In defense of the Triumph TR6
So, this would have been the early ’70s, ’73 maybe. I was just a teenager and hitching a ride was the way that impoverished youth got about in those days—no Uber for me. People would stop, too, since this was a more generous and tolerant age. I stuck my thumb out on the outskirts of Lymington in Hampshire and within minutes a vision in Damson Red drew up, top down, that “six” sounding like a jetliner at bay. I swooned.
“Jump in,” said the ex-military type behind the wheel. Sounds like a pick-up line, which I suppose it was, but not in that way. I think he just wanted to show off as we howled out of Pennington onto the Milford road and past Efford Horticultural Research Station, with the square-ended needle on the rev counter touching the 5750-rpm redline in overdrive third then fourth, with me barely noticing it was almost exactly the same gear ratio.
“I nearly drove my secretary’s Mini,” he boasted. “But I reckoned for another fiver on fuel it would be worth bringing the red peril out—after all, it’s a lovely day.”
Indeed it was, but I’ve often wondered about that conversation. Another fiver, hum. Given he was on his way to look at a house in Dorchester (he was an estate agent, of course he was), a round trip of about 100 miles and with fuel at about 35 pence a gallon, he’d have to be driving like an absolute nutter to find the difference between the big TR’s 25-mpg and the Mini’s 40-mpg to be another fiver. True, this was the full CP-prefix car with its fuel-injected six belting out 150 bhp (~148 hp), but I still reckoned the difference to be about a pound, which could still be had in note form. Perhaps he was on some sort of expenses fiddle … but good as his word he dropped me off in Milford on Sea and growled up the road. Wonderful.
There were many who thought that Karmann of Germany’s quick and cheap restyling job on the Michelotti styling of the TR5 was a brutalist monstrosity, but not me. You quickly tired of “hairy chested” as a descriptor of this last separate-chassis TR in road tests, and Spen King’s insistence on a larger-diameter front antiroll bar meant that the square-set two-seater would tend to understeer in extremes rather than the old TR5’s tendency to oversteer, but it looked and felt more modern, more in keeping with the times compared to the TR5 which could trace its looks to the 1961 TR4—although both TRs could trace their chassis lineage back to the TR2 of 1953.
Of course, this car was launched in 1969, the year George Lazenby got an outing as James Bond in a kilt and a cardie (along with Diana Rigg, surely the best-ever Bond girl) in On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. And you’d be forgiven for missing the launch of this reskinned Triumph sports car that year, what with Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landing on the moon, ad the Woodstock and Isle of Wight festivals taking place, which some think marked the end of the spiritual ’60s. On my way to buy David Bowie’s Space Oddity in Lymington High Street, I was told in agog tones about the two hippies who had come back from the Isle of Wight after seeing Bob Dylan, Free, and The Who, walked into the launderette, taken their clothes off, and sat there naked while the washing and drying cycle took place. Then there were the maiden flights of the Boeing 747 and Concorde, and the first ARPANET message, which marked the beginning of the internet on which you are reading this.
It was the best of times, certainly, but we were about to enter the worst of times. The world was about to be hit with the first oil-price shock of the early ’70s, which impacted the UK in the form of a devasting house-price slump, devalued wages, and what economists call “stagflation,” where even politicians’ folderol made no difference to the prosperity and wellbeing of the nation. Fripperies such as TR sports cars were the last thing on people’s minds, though in America, where the oil-price impact was less and folks struggled to keep their hands in their pockets, the TR6 did well.
How well? Now there’s a subject for debate. Turn to the expert Bill Piggott in his excellent originality guide, Triumph TR, and he sets out the background to the TR6, explaining that by 1968, despite the fuel-injected six-cylinder TR5 being the fastest ever TR, its Michelotti looks desperately required a facelift to appeal in a European sports car market which was fast being eroded by performance saloons, and for buyers in America who were restless for something new in the land where sports cars were still popular.
Extravagant spending on a niche sports car, however, is almost always hubristic, so budgets were super tight and there wasn’t a lot of time. In the end, it was Karmann the German coachbuilder who stepped up to deliver a radical new look which changed hardly anything fundamental. The chassis and inner structure, plus the suspension and drivetrain and interior, were largely unchanged, as were the doors and windscreen surround. With just new wings, bonnet, boot, front and rear panels, and external trim, the car delivered by the German firm was handsome and more modern-looking. It could be readied for production in less than a year, which meant the TR5/250 model, which was only on sale for just 15 months, became one of the rarest TRs, with a total of 2947 TR5s built and 8484 250 models.
This compares with the TR6, though you need some amateur detectoring to find the definitive totals, for there are some stupefying inaccuracies out there on the web. Derek Graham, the TR Register’s TR6 registrar, has the definitive numbers, as the figures are based on production ledgers for the TR6: there were 13,702 fuel-injected cars (including the 3600 completely knocked down “CKD” cars assembled in Belgium) and 78,147 carbureted cars which sold mainly in North America where emissions legislation ruled out the Lucas mechanical fuel injection and the high cost of the system could have priced the car uncompetitively.
About which we should come to, since the Lucas system is not, as some of the internet suggests, an unreliable, prone to overheating monstrosity. When well maintained it is a thing of loveliness, which imbues the TR with a terrific progressive surge of power, a steady idle, and few if any shortcomings. It’s a low-pressure (110 psi) system which is largely a fit-and-forget device, though it can suffer issues, mainly on hot days where under-bonnet temperatures can vaporize the fuel in delivery pipes and leave owners stranded. Few PI cars will not have been rebuilt or had serious work done by now, though as old hands know, that can be a curse as much as it can be a blessing.
So, what’s a TR6 like to drive? Rather lovely, that’s what. Powerful with a beguiling engine note, the TR6 was never short of performance and it’s hard not to play tunes on the overdrive. In 1969 Motor magazine achieved a maximum each-way average top speed of 117 mph, 0-to-60-mph in 8.5 sec, with an overall fuel consumption of 20.8 mpg and a “Touring” figure of 28 mpg.
“Smooth and potent,” the test concluded, “a nice blend of old he-man feel and up-to-date behaviour.”
Although the lead picture was of the hard-cornering TR6 with an inside front wheel in the air (in the wet!) the other shots showed the fantastic amount of chassis squat under power and the road tester struggling with the top fastening. In general, however, the magazine’s testers approved and considered the TR6 “probably the best value for money in open top terms.”
My experience in a friend’s mildly modified TR6 is of a powerful, well-balanced, and generally safe car with direct steering, and soft rear suspension to keep traction, but which also requires you to “flow” between bends to avoid upsetting the handling. With plenty of room, and a really good heater, this seemed like a brilliant grand touring car which could also be used for sprints and hillclimbs if the owner were so moved.
The question is, though, what were they like in period? Let’s turn the clock back to November 1973 when Clive Richardson, Motor Sport magazine’s redoubtable assistant editor (who died last June), gave his verdict on a year and 11,300 miles in his mimosa-yellow Triumph TR6. Perhaps we should have been forewarned about the tenor of the article when he revealed that his wife had nicknamed the car “Pig-in-‘ell” after its registration plate PGN769L. Despite Richardson’s enthusiasm and almost unbelievable optimism, he’d found himself in a truly awful “Friday-afternoon” car, which suffered leaks from hood and drivetrain, unreliability, screeching brakes, a misfiring engine, self-destructing tires, leaking Lucas fuel injection, rust on the bodyshell, and badly fitted and torn interior trim. As a spotty youth I couldn’t believe that a new car could be this bad, but I was to learn and Richardson’s fine piece, which can still be read on the Motor Sport archive, is an object lesson in just how things were at British Leyland in the ’70s.
Once things were largely sorted out by Triumph’s experimental engineering department, Richardson warmed to Pig-in-‘ell writing: “At one time I thought this TR6 would drive me up the wall, but over the last 5000 miles I have grown to love it. It has character, it has reasonable performance and that open-top potential, while I even enjoy the fairly primitive handling.”
Best not look back with too much rose tint on your glasses, then, but these days, with a wealth of helpful owners, excellent clubs such as the TR Register, and specialists who will modify your TR to go to the moon if you’ve got the desire (and the pockets), owning a TR6 is a lot easier, more fun, and hopefully involves you spending less time at the side of the road. Dare I say it, with ’70s revivals that seem to come and go, the old TR6—which was one of the 10 classics highlighted in the 2022 Hagerty UK Bull Market List—is now a cool car to be turning up in, which is something I never thought I’d be writing.
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This was always a better car than many British cars. None were perfect but this one has more right than wrong. It better fit America due to the little larger size, larger engine and independent rear.
Curious, Did the TR6 have a trunk
Yes they did and adequate enough for a long weekend away.
The TR-6 was probably outdated when it was introduced, particularly here in the US, where it got dual carbs instead of injection. However, it was a great drive with a smooth torquey 6 and available overdrive. Dealer installed AC was available. I didn’t like the TR-6 styling as much as the TR-5/250, but it was a nice looking car. I believe the thing that really did it in was the 240Z, a modern 6 cylinder powered sports car which, if I remember correctly, was cheaper to buy.
I drove a 69 Ford XL sport….it had a carb with that 429 engine. Injection was rare in in the 60s
A so-called “dirty weekend”?
Yes; room enough for TWO (2) full sets of clubs.
I owned a ‘74 Tr-6 British Racing Green in the early 80’s. Loved it when it ran, but there was no heat shield between engine compartment & driver because I remember my feet always really hot
Then on one rainy night, with the wipers, lights, radio on I hit the horn and the electrical system basically exploded- car was stuck- towed it and sold it
Fun while it lasted
I’ve owned my TR6 for 31 years. Other toys come and go, but the TR6 will be part of my estate. It’s kind of like a mutt that’s a better dog than any purebred.
As a TR6 owner since 1990 I am still as keen as ever to be out in it when the sun shines (I have tin tops for the other weather). As reliable as an anvil since my restoration thirty years ago, it pleases me and provides entertaining (if not super rapid) transportation and many thumbs-up from other road users. Simple to maintain and inexpensive parts make it a good choice as a long-term, fun, collectable car.
Good grief there’s no need to ‘defend’ TR6 in my opinion. Purpose built, good looking, charming, almost eccentric but not THAT weird! I really like MGA’s, early MGB’s are ok but the TR250 and later the TR6 really are the hidden gem and I think a lot more people have come to realize this based on the market.
Maintenance is easy, once you’re versed in assembly/disassembly of components, and the pleasure of experiencing the power and tone of that lovely inline 6 cylinder engine! The TR6 isn’t nervous or twitchy and if you can pack luggage economically it’s a great ‘weekend away’ sports car.
I believe a lot of people use the euphemism ‘charming’ when describing English cars to describe leaky (all kinds of leaks), marginally reliable, and slightly confounding cars that have a touring/sporting heritage; however, I find their charm and value to be in that they are cars with good manners with heart of performance car behind the curtain.
Loved the article, as a 69 year old it touched a nerve, a rather genteel, soothing nerve.
Great article. Small correction though. There were 8484 TR 250s made and 2497 TR 5s. The difference being carbs for the TR250 for the US market and fuel injection (petrol injection) for the rest of the world in the TR5. Thanks, KO
I have one memory of the TR6. A friend of mine, very cool guy bought a yellow one. He was a few years older than me and hooked up with great looking ladies. We went for a ride a few weeks after he got it, did some shopping. I had some packages in my hands when he dropped me off and he said he’d get the door. Reached over, shut the door and the armrest came off in his hand.
There was no armrest in a TR6.
Well, at least not in that one anymore!
Never was an armrest in a TR6. The early one had finger pulls molded into the top of the door with later models having pulls embedded it the door panel. The only ‘armrest’ was the top of the door, if you were tall enough.
Thank you for this, you are correct and we are making the change now.
I’d rather have a GT6.
I’ve still got my 1975 tr6 and will until
MK3 1971 GT6 that I had for all of 1 year was more car than I could deal with at 21. Not much budget and less brain (hormones hadn’t allowed for full functionality yet). 36 years later I still remember the serial number – KF451L. There’s a couple locally under restoration that I stop and chat about with their owners.
One fatal flaw with the GT6: a solid roof.
I like the TR6. I’ve also seen some nice engine swaps in them too.
Saw a dark green tr6, top down, motoring down a low speed road in cottage country. Instant love. Was going to Uni in a month, so purchase was out of the question.
This is the car I always longed for as a teenager back in the UK . However now my summer drive in Saskatchewan is a 79 MGB . Not quite as fast or pretty (or as expensive) as a TR6, but a lot of fun.. and that’s what these British cars are all about.
Always thought the TR6 was a great looking car and the sound of that straight 6 was terrific. I was stationed in San Diego when they came out, and the new TR6’s seemed to be everywhere in that perfect climate. Loved seeing them, but I couldn’t quite convince myself to buy one. I think a friend’s never-ending issues with his TR250 probably influenced my decision at the time. Still like seeing them, though, and applaud those that keep them on the road.
Bought a 1970 brand new for my new wife. Had been used to a great little TR4 A but the TR 6 was absolute junk. Everything that could go wrong, did so. Also had a ’55 Healey 100-4 & a ’60 MGA. Both were great cars. The TR 6, not so much. Sold it soon thereafter.
Had my 73 for about 8 years, and love it, been totally reliable, but had a lot of money spent on a full restoration before I bought it. It will be part of my estate too.