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#triumph

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One for #FensterFreitag today. A few weeks ago, I kicked off a long sequence on small Triumph/Rover/MG saloons with the 1949 Triumph Mayflower. Here’s another 1949 Triumph, the much fancier 2000 Roadster, with a rear ‘dickie seat’. The unusual thing here is that the rear passengers using the dickie seat get their own split windscreen, which must have made things a lot less blustery for them. Snapped at the recent NEC Practical Classics resto show.

Yesterday, I explained how, in 1981, BL replaced the Triumph Dolomite with the Acclaim, a licence-built Honda Ballade. When Honda introduced the second-generation Ballade in 1984, it was logical that BL should adopt this car as the Acclaim’s successor as well. The big change was that the new car would be a Rover, the 200 series, not a Triumph. Photo taken: NEC Classic Car Show, 2023. (1/3)

As we have seen, none of the internal projects to replace the Triumph Dolomite made it into production under the investment-starved British Leyland regime. But a solution was at hand. In 1979, BL entered into a collaboration with Honda, which gave it access to an off-the-shelf design, the Honda Ballade (basically a Civic saloon). Produced in tweaked form in the UK as the Triumph Acclaim, it was launched in 1981. Photographed at #FOTU 2023. (1/2)

Today, one of the great might-have-beens of the 1970s British motor industry. SD2, a smaller companion design to the Rover 3500 (SD1) was intended to replace the Triumph Dolomite. It combined some of the Dolomite engines with certain parts from the SD1 and the TR7. The project (renamed TM1) was briefly expanded to include a replacement for the Morris Marina before being scrapped in 1975. Snapped at the British Motor Museum, 2023. (1/3)

After yesterday’s Michelotti proposal, today we are looking at another attempt at reskinning the Triumph Dolomite in order to give it a more modern, fancier look. I said a few weeks ago that there was a Panther connection to the small Triumph story and this is it - the 1975 Panther Rio, a Dolly re-clad in bespoke hand-beaten aluminium bodywork, with a Rolls-class wood and leather interior. Snapped at the NEC Classic Car Show in 2024. (1/2)

As the 1970s wore on, the small Triumph saloons were starting to look a bit old fashioned. One idea for a successor was this 1972 proposal for a reskinned Dolomite from Triumph’s established design partner Michelotti. This would have given the Dolly much sharper, modern, Italian-style looks while making as much use of the old car as possible. Squashed away from the main display area at the British Motor Museum at Gaydon in 2023.

In 1971, Triumph launched yet another derivative of its small saloon range, the Dolomite. This combined the rear-wheel drive layout of the Toledo and the twin-headlamp/longer tailed body of the 1500 with a 1.85-litre OHC engine, later expanded to 2 litres for the Sprint. In 1976, the Toledo and 1500 were merged into an expanded Dolomite line-up with 1.3, 1.5, 1.85 and 2.0 engines. Pics: NEC Classic Car Show, 2023. Tomorrow: replacing the Dolomite (1/3)

In 1970, Triumph developed the 1300 featured yesterday into two separate lines of car. The first was this, the Toledo which had a restyled nose and a two-door body, although later, four-door versions were available too (the 1300 was always a four-door). But the biggest change was a switch from front-wheel drive to rear-wheel drive. Pics taken: The Great British Car Journey, 2023. 1/2

In 1965, Triumph introduced the car intended to replace the Herald, the compact 1300 saloon - although the Herald and its spin-off the Spitfire actually survived for many more years. Like the Herald, the 1300 was designed by Michelotti, but bore a strong family resemblance to the larger 2000. Perhaps as a nod to the success of BMC’s ADO16, Triumph adopted front-wheel drive for the 1300 too. Pic taken: British Motor Museum, 2023. 1/2

Hi #motorcycle friends. I'm about 95% certain I want to buy a 2019-2023 #Triumph Scrambler 1200.

I'm still torn on XC vs XE a bit. The XC is really all I need, if I'm honest with myself. But having the 6 axis IMU and the look of those gold forks is really calling to me. The extra height of the XE is concerning a bit, but I'm 6' (183cm) ans already daily ride a Multistrada with an 860mm seat height (-10 from the XE)

Help me out here. Any real cons to either bike?