The Midget 1500 may have had its rival Spitfire’s engine, but how do they compare on the road today? We put both to the test.
Small, rear-drive open two-seater sports cars were very much in decline in the late 1970s and early ’80s as the hot hatch juggernaut slowly gathered momentum. Deadly rivals, the MG Midget and Triumph Spitfire were nearing the end of their lives, but the company that was building them by this point – British Leyland – proved beyond doubt that it had a sense of humour. After decades spent packing traditional A-series power, the last MG Midget was unveiled in 1974 with – gasp! – the 1493cc engine out of the new Spitfire 1500. Worse, the MkIII’s delicate chrome bumpers were gone, replaced by enormous black plastic affairs that, along with the new tippy-toes ride height, were British Leyland’s Heath Robinson idea of how to comply with the stringent US safety regulations.
The Spitfire 1500, meanwhile, escaped such ignominy (in the UK at least – very late US-market Spitfires also went down the plastic bumper route), retaining its external jewellery and gaining a meaner stance thanks to lower spring mountings and a wider track.
Today, both are still rear-drive sports cars with considerable grin potential, dedicated followings and the sort of dimensions that make the current Mazda MX-5 look like a Challenger tank. But which entertains the most?
ON THE ROAD
US car magazine Road & Track memorably kicked off its 1979 road-test of the new MG Midget 1500 by asking, ‘Why would anyone want one?’ before concluding that ‘MG has fallen into a state of disrepair.’ Autocar, on the other hand, started its 1 March 1975 road-test of the new Triumph Spitfire 1500 by calling it ‘a topping little sports car’ and concluding that ‘it has a lot to offer which no other car quite matches.’
‘No other car’ presumably included its opinion-polarising MG brother.
This story is from the February 15,2017 edition of Classic Car Weekly.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the February 15,2017 edition of Classic Car Weekly.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MG Beater
Add two cylinders and a fixed roof to a Spitfire and is the resultant GT6 as much a baby E-type as it is an MGB GT rival? We find out.
Jaguar XJ-S/XJS
You should always buy the best classic you can afford in order to avoid terrifying restoration costs, and some of the best XJSs come from overseas.
Last Chance Saloon
The Series VI was the Farina’s final hurrah before the newfangled 1800 ‘Landcrab’ took its place. Nick Larkin tries a mint survivor for size.
The Supercar From Stuttgart
It’s 40 years since the 928 first took Porsche into GT territory even beyond the 911, upping the marque’s game in both the performance and prestige stakes.
Minx Coincidence
Nick’s sadness about his 1960 Hillman Minx is made worse by a bizarre photographic coincidence.
'Proper' TVR Wins Over Classic Fans
Revival picked for sports car maker’s long-awaited comeback
British Fashion, Italian Flavour
There was so much more to see away from the race track. Richard Gunn Went off to find it
Treasure Trove Of UK Classics Unearthed
60 British motors heading for two auctions, most with no reserve!
Amazon Warrior's Rallying Call
Volvo will star at Wales Rally GB to mark 50 rallies since model’s last win
57% Of Carmakers Not Stripping Parts From Scrappage Victims
Complete cars being crushed puts tomorrow's classic spares at risk