Triumph I6


The Triumph Six Cylinder or Triumph I6 engine is a cast-iron overhead valve straight-six engine produced by Standard Triumph. It is an evolution of the Standard Motor Company's inline-4 Standard Eight, with the addition of two cylinders and a larger displacement.
Introduced in their Standard Vanguard Six in 1960, it was used in a wide range of Triumph vehicles, including the Triumph TR5, TR250, and TR6.

Origin

Standard Eight engine

The Triumph six is based on the 4 cylinder engine first used in the Standard Eight in 1953. Displacement of the engine in the Eight was 803 cc.
That engine was modified a number of times for use in the Standard Ten, Triumph Herald, and Triumph Spitfire. First for the 948 cc Herald, and again for the 1147 cc Herald 1200, the cylinders were re-aligned to give better clearance for the head studs and allow the bore to be enlarged. The engine was further developed and bored from in the 1147 cc version to giving 1296 cc for the Herald 13/60, the stroke was also increased from to providing 1493 cc for the Spitfire 1500.

Inline 6

The six cylinder engine was developed from the Standard SC four used in the Eight and the Ten. It was first used in 1960 in the Standard Vanguard Six, in which it had a bore and a stroke, giving a capacity of 1998 cc.
The engine was next used in the Triumph Vitesse, a sports saloon based on the Herald, in 1962. In this application, the engine had a bore, reducing displacement to 1596 cc. The Vitesse was given the two-litre engine with the 74.6 mm bore in 1966.
The Triumph 2000 replaced the Vanguard Six in 1963 when Leyland discontinued the Standard marque. The two-litre six was later used in the Spitfire-based GT6 coupé from 1966 to 1974.
Beginning in 1967, the engine was used in the Triumph TR5 and TR250 sports cars, replacing the Standard inline-four engine used in TRs from the TR2 to the TR4A. For this application, the stroke was increased to, giving 2498 cc. When equipped with the Lucas mechanical fuel injection system in the TR5, this new 2.5-litre version gave a claimed at 5500 rpm. When tested on dynamometers, 110 to 130bhp at the crankshaft is more usual, and may explain Triumph's decision to fit the TR7 with a 2-litre slant-four engine, whose power output and hence performance were in fact similar to those of the earlier and ostensibly more powerful engine. The TR250 was sold in the US with Stromberg carburettors to avoid the need for additional emissions control systems; this reduced the power to at 4500 rpm. The TR6, made from 1969 to 1975, used the TR5's engine, detuned to in 1973. with a 106 hp version of the TR250's engine in the United States.
The fuel-injected 2.5 litre engine became available in the 2000 unit body as the 2.5 PI in 1968; this was supplanted by the twin-carburettor 2500 TC in 1974. The 2000 and 2500 TC were discontinued in 1977.

Technical

A partial chart of Triumph engine numbers is posted on the "Spitfire & GT6 magazine" site. However the capacity appears not to match the bore/stroke, or that published on other sites including the GT6 Ezine, hence the corrections in the tables below.
Engine Applications Chart
Engine No. PrefixCapacityCar
HB1596 ccVitesse 6
HC1998 ccVitesse 2 Litre
KC1998 ccGT6 Mk1/2
KD1998 ccGT6 Mk1/2
KE1998 ccGT6 Mk3
KF1998 ccGT6 Mk3
KG1998 ccGT6 Mk3
MB1998 cc2000 Mk1
MB1998 cc2000 Mk1
MG, MM, MN2498 cc2500
ME, ML1998 cc2000 Mk2
CC2498 ccTR250 & TR6
CF2498 ccTR6
CP, CR2498 ccTR6 and TR5PI

Factory Quoted Power Chart
ModelQuoted power @rpmQuoted torque @rpmCapacity
TR5 @5500 @35002498 cc
TR250 @4500 @30002498 cc
TR6 @5500 @35002498 cc
TR6 @5000 @35002498 cc
TR6 @4500 @30002498 cc
2.5 PI Mk1 & Mk2 @5500 @20002498 cc
2500 Mk2 @4700 @30002498 cc
2500 TC @4700 @30002498 cc
2000 Mk1 @5000 @29001998 cc
2000 Mk2 @5000 @29001998 cc
2000 TC @4750 @33001998 cc
GT6 Mk1 @5000 @30001998 cc
GT6 Mk2 @5300 @30001998 cc
GT6+ @4700 @34001998 cc
Vitesse 6 @5000 @28001596 cc
Vitesse 2L @5000 @30001998 cc
Vitesse Mk2 @5300 @30001998 cc

Racing

Triumph raced Spitfires, and some early GT6 prototypes at Le Mans, with some good success, and later at Sebring but due to rule changes and the takeover by Leyland, this was not continued.

Replacement

After Triumph, and later Rover, were absorbed into Leyland Motors in 1960, and 1967 respectively, work began on a successor to both the Triumph 2000 and the Rover P6 which would also use a new straight six engine design. The engine, known internally as the Leyland PE166 was originally intended to be a development of the Triumph I6, but ended up becoming an entirely new design, with almost no interchangeable parts with the original. The Rover SD1 was the only recipient of this engine in both 2.3L and 2.6L capacities.