
The Triumph TR7 was perhaps the ultimate product of the 1970s, a period referred to as “the decade that quality control forgot.” Abysmal production quality, labor strife, bad management and controversial styling all conspired to render the TR7—although a surprisingly decent seller—a tragic footnote in the last days of the British sports car empire. By the mid-1970s, Triumph’s big sports cars were decidedly long in the tooth and still clinging to outdated separate body-on-chassis construction long after rival MG had gone to unit construction. Sports car scribes were clamoring for Triumph to replace its archaic designs with a modern sports car based on one of the better saloon platforms of the day, the Dolomite.
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Keith Martin on Collecting Austin-Healey, MG, and Triumph $19.95 |
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Keith Martin on Collecting Austin-Healey, MG, and Triumph with Digital Supplement $29.95 |
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Vintage Triumph TR-3 Print $15.95 |