biking-tips

Motorcycling tips and 'how to' guides

Our experts have prepared these helpful guides in order for you to get the most out of your motorcycling experience.

test-banner-left-aligned1330x400

Whether it’s a daily task like checking your tyre pressures, or help in laying up your bike for the winter, our team are here to help make your motorcycling safer, cheaper and above all more satisfying with some handy maintenance tips.

Search motorcycling tips & guides

Insidebikes

Looking for some hints, tips or inspiration on how to get the most out of your motorbike?

From changing a tyre to buying a classic, our team of specialists are on hand to pass on their decades of experience with 'how to' guides and advice columns.

Reviewed: Triumph Tiger 900 Rally Pro

TriumphTiger900_RallyPro_01.jpg

Triumph’s popular Tiger 800 is no more! Replacing it for 2020 is the Tiger 900, an almost ground up new adventure bike with a bigger engine, higher spec and two main variants. While the base and GT models are aimed at pure road riders, the higher spec Rally models feature pumped up suspension for adventurers looking for a greater degree of off-road capability. Insidebikes sent leading freelance motorcycle journalist to the bike’s world press launch in Morocco to try out the range topping Rally Pro…

The Rally Pro is the more upmarket of the two off-road biased Rally variants, which both feature 21” wire-spoked front wheels (compared to the 19” cast alloy items on the base and GT models) and Showa suspension with extra travel – 240mm front and 230mm rear, with correspondingly taller seat heights of 850/870mm – an increase of 40mm on the other models.

Both Rally models match the GT roadsters by including a 7” TFT instrument panel, hand-guards, heated grips, cruise control, and under-seat USB charger, plus IMU-controlled cornering ABS. The basic Tiger 900 has a smaller screen and none of the other stuff. Like the GT Pro, the Rally Pro adds to that with a quick-shifter, LED fog lights, centre-stand, tyre pressure warning, heated seat and connectivity system.

It makes for a superbly well-equipped adventure bike that is genuinely capable off-road. The triple engine’s sweet throttle response and broad torque spread are as welcome here as with the GT, and the 900 unit’s irregular power pulses helped its chunky rear Pirelli (pure off-road Scorpion Rallies were fitted on our test bike instead of the standard Bridgestone Battlax Adventures) find controllable grip on the varied surface of sand and stones.

Bigger bang

All new Tiger models are powered by a new 888cc engine, an increase of 89cc on the old Tiger 800 unit. It adds roughly 10% more torque through most of the range, while keeping the maximum power output of 94bhp almost unchanged. All this improved performance despite being cleaner and fully Euro5 compliant.

It feels significantly different too, thanks to a revised firing order – designed to give one short gap between sparks, then two longer ones. Riders familiar with the old Tiger 800 will notice the change immediately. The Tiger fires up with a notably throatier sound and accelerates from low revs with a subtly different feel, almost more like a twin than the smooth-revving Tiger 800 with its ‘big bang’ 120-degree crankshaft.

The bigger-bore engine’s extra midrange delivery is welcome and the Rally Pro has six easily-changed riding modes, adding ‘Off-Road Pro’ to the GT Pro’s five settings: Road, Rain, Sport, Off-Road and a rider customisable mode. It’s a delightfully flexible powerplant, delivering usable shove from below 3000rpm, and making the Tiger effortlessly able to cruise at 80mph or more, and to accelerate from there towards a top speed of about 125mph.

Its new firing order helps the Tiger find traction on loose surfaces, and the extra suspension travel was welcome too, especially when clouting larger rocks on the occasional wider, faster sections of gravel track. The Rally Pro doesn’t have electronic shock adjustment but adds to its dirt-devouring ability with an aluminium bash-plate and the additional Off-road Pro riding mode – worthwhile even if it simply allows the traction control and ABS to be disabled.

A quick way of fine-tuning the traction control would be better, but in most respects the Tiger 900 Rally Pro is an excellent go-anywhere bike – powerful and comfortable enough for serious road trips, and sufficiently agile, robust and versatile to be hugely enjoyable off-road. At £13,100 it’s slightly more expensive than the GT Pro but is the Tiger to choose for taller riders and anyone planning to leave the black top behind.

What are the alternatives?

The Triumph Tiger 900 Rally Pro goes up against some heavyweight competition, including the F850GS Adventure, Honda’s similarly priced CRF1100L Africa Twin and KTM’s 790 Adventure R.

 

Triumph Tiger 900 Rally Pro
Engine type Liquid-cooled transverse triple
Valve arrangement DOHC, 12 valves
Displacement 888cc
Bore x stroke 78 x 61.9mm
Compression ratio 11.27:1
Fuelling Multipoint sequential fuel-injection
Maximum power 94bhp (70kW) @ 8250rpm
Maximum torque 87N.m @ 7250rpm
Clutch Wet multiplate
Transmission 6-speed with two-way quick-shifter
Front suspension 45mm telescopic upside-down Showa, 240mm travel, adjustable for preload, compression and rebound damping
Rear suspension Showa monoshock, 230mm travel, adjustable for preload and rebound damping
Front brake Twin four-piston Brembo Stylema radial monobloc calipers, 320mm discs with cornering ABS
Rear brake Single-piston Brembo caliper, 255mm disc with cornering ABS
Front wheel 2.15 x 21in; wire spoked
Rear wheel 4.25 x 17in; wire spoked
Front tyre 90/90 x 21in Bridgestone Battlax Adventure
Rear tyre 150/70 x 17in Bridgestone Battlax Adventure
Rake/trail 24.4 degrees/145.8mm
Wheelbase 1551mm
Seat height 850/870mm
Fuel capacity 20 litres
Dry weight 201kg

 

 

Bike Reviews, Inside Bikes

Motorbike Reviews

Reviewed: Ducati Hypermotard 698 Mono RVE

Bologna takes on KTM with first single-cylinder Supermoto

Read more Bike Reviews