Tag Archive: Triumph TR6

May
14

The Best Sports Car Of All Time ..The Triumph TR6 ..A 1970′s Hairy Chested British Roadster

I know its hard to admit but the British invented the Sports Car. When American troops after World War II started to drive early sports cars like the MGTD a love affair started with British roadsters. In 1953 when Triumph first started sending the brash TR2 to the USA another love affair started with Triumph Sports Cars. The formula was simple. Ground hugging suspension, superb engine sounds, little or no creature comforts and bull dog like toughness that became a Triumph trademark. More and better TR’s would follow like the TR3,TR4 and the TR250. By 1968 the TR’s needed and update. British Leyland called on German design studio Karmann to do a hurry up restyle of the TR250 thus creating the TR6 for model year 1969. The TR6 was everything a brazen brutal sports car should be. Quick, agile, creaky, leaky and unforgiving. With its lusty wonderful sounding 2.5 liter six cylinder engine it made sounds that would make a Ferrari blush.

The Karmann restyle was crisp and he-man like. Interiors were typical English with a wood dash and full gauges. The TR6 sat low slung on it’s independent rear suspension and its four speed transmission shifted with a resounding thunk. As vehicle comforts improved in the 1970′s the TR6 made no excuses for its leaky top and buckboard ride. As Car and Driver Magazine said in a 1976 road test “It is the last of the hairy chested British roadsters“  Triumph made over 90,000 TR6′s from 1969-1976. It was replaced with the “Shape of things to come” tepid TR7 door stop. When production of the TR6 ended it was the last of its kind. A true sports car in the true sense of the term. Unforgiving, blunt and a drivers car. Having owned a red 1969 TR6 I can say that you either loved it or hated it. Mine was upgraded with Weber Carbs, Ansa four pipe exhaust, Pacesetter header, 72 spoke chrome wire wheels, roll bar and suspension mods. It was my favorite ride on a warm summer evening and it made the most glorious sounds. Despite the reputation for being ahhh ummm British my TR6 never let me down in fact gave me 9 years of thrilling service. The TR6 was full of greatness and flaws but it never went away from its mission. A bold hairy chested sports car. The last of its kind and that’s why Carlisle Johnny has named crowned it The Best Sports Car Of All Time.

Check out this classic Triumph TV commercial

Feb
15

On The Road With Johnny B ..The Good,The Bad and The Ugly..

The Good and The Bad. The Triumph TR6. In the our ever changing American language sometimes things mean the same thing but are opposite words. During the 1970′s when something was “bad”‘ it was “good” So with that in mind the Mimosa Yellow 1972 Triumph TR6 spotted in Port Jeff last month is one “bad” British Sports car.First introduced in 1968 as a 1969 model the TR6 was the replacement for the TR250 (in the USA) and the TR5 (in England) Sold from 1969-1976 Triumph would sell over 94,000 plus TR6′s. Oddly only 8370 were sold in the UK with most going to our shores. The TR6 was the last of the big and brawny British sports cars.Powered by a lusty 2.5 liter six cylinder engine it was low on comfort but long on soul stirring sounds and wind in the face performance. The TR6 rode on a full frame bolted to a creaky body that like a bad girlfriend your either loved it or hated it. In 1976 Car and Driver magazine described it as “The last of the hairy chested sports cars” My red 1969 TR6 would creak,rattle,spit,stall and cause you to do all kinds of late night bloody knuckle repairs but with the top down and that throaty six cylinder it was automotive heaven. The Triumph TR6 is one good umm I mean “bad” sports car.. The Ugly.1988 Sterling 825SL. Lets start by saying beauty is in the eye of the beholder. I must admit to purchasing one of these when they were new in 1987. The Sterling was Rover’s very failed attempt at re-entering the US car market. Rover’s reputation was so bad in the USA that it had to  re-brand its sporty sedan to try to trick US buyers into some sort of amnesia to purchase this lemon. Not that it was such a bad car it just couldn’t shake its own reputation.With engines borrowed from Honda it would use the same 2.5 liter V6 as the first Acura Legend.The Honda drivetrains were bullet proof but everything British simply just fell off. I spent many a day at the Sterling service center waiting for them to install pieces of wood that fell off dash almost daily. A five mile walk home in the dark when the electrical system stopped working in a rain storm made put the for sale sign on the next day. Even with a $7500.00 rebate Rover couldn’t give a Sterling away and they left our shore forever in 1990.Oh how British and one “Ugly” car..

May
16

Coming Soon To Carlisle Johnny.com “The Nash-straction”

The Webster’s Dictionary describes and “extraction” as “The act of extracting or the condition of being extracted or removed”. My recent purchase of a very unrestored 1938 Nash Ambassador Six is going to require an old fashioned ‘extraction” Alot like this little Triumph TR6 my recent moss covered mess is going to be like raising the Wreck Of The Edmund Fitzgerald. My friend Tony who I purchased this crust wagon from has a yard full of vintage crap. Parked in front of my resto project is six other rusting oil leaking hulks that would make Al Gore cry.To get my Nash removed from the bowels of the earth we need to do a “Nash-straction.” What better way to document this event than on Carlisle Johnny.com.So watch for updates and videos on the site starting soon. What could bo wrong when you have four automotive pros, a grill full of burgers and a 48 pack of Sam Adams..Watch for updates.

Mar
12

Relic or Wreck?..1979 Triumph TR7 Convertible

Spotted in Dover Delaware is this 1979 Triumph TR7 Convertible. Introduced in 1975 as the replacement for the “Iconic” Triumph TR6 parent company dubbed the wedge shaped TR7  as “The Shape Of Things To Come”  Little did they know that the underpowered door stop looking horror would indeed be “The Shape of Things To Come” if that thing was poor build quality, labor strikes, reliability issues and eventualy the exit of Triumph in the USA. The idea was a giant leap forward compared to the designed in 1960′s TR6.  Unibody construction with a real suspension and creature comforts but the execution was terrible and British Leylands refusal to admit anything. “Oh how English of them”  To add to the misery it just didn’t have the robust TR6 six cylinder engine. The biggest mistake the Triumph made was not understanding that the reason people would put up with all the discomfort, creaking, leaks and frustration of a British Sports car was that on a perfect summer day you would flip the top down and got to hear that glorious TR6 six  cylinder and all that a classic roadster offers. The TR7 came with a mix-master sounding Slant four cylinder engine with an exhaust note that was Pinto like rather than Austin Healy like.The other mistake was due to US safety regulations the Convertible or “Drop Top” wasn’t introduced till 1979. Even with the Drop Top and the introduction of the upscale “Spyder” poor sales a dismal quality killed off the TR7 and Triumph in the USA in 1981. As per C.A.R.S. Classic Auto Appraisals due to strong values of other TR’s and great club support TR7′s values are holding and will be on the rise soon.So maybe somebody needs to save this little Drop Top. Hey who knows maybe it really was the “Shape of Things To Come”  

In 1976 Triumph was bragging about the TR7 as you can see from this classic TV commercial. The only thing they didn’t show was the tow truck you needed to get the stinkin thing home..

Jan
13

Things You Can Do With Your Triumph

In her never ending obsession to drive her Triumph TR6 year round my friend Lynn Sedler has designed the first “All Wheel Drive” TR6.

Jan
19

Another Redneck Auto-moment “The Chia-pet Incident”

The last thing Twanda remembers Billy Bob say was. ” Did yall remember to take the bag of Chiapets from the roof of the ole Triumph”