The charm of the 70s to the 90s, where designs were simplistic, and motorcycles were pure, is a desire that’s been echoed well past a quarter of this century. And a lot of motorcycles are wearing the old shape well. The round headlight, the teardrop tank, the twin rear shocks, the brushed-metal mufflers, the look has been nailed and successfully so. But it’s the chassis and mechanicals underneath that should ideally be a departure, rather than a far cry from the equivalents of yesteryears.
After all, modernity has a purpose, and that’s the convenience and reliability that the 80s couldn’t provide. The neo-retro bikes that will still be worth chasing decades from now are the very ones where the stuff you can’t see has kept pace with the stuff you can. Triumph has been selling the retro aesthetic longer than almost anyone else, which is exactly why it had the most to prove when it decided to build the sharpest version of its long-running parallel-twin roadster.
The aesthetics of a modern classic is really the whole game, and they definitely matter. A neo-retro bike has to nail the old silhouette before it can claim the label of a modern classic at all. It’s probably why millennial riders are now drawn toward a classic-looking daily rider. But the look alone is never going to sell a bike in 2026. There’s a reason monoshocks replaced twin rear shocks and twin-spar frames pushed out the old double-cradle setups, and it wasn’t simply because they weren’t fashionable anymore. Those changes brought sharper handling and better damping control that the bikes of yore simply couldn’t offer.
The same logic runs for the mechanics. Fuel injection means the bike fires on the first thumb of the starter on a cold morning, with no flooded carburetor to deal with. In its true sense today, retro is an aesthetic after all, not the obsolete machinery that forces you to rearrange your day because it refuses to start up. Ride-by-wire throttle bodies open the door to selectable ride modes that soften or sharpen the power delivery to suit the weather and your mood on the day. Cornering ABS and traction control gauge how far the bike is banked and step in before a damp patch or a scattering of gravel turns a sunny riding day ugly. That blend of classy vintage looks, and modern dependability is the whole point of a modern classic.

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Triumph traces the Speed Twin name back to the early 1900s, and the latest 1200 RS is the most focused expression of it yet. At $17,195, it’s not a cheap deal, but there’s quality componentry and performance to back that figure up. The 1,200cc liquid-cooled parallel twin keeps the 270-degree firing order that gives the bike its uneven, V-twin-style throb, and in this latest tune, it makes 103.5 horsepower at 7,750 rpm and 83 pound-feet of torque at 4,250 rpm. Don’t let the modest figures fool you, though, and yes, it’s by no means a Speed Triple, but the beauty of a big-twin is that you get the best of both worlds.
Diving deeper, you’d be mistaken to think that Triumph may have simply rebadged the standard Speed Twin and used the same engine tune. For the RS, it went into the motor and revised the tune, lifting the peak output, on a healthy 12.1:1 compression ratio. The practical effect is a bike you can ride lazily in a tall gear through town and still get a clean, strong pull when you crack the throttle. But the real party trick is the gearbox.
The RS is the first Bonneville twin Triumph has fitted with Shift Assist, its two-way quickshifter. So you can bang up and down through the six speeds without touching the clutch. On a classic-styled roadster, performance bits, even if minimal, are genuinely rare, but it pulls the riding experience firmly into the present.
Borrowing superbike-level components is where the RS separates itself from the standard Speed Twin and from every soft-riding retro beside it. 43mm Marzocchi forks up front and fully adjustable Öhlins piggyback shocks out back let you dial in the preload and damping to match your weight and pace, so the chassis stays composed where cheaper retros may wallow around corners, and the raised rear ride height gives the 476-pound bike real eagerness to turn in with the lower, thus sharper front-end. Twin 320mm discs and Brembo Stylema monobloc calipers round things off.
Underneath the period look sits a six-axis IMU that feeds lean-angle data to the cornering ABS and traction control systems. The RS adds a Sport mode over the standard bike, sharpening throttle response and loosening the traction-control leash to keep things playful and safe, alongside Road and Rain modes that you switch on the move. A single-pod LCD-TFT hybrid screen makes up the instrumentation that centers the settings and adjustability for the electronics while keeping the readouts clear.

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For all the sporting hardware and modern electronics, the RS never lets you forget what it is, a retro-looking roadster, and the devil is in the details. Triumph slimmed the fuel tank to fit your knees closer, narrowed the seat, and shortened the exhaust in the 2025 redesign, then added machined cooling fins atop the cylinder head and finned header clamps that nod to the air-cooled twins of the past.
The throttle bodies, cables, and wiring are tucked away to preserve the open space around the engine that defined the Triumph twins from decades ago. Meanwhile, cast aluminum wheels and a brushed stainless two-into-two exhaust keep the look contemporary. It is the kind of bike you glance back at after you have parked it, and the kind strangers wander over to admire at a café, which is exactly the emotional pull a modern classic has to deliver.
The Speed Twin RS lands in a thinning field where Triumph’s own Thruxton RS and the Speed Triple 1200 RR have been discontinued, which leaves the Speed Twin 1200 RS bearing the performance-retro flag for the brand almost by itself. The natural cross-shop is BMW’s R 12 nineT at $17,245, a touch over the $17,195 Triumph. The BMW brings a 1,170cc air/oil-cooled boxer making 109 horsepower and 85 pound-feet, a fully adjustable 45mm fork, and its own shift assistant, so it matches the RS on specs and beats it on paper for grunt, with that unmistakable side-to-side boxer sway as its signature.
The other benchmark is Kawasaki’s Z900RS SE, the value play at $14,599, with a 948cc inline-four good for around 111 horsepower, an Öhlins shock, Brembo M4.32 calipers, IMU-backed cornering aids, and a dual-direction quickshifter. Both rivals out-muscle the Triumph on a spec sheet, yet neither quite matches what the RS puts together.
The 270-degree twin gives it a low-end shove and a thumping soundtrack only a big-parallel-twin’s character can, something that even the BMW boxer-twin can’t match. The Triumph also has a more focused chassis and the components to thrill with the handling, too. For a rider who wants the sharpest-handling, best-stopping modern classic with genuine twin character, the Speed Twin 1200 RS becomes an irresistible neo-retro that’s well on its way to becoming a modern classic.
Source: Triumph Motorcycles
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