Triumph Bonneville 650 `68 as 3D large model
Triumph Bonneville is a motorcycle series from Triumph Motorcycles Ltd. in Hinckley, UK. The prototype of the series, also known as "Bonnie", was presented in 1958 at the Earls Court Motor Show in London. The series model came on the market in 1959.
The Triumph Bonneville became the Triumph Tiger T110, its engine was upgraded from 500 to 650 cm³. With around 50 hp, they made a real 193.1 km / h possible. The engine of the T110 is heard to belong to. So he has a new one-piece, controversial crankshaft to match the performance experience. The necessary T120 engine was tested in a streamlined, faired machine on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah in September 1956. This applies to the test driver Johnny Allen a new motorcycle world record with 345.2 km / h. The motorcycle was purchased in various stages of development until 1980 in the old Triumph plant in Meriden. After the final loss of Triumph and the loss of the insolvent company by the building contractor John Bloor, the English Triumph dealer Les Harris assembled several Bonnevilles from stock and supplier parts from June 1985 to 1988.
John Bloor leads Triumph in the same years; he has the manufacturing facility of Meriden near Hinckley and building a new new plant there. If you part with the Triumph in the 1990s with three- and four-cylinder motor rollers that were regained as well as established, you have heard a two-cylinder remake of the Bonneville in retro style, at Triumph also as Modern Classic.
(Source Wikipedia)
Please note that this kit is not a toy and can only be used to a limited extent.
Please keep the items away from small children under 6 years old. It involves breaking off small parts and being swallowed. We declare the model as a puzzle or decoration
Item Description:
Material: wood
Dimensions approx. 37 x 12 x 19 cm (LxWxH)
Weight approx: 1,20 kg
Content: 1 x lasered kit with 130 parts / assembly instructions
Supplied as a lasered kit. This must be assembled by yourself.
No tools needed. The parts must be glued.
The kit is made of wood and has been lasered. This will cause the edges to look burnt and possibly leave traces of soot and smoke on the wood. These can be easily removed with fine sandpaper.
All components are laser cut so that there is a "beautiful" front and a marked, production-related "bad" back. Make sure that the good side always points to the visible side.
These soot and smoke marks as well as the fact that wood is a natural product, which is dimensionally influenced by basic physical laws such as temperature and humidity, there are certain limitations in the nature of the products, which must be consciously accepted.
We offer the most careful choice of material and the most modern production methods, nevertheless one has to accept with wood the peculiarities and unimpeachable characteristics, which are to be observed again and again in the practice - therefore these can not be claimed by the buyer as a material defect.