suspension failure on 2006-09 Triumph Daytona 675s / Street Triples

Discussion in 'Technical Help' started by bertrem, Jan 10, 2015.

  1. bertrem

    bertrem New Member

    Jan 9, 2015
    0
    1
    San Carlos, CA
    Early last year, the drop link plates on my 2007 Daytona 675 failed in the same manner as numerous other people have described, under normal riding conditions, on a straight road, at constant speed, on a clear, dry day.

    For people who might not know what they are, the drop link plates are basically a pair of triangular metal brackets that connect the rear shock to the rear swingarm. When there's a load on the bike, they're in tension, and after breaking, they look like in the first two attached pics (on and off the bike). Their failure causes the bike to collapse as shown in the third pic.

    A friend riding behind me actually witnessed the collapse of the suspension _prior_ to the ensuing crash, and I have a lot of evidence to suggest that the part is fundamentally flawed, including the opinion of an engineer that Triumph themselves hired to inspect my bike after the accident.

    Triumph has almost certainly been aware of the issue for a long time because they quietly changed the part from aluminum to milled steel sometime in 2009, but they nonetheless refuse to reimburse me for damages or more importantly, recall and replace the defective part on all the other 675s that are still on the road.

    I'm seriously concerned that if the failure of this part has not already seriously injured (or killed) someone, it's just a matter of time before it does. I'm trying to coerce Triumph to recall the part before this happens, and would really appreciate hearing from anyone else who has experienced a similar failure or knows anyone else who has experienced a similar failure on either a Daytona or Street Triple. If you have any information at all about this issue, _please_ contact me, either by PM or directly by email at [email protected]. Any information you can provide would give me more leverage to make Triumph stop ignoring this!

    Thanks very much in advance!

    IMG_5953.jpg IMG_6002.jpg IMG_5957.jpg

    IMG_5953.jpg

    IMG_6002.jpg

    IMG_5957.jpg
     
  2. SteveJ

    SteveJ Super Moderator

    Aug 12, 2013
    524
    113
    North Hampshire
    HI and welcome to the forum

    Sorry it took a while to approve it.

    Cheers

    Steve
     
  3. bertrem

    bertrem New Member

    Jan 9, 2015
    0
    1
    San Carlos, CA
    @SteveJ: Thanks, and no worries. Sorry that I got confused and submitted it twice.
     
  4. Richard H

    Richard H Noble Member

    Oct 26, 2012
    1,132
    300
    Swadlincote Derbyshire England
    Hi welcome to the forum, sorry to hear about this issue. If any of our members have had this problem I'm sure they will post, good luck in getting it sorted.
     
  5. PJT

    PJT Active Member

    Oct 20, 2014
    116
    43
    Leicestershire. UK.
    Hello Bertrem, may I wish you a very warm welcome to the forum.
     
  6. steve lovatt

    steve lovatt Something else

    May 12, 2014
    9,216
    1,000
    North Yorkshire
    Hi and welcome to the froum - hope you get this sorted
     
  7. bertrem

    bertrem New Member

    Jan 9, 2015
    0
    1
    San Carlos, CA
    Thanks, all, for the welcomes.
     
  8. GladImbackontwowheels

    Sep 26, 2014
    12
    3
    Dover Kent
    Bloody hell, that's terrible. Imagine if that had happened in the middle of a fast bend, doesn't bear thinking about! I'm no mechanical engineer but just looking at those ally brackets starts alarm bells ringing in my head, they just don't LOOK as if they are up to the job.
    Oh, and welcome to the forum lucky boy! :)
     
  9. Jonty

    Jonty New Member

    May 2, 2014
    1
    3
    Braintree
    Hi, I really think you need to contact the DVSA to report this - your evidence should start an investigation that will ensure Triumph do the right thing. After all, we are talking about people's lives here. The page you need can be found via this link:
    https://www.gov.uk/report-vehicle-safety-defect
    Good luck Jonty
     
  10. bertrem

    bertrem New Member

    Jan 9, 2015
    0
    1
    San Carlos, CA
    Alas, it seems I cannot report it to the DVSA because they don't allow reports from outside the UK. (Their form rejects my zip code.) It has, however, been reported to the NTSB (our equivalent of the DVSA).
     
  11. bertrem

    bertrem New Member

    Jan 9, 2015
    0
    1
    San Carlos, CA
    BTW... if anyone bought a new 2007, 2008, or 2009 Daytona 675 after April 2008 (in the United States) and would be willing to help me try to force Triumph to recall the defective plates, please PM me as soon as possible (legal deadline is coming up). Your help would be tremendously appreciated and might save someone else a serious injury (or worse :/ )

    Thanks in advance!
     
  12. thebiglad

    thebiglad Old fart, still riding !

    Sep 25, 2013
    5,066
    1,000
    Central France
    It sounds to me like anyone who currently owns one of these models should be "getting underneath" and inspecting these plates tout de suite if not sooner.

    That is a really crappy design in my opinion and looks doomed to fail.
     
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