Triumph 10/20
The Triumph 10/20 is a car manufactured from 1923 until 1926 by the Triumph Motor Company. It was the first Triumph automobile and was named the 10/20 for the Royal Automobile Club's taxation class of 10 horsepower rating and its actual output of 20 brake horsepower. The design was principally by Arthur Alderson assisted by Alan Lea and Arthur Sykes who were employed by Lea-Francis, to whom Triumph paid a royalty on every car made. It was powered by a 1,393 cc (1.4L) 4-cylinder side-valve engine designed by Harry Ricardo and fitted with a single updraught Zenith carburettor. The engine produced 23.5 brake horsepower (17.5 kW) at 3000 rpm, giving the car a top speed of 52 mph (84 km/h) and economy of 40 miles per imperial gallon. The four-speed gearbox was mounted centrally and coupled to the engine by a short drive shaft.
Text adapted from “Triumph 10/20” on Wikipedia ↗ · CC BY-SA 4.0 ↗ · retrieved 2026-07
- Weight
- 864 kg
- Length
- 3,556 mm
Other Triumph models
- 13/35 —
- 15/50 —
- 1800 saloon —
- 20TS —
- Dolomite Straight Eight —
- Fury —
- Gloria —
- Mayflower —
- Renown —
- Roadster —
- Southern Cross —
- Super 7 —
- Super 9 —
- TR250 —
- TR3A —
- TR4A —
- TR7 Sprint —
- Dolomite 1932
- Vitesse 1935
- 2000 1948
- TR2 1952
- TR3 1953
- Herald 1959
- Italia 1959
- TR6 1959
- TR4 1960
- Stag 1961
- TR5 1961
- Spitfire 1962
- GT6 1965
- 1300 1966
- 2.5 1967
- 1500 1968
- 2500 1968
- Toledo 1971
- TR7 1975
- TR8 1977
- Acclaim 1981