Triumph Herald

Triumph Herald

1964 Triumph Herald 1200 Saloon
Overview
Manufacturer Standard-Triumph
Also called Triumph 12/50 [1]
Triumph 1200 [2]
Triumph Courier
Production 1959–71
Technical summary
Assembly Coventry, Warwickshire, England
Australia (AMI) [3]
Belgium [4]
Ireland [4]
New Zealand [4]
Philippines [4]
South Africa [4]
Designer

Michelotti

Body and chassis
Class Small family car
Body style 2-door saloon
2-door coupe
2-door convertible
2-door estate car
2-door van (Courier)
Layout FR layout
Related Triumph Vitesse
Triumph Spitfire
Triumph GT6
Powertrain
Engine 948 cc OHV I4
1147 cc OHV I4 (Herald 1200 & 12/50)
1296 cc OHV I4 (13/60)
Transmission 4-speed manual (synchromesh on 2nd 3rd and top gears, no overdrive)
Dimensions
Wheelbase 91 in (2,311 mm)
Length 153 in (3,886 mm)
Width 60 in (1,524 mm)
Height 52 in (1,321 mm)
Kerb weight 725 kg (1,598 lb) (1200 convertible) to 865 kg (1,907 lb) (13/60 estate)
Chronology
Predecessor Standard 8 / 10
Successor Triumph Toledo

The Triumph Herald is a small two-door car introduced by the Standard-Triumph Company of Coventry in 1959 and made through to 1971. Body design was by the Italian stylist Giovanni Michelotti, and the car was offered in saloon, convertible, coupé, estate and van models, with the latter marketed as the Triumph Courier.

Total Herald sales numbered well over half a million. The Triumph Vitesse, Spitfire and GT6 models are all based on modified Herald chassis and running gear with bolt-together bodies.

Herald & Herald S (948cc)

Towards the end of the 1950s Standard-Triumph offered a range of two-seater Triumph sports cars alongside its Standard saloons, the Standard 8 and 10, powered by a small (803 cc or 948 cc) 4-cylinder engine, which by the late 1950s were due for an update. Standard-Triumph therefore started work on the Herald. The choice of the Herald name suggests that the car was originally intended to be marketed as a Standard, as it fits the model-naming scheme of the time (Ensign, Pennant and Standard itself). But by 1959 it was felt that the Triumph name had more brand equity, and the Standard name was phased out in Britain after 1963.

Giovanni Michelotti was commissioned to style the car by the Standard-Triumph board, encouraged by chief engineer Harry Webster, and quickly produced designs for a two-door saloon with a large glass area that gave 93 per cent all-round visibility in the saloon variant and the "razor-edge" looks to which many makers were turning. As Fisher & Ludlow, Standard-Triumph's body suppliers became part of an uncooperative BMC, it was decided that the car should have a separate chassis rather than adopting the newer unitary construction. The main body tub was bolted to the chassis and the whole front end hinged forward to allow access to the engine. Every panel  including the sills and roof  could be unbolted from the car so that different body styles could be easily built on the same chassis. As an addition to the original coupé and saloon models, a convertible was introduced in 1960.[5]

The Standard Pennant's 4-cylinder 948 cc OHV engine and 4 speed manual gearbox was used with synchromesh on the top three gears and remote gear shift and driving the rear wheels. Most of the engine parts were previously used in the Standard 8/10. The rack and pinion steering afforded the Herald a tight 25-foot (7.6 m) turning circle. Coil and double-wishbone front suspension was fitted, while the rear suspension, a new departure for Triumph, offered "limited" independent springing via a single transverse leaf-spring bolted to the top of the final drive unit and swing axles.

Instruments were confined to a single large speedometer with fuel gauge in the saloon (a temperature gauge was available as an option) on a dashboard of grey pressed fibreboard. The coupé dashboard was equipped with speedometer, fuel and temperature gauges, together with a lockable glovebox. The car had loop-pile carpeting and heater as standard. A number of extras were available including twin SU carburettors, leather seats, a wood-veneered dashboard, Telaflo shock absorbers and paint options.

In late 1958, prototype cars embarked on a test run from Cape Town to Tangiers. An account of the journey was embellished by PR at the time.[6] However only minor changes were deemed necessary between the prototype and production cars. The new car was launched at the Royal Albert Hall in London on 22 April 1959 but was not an immediate sales success, partly owing to its relatively high cost, approaching £700 (including 45 per cent Purchase Tax). In standard single-carburettor form the 34.5 bhp (26 kW) car was no better than average in terms of performance. A saloon tested by The Motor magazine in 1959 was found to have a top speed of 70.9 mph (114.1 km/h) and could accelerate from 0–60 mph (97 km/h) in 31.1 seconds. A fuel consumption of 34.5 miles per imperial gallon (8.2 L/100 km; 28.7 mpgUS) was recorded.[7]

The rear suspension was criticised as yielding poor handling at the extremes of performance though the model was considered easy to drive with its good vision, light steering (smallest turning circle of any production car) and controls, and ease of repair.

A Herald S variant was introduced in 1961 with a lower equipment level and less chrome than the Herald.[5] It was offered in saloon form only.[5]

The 948cc Herald Coupé and Convertible models were discontinued in 1961, the 948cc Herald Saloon in 1962 and the Herald S in 1964.[5]

Herald 1200

Standard-Triumph experienced financial difficulties at the beginning of the 1960s and was taken over by Leyland Motors Ltd in 1961. This released new resources to develop the Herald and the car was re-launched in April 1961 with an 1147 cc engine as the Herald 1200. The new model featured rubber-covered bumpers,[5] a wooden laminate dashboard and improved seating. Quality control was also tightened up. Twin carburettors were no longer fitted to any of the range as standard although they remained an option, the standard being a single down-draught Solex carburettor. Claimed maximum power of the Herald 1200 was 39 bhp (29 kW), as against the 34.5 bhp (25.7 kW) claimed for the 948 cc model.[8] One month after the release of the Herald 1200, a 2-door estate was added to the range.[5] Disc brakes became an option from 1962.

Sales picked up despite growing competition from the BMC Mini and the Ford Anglia. The coupé was dropped from the range in late 1964 as it was by then in direct competition with the Triumph Spitfire.

Courier van

The Triumph Courier van, a Herald estate with side panels in place of rear side windows, was produced from 1962 until 1966, but was dropped following poor sales. Production in England ceased in mid-1964. CKD assembly by MCA in Malta continued till late 1965, at least.[9] The Courier was powered by the 1147 cc engine.[10]

Herald 12/50

An upmarket version, the Herald 12/50, was offered from 1963 to 1967.[11] It featured a tuned engine with a claimed output of 51 bhp (38 kW) in place of the previous 39, along with a sliding (Webasto) vinyl-fabric sunroof and front disc brakes as standard. The 12/50, which was offered only as a 2-door saloon,[11] was fitted with a fine-barred aluminium grille.[11]

The power output of the 1200, which remained in production alongside the 12/50, was subsequently boosted to 48 bhp.[12]

Herald 13/60

In October 1967 the range was updated with the introduction at the London Motor Show of the Herald 13/60.[12] The 13/60 was offered in saloon, convertible and estate-bodied versions. The sun-roof remained available for the saloon as an optional extra rather than a standard feature. The front end was restyled using a bonnet similar to the Triumph Vitesse's and the interior substantially revised though still featuring the wooden dashboard. Interior space was improved by recessing a rear armrest in each side panel. The engine was enlarged to 1296 cc, essentially the unit employed since 1965 in the Triumph 1300, fitted with a Stromberg CD150 carburettor, offering 61 bhp (45 kW) and much improved performance. In this form (though the 1200 saloon was sold alongside it until the end of 1970) the Herald Saloon lasted until December 1970 and the Convertible and Estate until May 1971, by which time, severely outdated in style if not performance, it had already outlived the introduction of the Triumph 1300 Saloon, the car designed to replace it and was still selling reasonably well but, because of its labour-intensive method of construction, selling at a loss.

Remaining cars

Early 948 cc powered cars are rare, convertibles and coupes are especially sought after. Current figures have only 486.5 early (948cc) cars remaining, 269.5 being coupes. [lower-alpha 1] coupés remaining worldwide (948 cc cars), many in Australia, Malta, New Zealand and the USA. Similarly, 948 cc convertibles were mostly exported, of which, only 64 are known to still exist.[13] Later cars, such as the 1200 and 13/60 models, are more numerous. A later 13/60 white convertible model with 12 genuine miles on the clock is known to exist in Malta.

International production

Triumph Heralds were exported and assembled in a number of countries, and the separate chassis used as a jig to assemble kits exported from Coventry. These cars were referred to as CKD – Complete Knock Down cars.

India

In the 1960s Standard Motor Products of Madras, India, manufactured Triumph Heralds with the basic 948 cc engine under the name Standard Herald, eventually with additional four-door saloon and five-door estate models exclusively for the Indian market. In 1971 they introduced a restyled four-door saloon based on the Herald called the Standard Gazel, using the same 948 cc engine but with the axle changed to that of the Toledo, as the Herald's "swing-arm" could not cope with India's poor roads. The Gazel was discontinued in 1977.

Australia

The Herald was produced in Australia by Australian Motor Industries from 1959 to 1966 with output totalling 14,975 units.[14] Production included a 12/50 model, which unlike its English namesake was offered in both saloon and coupe body styles.[14] It featured the bonnet and four angled headlights of the Triumph Vitesse[14] and was marketed as the Triumph 12/50,[15] without Herald badges.[14]

Others

Triumph Heralds were also assembled in South Africa, New Zealand, Ireland, Malta, and at two locations in Peru.

A Triumph Herald was used at the 2012 London Olympic Games during the beginning of the Closing Ceremony when cars were paraded around the stadium.[16]

A Cactus Green 1961 Triumph Herald was driven in the Heartbeat series by leading characters Nick and Kate Rowan.

A 1962 Herald was used by James May on the TV car show Top Gear as a template for an amphibious car. It was used in the third episode of series 8, in which it and May were victorious in the featured challenge of crossing a 2-mile (3.2 km) lake. It was again seen in the second episode of series 10, in which May used exactly the same car from the previous amphibious car challenge and attempted to cross the English Channel. The car is now a part of the scenery within the Top Gear studio.

The character of Edie Pegden (played by Thora Hird) in the BBC 1 long-running comedy Last of the Summer Wine drives a red 13/60 Herald convertible.[17]

A red Herald 1200 Convertible was driven by David Niven in the 1975 film: Paper Tiger.

In the 1967 movie Two for the Road, Albert Finney drives a red Triumph Herald convertible.

In L'Île Noire, the seventh album of the comic series The Adventures of Tintin created by the Belgian designer Hergé, a Triumph Herald appears with a caravan.

Herald-based cars

The Equipe was a car produced by Bond, using the Triumph Herald chassis and components.

Having a separate body mounted to a chassis, the Triumph Herald provides a sound basis for a kit car. Examples include:

Scale models and die-cast

References

Notes

  1. The Earls Court motor show of 1959 used a Triumph Herald Coupé cut in half. This car survives and can be seen at Coventry Transport Museum, adding the 0.5 to the total number of known surviving 948 cc Triumph Herald Coupés.[13]

Citations

  1. Triumph 12/50 Sports Saloon, Australian Motor Manual, July 1964, page 32
  2. Triumph 1200 advertisement classiccarmag.net Retrieved 13 November 2015
  3. Pedr Davis, The Macquarie Dictionary of Motoring, 1986, page 495
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Triumph Herald Export Figures, www.triumph-herald.com Retrieved on 3 November 2013
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Michael Sedgwick & Mark Gillies, A-Z of Cars 1945-1970, page 202
  6. "Original diary can be read online". Triumph-herald.com. Retrieved 9 October 2010.
  7. "The Triumph Herald Saloon". The Motor. 22 April 1959.
  8. "News Summary". Practical Motorist. 7 (nbr 83): 1187. July 1961.
  9. Triumph Courier 1962–1966 Retrieved from www.aronline.co.uk on 22 July 2010
  10. Triumph Engine Numbers, www.triumphspitfire.com Retrieved 13 December 2014
  11. 1 2 3 Michael Sedgwick & Mark Gillies, A-Z of Cars 1945-1970, page 203
  12. 1 2 "1,296 cc for Triumph Herald 13/60". Autocar. 127 (nbr 3739): 55–56. 12 October 1967.
  13. 1 2 >"Triumph Herald Database". Triumph-herald.com. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  14. 1 2 3 4 A different slant on the Herald Retrieved from www.vtr.org on 20 January 2010
  15. "The Triumph Brochure Page". Retrieved 20 January 2010.
  16. Martin, Arthur (6 August 2012). "After that spectacular opening show, this is the mini London Eye that will bring the curtain down". Mail Online. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  17. Ker, Rod (28 April 2007). "Back from the dead". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  18. Ramsey, John. The Swapmeet and Toyfair Catalogue of British Diecast Model Toys. Swapmeet Toys and Models Ltd. p. 32. ISBN 095093190X.
  19. Ramsey, John. The Swapmeet and Toyfair Catalogue of British Diecast Model Toys. Swapmeet Toys and Models Ltd. p. 139. ISBN 095093190X.

Further reading

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