Background
Following the enhanced measures put in place on March 23 with regard to Covid-19, we would like to assure all customers that as an online business we continue to operate, although our office is closed.
In order to help, we have a wide number of storage and delivery partners across the country who we can provide details to on request.
If there is further information you would like about any of our cars, we are happy to run individual live videos (using WhatsApp, Facetime or similar) of specific areas to your direction.
We thoroughly recommend all, new or old customers, to read our FAQs and our Trustpilot reviews for more information about our operation, and to help with your buying or selling decision. Any questions please contact us.
In the late 1960s, the accepted look for sports cars was still very much based on the curve rather than the straight line. Triumph’s 1968 decision to launch its square-jawed TR6 against curvy and lithe opposition like the Alfa Spider, Lotus Elan and MGB was therefore not only bold but also somewhat risky, especially as it came hard on the heels of the flawed and extremely short-lived (just 13 months) TR5 that preceded it.
What the Michelotti-styled, Karmann-modded TR6 had in its favour however was a decent chassis – front anti-roll bar, rack and pinion steering, semi-trailing arm independent rear suspension, and front disc brakes – and a strong reputation for husky, no-nonsense performance that went right back to the first TR2 of 1953. That reputation was raised a notch in 1967 by the TR4’s adoption of a 2.5-litre version of the Triumph 2000 saloon’s characterful straight six engine.
That engine was carried through to the TR6 via the ill-fated TR5, which featured (Triumph claimed) the first petrol injection system in a British production car. Most of the problems of the hurriedly launched and equally hurriedly withdrawn TR5 were largely sorted in the TR6, but the fuel injection system on the 150bhp UK TR6s (American spec cars had twin Stromberg carbs and 104bhp) continued to be the car’s Achilles heel, unfairly encumbered as it was by a poorly-performing Lucas fuel pump. Over time, most TR6 owners replaced that Lucas pump with the far superior Bosch unit which gave the car the combination of power and reliability it deserved.
From 1968 to 1976 the 6’s relative mechanical age didn't seem to deter buyers. More than 94,000 of them were found over the car’s seven-year production history, the overwhelming majority of them overseas.
The TR6 was the last of the separate chassis TRs. By 1976, car magazine road testers who were keen to usher in what they saw as an exciting new era of monocoque sports cars were running out of faint praise with which to damn the doughty Triumph.
Perhaps they should have been careful what they were wishing for, because the wedge-shaped American-designed TR7 that replaced it in 1976 in no way continued the TR’s brawny heritage.







