The 1974 Triumph TR6 arrived in the late 1960s, but it did not feel like an innovative car. It actually still felt like a car from a past era at its best. It had a dashboard cut from wood (not plastic ...
The TR7 has always been the red-headed stepchild of the Triumph family.
A gorgeously preserved 1975 Triumph TR6 is for sale with just 31,000 miles, offering classic British roadster style and low-mile appeal. The Triumph TR6 was, unlike its name suggests, more like the ...
Hailed as Leyland's first genuinely new sports car in a decade and a half, the Triumph TR7 hit the Australian market in mid-1978. Its only real achievement was to make every backyard kit-car maker ...
Alina has been enthusiastic about vehicles her entire life, and even from an early age found herself itching to get behind the wheel. Through high school and college, she could be found reading ...
The 1957 Triumph TR6 debuted with a new tank badge that was prominent across the entire 1957 Triumph lineup. Called “The Mouth Organ” it was as striking chromed grille set between two horizontal ...
The Triumph TR has a number of different wheel and tyre options. When it comes to wheel size, these range from 5.5x13 inches for Coupe in 1981. Year Body Type Front Tyre Size Front Rim Rear Rim The ...
The reason all Triumph TR6 customers wore polo necks was to conceal their cravats. But there’s no hiding the truth, and the sharp, chisel-chinned exterior of the TR6 masks a platform that was ...