The best big surprises come in small packages. Now, if you'll take a moment to stop giggling, we're talking about a car this time. But no, seriously, take a look at this tiny Triumph TR7 British ...
The 1970s gave us disco, blockbuster summer movies, and a whole lot of wedge-shaped cars. Today's Nice Price or No Dice Triumph is one of those pointy-prowed cars but will its price drive a wedge ...
Hosted on MSN
Triumphant at 50: The Underrated TR7
Last year was a big one for wedgy shapes—the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance had two classes dedicated to the style, and door-stop supercars from the 1970s onward appear to be rising in line with ...
British sports cars have a well-deserved reputation for indestructible build quality and stolid reliability, and the Triumph TR7 is possibly the crown jewel of them all. Between Triumph's reputation ...
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or ...
From the August 1977 issue of Car and Driver. It's time to cut through the purist malarkey smothering the Triumph TR7. According to the sports-car-must-hurt traditionalists, it's too conventional ...
Hailed as Leyland's first genuinely new sports car in a decade and a half, the Triumph TR7 hit the Australian market in mid-1978. Its only real achievement was to make every backyard kit-car maker ...
The TR7 really was a first commercial take on the wedge, which had heretofore been reserved for show cars and mid-engined exotics like the Lamborghini Countach and Ferraris of the era. The United ...
Sometimes, perception and reality can be so far removed it’s untrue. There’s no shortage of classics that have a terrible reputation, which is undeserved for whatever reasons, but at the top of the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results