Triumph Fury
The Triumph Fury was a two-door convertible prototype by the Standard-Triumph Company of Coventry. It was the first monocoque sports car to be made by Triumph.[1] Body design was by the Italian stylist Giovanni Michelotti and the car used components from the 2000 saloon including the 2.0L 6-cylinder engine of the time, although the use of the 2.5L 6-cylinder or the 3.0L Triumph V8 was possibly intended, had the car gone into production.[2] The car lost out to the continuation of the separate-chassis TR series, with the Triumph TR5 being introduced in August 1967. The decision by Triumph to not develop the car was due in part to the reluctance to invest in new production line and tooling facilities required to manufacture the model, in favour of continuing with the simpler manufacturing of the separate body and chassis design of the TR series.[2]
Triumph Fury | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Manufacturer | Standard-Triumph, Leyland Motors |
Production | 1964 |
Designer | Giovanni Michelotti |
Body and chassis | |
Body style | Two-door convertible |
Layout | FR layout |
Related | Triumph 2000, Triumph Vitesse, Triumph Spitfire, Triumph GT6 |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 1998cc OHV I6 |
Transmission | 4-speed manual |
The prototype still exists and is owned by a classic car rental business.[3]
References
- Triumph Cars The Complete 75-Year History Langworth & Robson (1979)
- "Triumph Fury: the prototype sports car inspired by the Jaguar E-type". AROnline. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
- "JHW Classics". jhwclassics.com. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
Further reading
- Triumph Fury Pictures at http://www.furyworld.fsnet.co.uk/Triumph.html