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Triumph’s latest retro-styled café racer is not just a work of art; it’s a call to action
Beyond the gorgeous throwback aesthetics lies a spirited attitude adjustment that could redefine how you ride.
The café racer style of motorcycles was born from a particular era. Just as small street bikes still draw inspiration from Japanese models of the 1970s and 1980s, modern café racers hearken back to ...
Amid the host of electric launches in modern times, Triumph’s new motorcycle subtly reminds us of the classic bygone years … ...
British bike maker Triumph presented the Speed Twin 1200 Cafe Racer Edition, 800 of them to be made and sold for $18,895 each ...
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the rock-n-roll rebellion happened in the towns and cities of the British Isles. It arose out of post-war young adults wanting to escape the dreary conventions of UK ...
Café Racer motorcycles first appeared on the streets in the 1950s in London, when restless teenage "rockers" began stripping back and customizing their British bikes for power, speed, and agility.
The café racer motorcycle is a fascinating relic of the past. Originating from the vibrant motorcycle culture of the United Kingdom in the 1950s and 1960s, café racers were the brainchild of young ...
Café racers started as a rider-made idea: strip a bike down, tuck in, and chase speed between hangouts. The look was never superficial. Clip-on style bars, a long tank, and a solo-seat "hump" all came ...
Triumph Motorcycles has unveiled the Speed Twin 1200 Cafe Racer Edition – a limited‑run model inspired by the original ...
Dmitry is a former Motorcycle Safety Foundation Rider-Coach, a writer of several fiction novels, a travel junky and an occasional YouTuber. He's owned and ridden a lot of motorcycles, loves vintage ...
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