The owner has been working on this TR250 for a while, and it shows. It’s a clean, great looking car. He brought it here for some attention to details. We re-installed the windshield wiper transmission correctly so the wipers will park where they are supposed to, sent the distributor to get rebuilt by Jeff Schlemmer, fixed a wiring relay, futzed with the top buttons… just little things to put right that increase enjoyment.
A List of Things
This TR6 is a good window into old Triumph ownership since there is not one glaring issue, but a bunch of smaller problems that need attention. That’s the way it goes with cars that are over 50 years old. Here, we had loose differential bolts (clunk, clunk), horns that didn’t work, a steering column that is loose (the felt spacers wear out), a gauge that wasn’t working, and a brake light switch that needed attention. I may have forgotten something.
Triumph TR6 5-Speed
Triumph TR4 in for a few things.
This TR4 came in for a few mechanical tasks. It looks like it’s been a pretty faithful ride, my opinion solely based on it being here and on the road over 50 years later. The floors are drafty, so that will need to be remedied at some point. I prefer the TR4 front fenders with no lights over the 4A style, but also believe I don’t see as many of those as 4As.
Datsun 510 Restoration
The Datsun 510 returned from Jeff Cotten’s Collision Masters. It looks very, very nice. I would love to tell you it will be back on the road next week, but that only happens on television.
Good Stuff
Looking for quality TR6 parts? Try www.goodparts.com. The TR6 below is modelling the polished radiator shroud. We’ve had good luck with his parts and wanted to pass on the word if you’re in the market for something reliable.