The only thing I have left from my 1970 Triumph 250 Trophy is the Service Manual. Back then Metric hadn't overtaken the use of Whitworth yet. But Whitworth tooling as migrated into the new world. . .it gets complicated.Me too. BSA lightning & both Victors are gone, so is the Norton. But Roxanne, my 1970 Triumph stays - she's a wonderful bike.

The valve springs were weak and the low end was crap. It wasn't the old 200 Cub.

After putting a valve through the piston, my pant leg catching on fire from an exhaust leak between the header and silencer, battery shifting and the terminal shorting out on the side cover (cigarette pack foil would come to the aid wrapped around a fuse in a pinch to get home), and finally the main bearing showing signs of ceasing up after I had the original replaced a year earlier, I decided without hesitation to sell to a locally well known motorcycle scrap yard. The owner's comment was. . .after he took it for a ride around his building. . ."I'll give you beer money for it. . .". Need I say more?

My friends in a club I rode with at the time mostly had Bonny's (miss the scent of chain case oil), and in order to move on I bought a used '73 TX650A Yamaha. Actually put some Bonneville silencers on it and it sounded great. Just had to be careful on cornering as the pipes hung a little closer to the ground than the stock ones. I think I put over 60K miles on it before I sold it. Took it cross country with the club (who eventually were migrating to Honda Fours and Wings) to Colorado and did Black Hawk - Central City region, Pikes Peak, Aspen, Vail, and Mesa Verde. The valves were easy to get to and the CV Carbs were great.
Time for another coffee. . .and I more than briefly considered more motorcycles since. . .never gave it up. . .but have to say the PCX is one awesome "go to" machine. . .just wish the stock seat was flat and more cushioned. Not selling that one!
