With the collapse of parent company British Leyland, some great brands disappeared either permanently or for a long period of time, sports car maker MG probably being the most notable. Lacking money to create new models, the lineup of MGs in the late seventies was made up of nearly twenty-year-old designs with black rubber bumpers and jacked up suspensions to meet headlight height requirements.
source: Mecum and Mecum Attempts to continue the name by BL went nowhere; probably for the best considering the rather wonky Triumph TR7-based MGs that were proposed. Jason reported on these earlier if you want to take a deeper look at examples of strange badge engineering:
source: Twitter Once it became clear that Leyland would have to shed the weight of MG in order to survive, Aston Martin stepped up with an offer to take on that sports car brand. There was a multi-phase plan to first update the MGB as best they could, and then make an all-new body version with the same floorpan but new mechanical components to be determined. The Phase I facelift and Phase II redesign were done by none other than William Towns, the person that gave us the knife-edge Lagonda and the wood bodied Hustler, among other things:
source: Classic Driver and Classic & Sports Car, January 2012 However, the board at Leyland realized that Aston was in worse shape than even they were, and the best solution appeared to be pulling the plug. The MGB and Midget roadsters were discontinued in 1980, with no immediate replacement in sight. The storied MG name was then stuck onto various hatchbacks and sedans in the eighties; a sad fate for the marque that brought the affordable sports car to the people, especially American buyers who would not get the RV8 and MG-F two seat roadster revivals that appeared briefly much later.
The Alternate Reality
Looking back at 1980, you could argue that there was definitely a need for a new sports car on the market. The Alfa Romeo and Fiat roadsters available at the time were nearly as old as the MGB, and Leyland’s own rather unloved TR7 was about to go the way of the MG.
source: Bring A Trailer and Bring A Trailer I am not about to even try to discuss the malaise-era politics and labor (sorry, labour) issues of the UK, but Leyland was short on cash, and the government could certainly have fixed that. I mean, they DID give tens of millions to an ex-General Motors executive to build a rather silly gullwinged stainless steel coupe that turned into a disaster, didn’t they? Wasn’t one of the greatest sports car marques in history (dating back the 1920s) more deserving of the money? Shit, they kept the monarchy around just because they’re part of the British mystique, so roadsters with wood dashboards should have been preserved as well. Let’s say Leyland did develop a replacement for the MGB, which I guess we can call the MGD (there already was an MGC, the beer that name references was not British, and the disease it is an acronym for was unknown…I think). To prove how bad things REALLY were in 1980 for Leyland, they didn’t even have a rear drive small car other than the crappy Morris Marina that I could steal parts from for a new MG design. In fact, the situation was so dire that I actually needed to assume that they would redesign and develop an entire other car to use as a donor. The car I chose to rework was something most Americans don’t even know about: the Triumph Dolomite, particularly the Sprint version. This little sedan featured a surprising-for-the-time four-valve-per-cylinder engine and was, according to contemporary reports, as close as Britain came to a small BMW fighter. Still, the Dolomite was nearly a decade old (and in reality about to be discontinued) in 1980 so a redesign and restyle would have been needed for it to live on in 1981. With the addition of independent rear suspension and four wheel discs, this little bulldog-looking thing would be more crude than products from Munich, but likely be faster and more rortin’ snortin’ fun.
source: Car Throttle and The Bishop Now that we have worthy modern mechanicals from one fake car to put into another fake car, let’s see how we could apply something like Sir Town’s styling to the new MGD. His Phase II sketch is clean but just looks a bit too squared off, even for him, and it doesn’t look like an MG or even a sports car at all (it looks a bit too much like a nicely modified LeBaron convertible, really). While admittedly in 1981 nobody was doing ‘retro’ yet, even then each new model of a car typically had at least something that called to mind the predecessors, and have some ‘MGness”. As such, I didn’t go full wedge shape, but I did add a laid-back nose with composite headlights and a reshaped low profile MG grille in chrome to go back to the pre-rubber-bumper style most people preferred. A more raked windscreen fronts a taller cabin, so now the crazy three wiper setup won’t be needed anymore. Smooth alloy wheels go with Town’s typical aesthetic, and also sort of call to mind the simple wheels on early MGBs. The overall look is cleaner and more austere than the outgoing MGB, but still available in glorious shades of brown.
source: The Bishop and Aston.Co Let’s get the tough part out of the way; we know the US spec nose will NOT be the same, but my design for that at least seems somewhat intentional. Rectangular sealed beams are too small to fit in the Euro opening so they would need to rise like on a Z31 300ZX when illuminated. In the deep chin spoiler we would need to add rubber ram-bar 5MPH bumperettes, which would likely have to exist in back as well (like on a Porsche 928).
source: The Bishop Also like the 928, in back the loop-shaped surround is a flexible body colored piece that mimics the back of the MGB, but the tall taillights of that earlier car are replaced by Rover SD1 units. Also, you might remember that there was a closed MGB coupe called the GT with a rear hatch door, so the MGD could offer this format as well:
source: Superclassics and The Bishop Inside, the dashboard features a sweep shape that echoes the traditional MG grille shape, with black or walnut trim surrounding central air vents with a slot pattern that will cause our man Adrian Clarke to start singing God Save The Queen…I mean King, sorry. The trim and specification of the Italian competitors had gone up by then (as had the spending power of the buyers in the demographic) which explains the wood trim plus available power windows and air conditioning. Note the shape and the cut lines on the lower dashboard to allow relatively easy left hand/right hand drive conversion. The large wood panel in front of the passenger is for an airbag that never came; it also might be good to have the fusebox there since you might be accessing that thing more than the radio controls in a British car. I kid! I kid!
source: The Bishop I know what the comments section will say- if the MGD had been produced it would have been a reliability disaster. We’re gonna see anecdotes about English Lucas electrics and why-British-drink-warm-beer jokes. Considering that concurrent Jags and later Sterlings (Honda-based Rover) sold here were still rather nightmarish, I think those predictions would have been true, and I honestly don’t care. You see, the Japanese spent countless hours on computers replicating the looks and sounds of something that was hammered together in a barn. They in fact made a perfect copy that wouldn’t miss a beat in a quarter million miles. But a pastiche is a pastiche even if it’s a great pastiche, and in my alternate reality you could have had the real thing in the 1980s as long as a little electrical smoke now and then didn’t bother you. There might still be a British monarchy, but there are no more MG roadsters, and we are a lesser place for it. 1981 MGD / MGD GT (US model) Base Price: $12,380 As Shown: $14,850 Options Shown on Photo Car: Air Conditioning Electric Windows Metallic Paint Abingdon Package (Leather Seating Surfaces and Walnut Dash Finish) Aluminum Wheels Alpine AM/FM Cassette Stereo Drivetrain: 2000cc DOHC 4 cylinder, 4 valves per cylinder 127HP (US model) 5 speed manual transmission Chassis: Strut independent front suspension Semi-trailing arm independent rear suspension 4 wheel disc brakes Rack and pinion steering Performance (US model): 0-60 8.5 seconds Top speed: 125MPH Even if MG could’ve held on with an 80’s roadster, the 1990+ Miata NA would have run it off the edge in every way. Supposedly, the Rover 75 was designed for US sales, too, there were clay models of them with US spec lighting and reflectors, but BMW again vetoed that to avoid hurting 3-Series sales. Very different cars, but similarly priced And why wasn’t I informed about the Dolomite Sprint? That thing looks great! He also had a few proper old Jaaaag’s when they weren’t old, and I’ve always loved those too. Unfortunately I hate welding up rusty junk so until I win the lottery I’m destined to avoid such things / admire them from a distance as I know what’s best for my sanity. A few years back I drove a Dolomite Sprint through the Alps and it was a surprisingly good sports sedan, when it wasn’t trying to destroy itself. In the Age of Yuppies, an updated Dolomite Sprint could have worked. Unfortunately, British Leyland’s idea of updating is a quick restyle without addressing any of the previous model shortcomings. Look up what the name MG stands for. You’re not buying a car, you’re buying a service experience. 😉 Fight me, I think the rubber bumper MGBs look better than the chrome ones, It is probably one of the best looking solutions to the US regulations of the time, along with Porsche’s adaptations. I find they actually look better integrated than the old chrome stuff. My grandfather had a Dolomite Sprint. I remember him driving me around London like he stole it. Scared the crap out of me. He was in his late seventies by then and seemed to consider himself invincible. I still had a will to live… That Dolomite was quite memorable. Something about the size and spirit always stuck with me. It was a four door sports car that was actually as low as a sports car. Years later when the 3rd and 4th generation Civic sedans showed up, I swear they looked and drove like a reincarnation. Instead of a new Dolomite, Triumph’s final car in the 80s was the Acclaim; a rebadged Honda Civic. If they’d done that, and a better job of handling the suspension (it was jacked up to respond to new headlight height regulations, which ruined the handling), the later cars would probably be a bit better received.