Richard Colby reviews MG’s 2017 Q4 sales, and also their annual performance.
The 2017 new car market slump with registrations down by 5.7% (152,000 units) compared to 2016 will be remembered for a number of things, but most significantly it is likely to be seen as the turning point for new diesel car sales in the UK following years of growth. Diesel had been promoted as the fuel of choice by successive governments since 2001, when the duty on diesel was reduced to help boost sales. The argument in 2001 was that as diesel car engines used 15-20 % less fuel than their petrol counterparts, then they must also produce less C02 and hence have a reduced impact on climate change per mile driven. Encouraging more people to move to diesel cars was therefore an obvious ‘quick win’ in the battle to meet new environmental targets.
In response, manufacturers (including MG-Rover) invested heavily in new diesel engines, with the addition of turbochargers, intercoolers and new injection technologies ensuring that even the most mundane of diesel hatchbacks could match their petrol powered counterparts for performance, while still making fewer visits to the pumps. Then in 2014 a well known and much respected German manufacturer who had been at the forefront of modern diesel engine development was caught cheating.
Five scientists from the University of West Virginia had been carrying out on-road testing of diesel vehicles from three manufacturers in the US and could not understand why one model, a VW, gave constantly high on-road emissions compared to results found in the laboratory. The scientists reported their findings to the California Air Research Board and the rest, as they say, is history.
Denne historien er fra March 2018-utgaven av MG Enthusiast.
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Denne historien er fra March 2018-utgaven av MG Enthusiast.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Love and devotion
Bob Nason waited eight years to get the car of his dreams and, 19 years later, he’s still smitten with it...
Tidy-up time
Craig continues his quest to save the modified ZS 120 he told us about in December’s issue of MGE and takes advantage of a break in the weather to focus on its bodywork.
XPress power
MGs on Track regular, Dave Pearce, has a range of MGs at his disposal including this rather special XPower SV-R.
Sparking memories
MGE reader Peter Morrey recalls his very first MG, his family’s experiences of the then-new MGA and advice from a chap with a bit of MG insider knowledge.
Gerry McGovern
When the MGF appeared, in 1995, it marked a return to the market for MG sports cars. MG Enthusiast caught up with the man responsible for the car’s styling.
MG's Twin-Cam engine
The Twin-Cam engine arrived in 1958 but was it a success?
Eyes peeled
This month Roger looks at other drivers’ habits and ponders whether autonomous vehicle lighting helps or hinders road users?
Dear Sir...
Paul Moran’s beautifully restored 1933 Midget J2 comes with some interesting documentation which illustrates just how the privileged new car owners of the 1930s dealt with the absence of a warranty.
CHEQUERED FLAG
THE ROADS LESS TRAVELLED... AND WHY THEY ARE WORTH SEEKING OUT
2019 HSRCA SPRING FESTIVAL
The 2019 Historic Sports and Racing Car Association Spring Festival was run during a brilliant spring weekend, between 28-29 September, in Goulburn (regional New South Wales).