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About the Cars - TR History, TR's in |
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TRIUMPHANT PROGRESS... A short history of the TR Marque (Go to TR's in NZ) |
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The very first Triumph car was sold in
1923, and sporting versions followed almost at once. The best way to get any
MG car enthusiast really annoyed is to remind them of that! Although it was
the MG, which took much of the glory in pre-war (WW2) years, it was indeed
the Triumph, which was born first. Triumph was already building it famous fine
motorcycles, a craft at which they were already national leaders in the Ownership changes, several in fact, did not
seem to have any effect on the pedigree of its cars. Until 1939 they were
proudly independent. Financial problems then threw them into new hands during
World War Two. Standard bought Triumph in 1945, were themselves taken over by
The sports cars from Triumph were built in
only two distinct strains - those built to 1939, often developments of
middle-class saloons for which Triumph were noted, and those built since 1945
at Coventry, which in every case except the styling of the last TR7/8 models,
have been completely conceived by Standard. Triumph sports cars heydays - There were
several over the years: There was the "Donald Healey" period of the
1930s, when that legendary character was Triumph's technical director; there
was the Ken Richardson era of the "Classic" TR's in the 1950s; and
there were the enormously innovative 1960's when the TR4, 5, 250 and 6's were
joined by Spitfires, GT6's and the Stag. The 1970's saw the TR7, TR7V8 and
TR8. With remarkably few exceptions, a sporting
Triumph has always offered excellent performance and value for money, and was
as simply engineered as the performance level allowed. The Triumph car brand
has always been at the forefront of new developments such as disc brakes, two
speed wipers, IRS and fuel injection. The Triumph story is interesting as there
have been many interesting cars built from the 1920's such as the
Supercharged Triumph Sports and in the 1930's model names such as the Southern
Cross, Gloria and the Dolomite Straight Eight. From the 1940's Triumph 1800
Saloons & Roadsters were popular. 1950's, 1960's & 1970's TR
and Spitfire ranges were strong sellers in the USA and around the world,
which sold till the end of Triumph in the early 1980s. Many of Triumph
components were used in other marques or derivatives such as Morgan, Italia,
Swallow Doretti and Dove cars. Triumph also had a strong competitive
motor sport department, which operated in rallying and racing from the early
1950's to the 1980's, and many works cars and developments of these models
benefited production cars directly. The silverware won through the years has been quite
substantial. |
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TR's IN |
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The
TR Register New Zealand (Inc) knows of over 600 cars
of the Triumph TR marque that are, or
have been, in |
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| Breakdown of the overall total by model | ||||||||
| 1953-1955 | TR2 |
79 |
1967-1968 | TR250 | 8 | |||
| 1955-1957 | TR3 |
26 |
1968-1975 | TR6 | 190 | |||
| 1957-1962 | TR3A/3B |
63 |
1975-1981 | TR7 (Coupe) | 82 | |||
| 1961-1965 | TR4 |
50 |
1980-1981 | TR7 (Convertable) | 20 | |||
| 1965-1967 | TR4A |
52 |
1975-1981 | TR7V8 (Coupe & Convertable) | 21 | |||
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TR5 |
22 |
1979-1981 |
TR8 |
8 |
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Breakdown by the four TR body designs (Period - Designer - Models) |
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| 1953-1962 | Belgrave (Sidescreen): TR2, TR3,TR3A,TR3B etc | 168 | ||||||
| 1961-1968 | Michelotti: TR4, TR4A, TR5, TR250 | 132 | ||||||
| 1968-1975 | Karman: TR6 | 190 | ||||||
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Harris-Mann (Wedge): TR7, TR7V8, TR8 |
131 | ||||||
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Current and past records of all TRs known to the Register are maintained by the Registrar. Information about any TR that may not be in the TR Register's records is very welcome. |
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