Well as a very small lad one of the very few people in our street owned a Herald 13/60 convertible. The Triumph marquee has never left my mind since then.
Years later (late 70's) there was a Java Green TR7 FHC in a neighbouring village which I saw every day on my way to school. I had to make a detour to see it though.
Whilst in the army (national service) there were several (very nice FHC) around, but the ultimate was an article I read about the Grinnall's way back in 1985, I was hooked.
Bought my first car in 1988 (mainly because everyone who knew about cars told me they were crap), a very early Dutch TR7 FHC and have had a road going TR7 ever since ....
The original plan though was to drive the DHC for a year and after that pull it apart, restore it and drop a V8 in, how ignorant I was. In the end I used it and worked on it (and learned a lot from it) for 10 years before I put in storage in a barn in 1998. The body was now so bad that it wouldn’t pass the MOT without some serious welding.
By then I had restored my first TR7, 't Kreng which I have been driving ever since. This car was actually bought as an accident write of car, to be used as a spares donor for the DHC. Turned out be to good to scrap so decided to restore it to original spec. How planes can change.
But next year the DHC will be back on the road again after lying dormant for nearly 12 years and a .... euhhh ... re-spray I think I called in my weblog. For the restoration I used the shell from a Californian DHC I bought from a friend a few years ago.
But still no V8 ...
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<font color="blue"><i>1981 TR7 FHC Sprint (better known as 't Kreng)
1980 TR7 DHC (my first car currently being restored)
In parts a 1980 TR7 PI DHC, 1981 TR7 DHC, 1981 TR7 FHC</font id="blue">
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http://tr7beans.blogspot.com/</i></font id="red"></center>