouch.

That said, Tamarit saw fit to upgrade the Thruxton’s already capable running gear even more. They kept the Brembo brakes, but swapped out the Showa forks out for a set of upside-downs from the Öhlins Blackline range. A stealthy Öhlins steering damper adds extra stability to the front end.

Custom Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit

Moving to the rear of the bike, Tamarit made a change that we haven’t yet seen on the Thruxton; they installed a Triumph Scrambler 1200 swingarm. Not only is it better looking than the original unit, but it’s also longer, stronger and lighter.

Gone is the OEM twin shock setup. In its place, Tamarit braced the swingarm and built a svelte bolt-on seat support with a new upper shock mount. An Öhlins unit connects the two, with a remote preload adjuster mounted just under the tail for easy access.

Custom Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit

The bodywork is a mixed bag of custom and repurposed parts. Tamarit started by adapting a Triumph Speed Twin fuel tank to the bike, then fabricated a tapered tail section directly onto it, effectively creating a one-piece body. LED taillights are embedded into cut-outs at the back, with a slim seat flowing right up onto the back of the fuel tank.

Hit a button on a remote, and the whole body lifts up on a hydraulic shock, offering access to the Thruxton’s wiring. It’s a trick that Tamarit has used on a number of builds already, but we’re nowhere near sick of it yet.

Custom Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit

The front fairing is a riff on Triumph’s own aftermarket part for the Thruxton, but with a few notable changes. For starters, the traditional headlight arrangement has been traded for a slim LED daytime running light, with a more powerful round LED light sitting lower down. Tamarit also lined the inside of it, with a dashboard that molds itself around a digital Motogadget speedo.

The Thruxton’s clip-ons are fitted with tiny Motogadget push buttons, and Rizoma grips, mirrors and bar-end turn signals.

Custom Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit

To help the motor along, Tamarit installed a pair of Free Spirit pod filters, mounted on intake tubes that thrust them forward. The twin exhaust system comes from the Italian exhaust specialists Zard.

Going deeper, the team rewired the bike with a Bluetooth-enabled Motogadget mo.unit control box. But that presented its own challenge, since the Thruxton’s stock ECU is extremely fussy about what it’ll work with. In the end, Tamarit found an additional box that acts as a conduit between the OEM ECU and the new brain.

Custom Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit

Other mods include a generous sump guard, that also doubles as a radiator protector, and a custom-made front fender. The stunning 17” wheels come from Canyon, and the tires from Pirelli. No stone was left unturned—which is why it’s no surprise that this build took almost a year to complete.

Taking the build over the finish line is an elegant black paint job, and a lot of chrome. Tamarit chrome-plated obvious parts like the swingarm and wheels, then went even further by stripping, chroming and re-assembling the brake calipers. Custom engine and tank badges, and a contrasting Tamarit logo on the swingarm brace, add tasteful finishing touches.

Custom Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit

The Thruxton’s stretched, forward-biased design likely won’t appeal to everyone. But there’s one person that’s a big fan: Tamarit’s client. He traveled all the way from California to Tamarit’s shop to take delivery of the bike in person, and has already ordered another custom Triumph from them.

We’ll count that as a win.

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Custom Triumph Thruxton 1200 by Tamarit


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It's not a café racer. Café racers are 60s Brit bikes stripped back to go faster on British roads. British roads are narrow and have lots of corners.

This monstrosity won't turn well being so long. So won't be doing any racing around corners. It's more a bobber if anything.

The problem with a lot of these custom builds is the builder tries to 'intellectualise' the design, and end up looking silly.
Should just say, Hey, I've made this.
 
can’t imagine what that long swing arm does for the handling , has drag racing potential though

Reduces turn radius and overall maneuverability.

As far as actually running the drag strip goes, this guy will get thoroughly schooled by actual drag scene guys, and those cats are DEADLY SERIOUS in the States. They'll race for papers w/out thinking twice. Powerplant isn't configured for the strip either. According to the article its still running factory HP.

The swing arm will definitely help keep the front wheel planted, if that's a concern of the owner. It's just long enough to not attract too much attention to itself because if this kook gets called out by an actual drag bike he's going to get spanked. This thing is a Cafe by the traditional definition- it spends the weekends hopping from cafe to cafe to be put on curb display while owner sips lattes and watches all the admirers strolling by.

I'm thinking this guy's some LA poser who likes to leap out in front of everyone off the line at red lights but can't be bothered with keeping the front end down through normal control measures. Lane splitting is legal in Kali so he probably creeps up to the line at every stop so he can give it the large one when the light goes green.

Fair enough, I guess. "If you're not cheating, you're not trying."
 
This thing is a Cafe by the traditional definition- it spends the weekends hopping from cafe to cafe to be put on curb display while owner sips lattes and watches all the admirers strolling by
That's the polar opposite of what a café racer was. I think that might be what in present-day America is a bar hopper?

There's plenty of vids on café racers from the 60s. The name came about when the young bikers were barred from pubs (and didn't want to go to such places anyway). They ended up only being excepted for their custom in what we call Greasy Spoon cafés.

There'd be some landmark nearby. They'd put a record on the juke box, go outside, kickstart the bike, and go hell-for-leather to the landmark and back. Arriving back in time, the aim was to hear the end of the record.

There was absolute carnage on the roads, 10,000s, I think, dying in crashes. Sipping lattes?

*

Anyway, the first and best full length CGI animation was Toy Story. This bike makes me think of Mr Potato Head from that film. You know, how Mr Potato Head falls apart, and wrong bits end up in wrong places when put back together?

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