30 Years of MGF: As MG Return to Mass Market Sports Cars

‘What If’ Projects Kept the MG Dream Alive

During this period, several ‘What If’ projects and ideas for returning the MG badge to a sports car came and went, one or two being shown to the public, such as the very technologically advanced MG EX-E, a quantum leap forward from the much loved but old and tired MGB of a handful of years before.  The MG EX-E raised public expectations of what a new MG sports car could be like, but it would be 1995, 10 years on from the EX-E unveiling, before the public could get their hands on the MGF.

Behind the Scenes: The PR3 Project Takes Shape

By late 1991, the PR3 project styling was looking noticeably like an MGF, and its use of Rover componentry rather than drawing parts from Rover’s collaborations with Honda became  fixed over the next couple of years: the layout would be mid-engined, the engines themselves would be Rover’s K Series, including a new version with variable valve timing, the gearbox Rover’s PG1, the suspension and subframes derived from Metro – including the Hydragas system, which raised quizzical eyebrows at the eventual launch of the car, until the car was driven and the suitability of the suspension understood.

A Groundbreaking Partnership Brings the MGF to Life

The bodies of the PR3 (as it was still known internally) sports car would be, in a ground breaking, cost saving arrangement between Rover Group and Mayflower Vehicle Systems (formerly the famous old Motor Panels Ltd), tooled up for and built by Mayflower in their Coventry plant and then shipped to Longbridge for painting, trimming and final assembly – and, come 1995 and the launch of the MGF, that’s exactly what happened.

The MG RV8 Sets the Stage

So by 1995, the world was ready, and so was the new MGF.  Actually, at launch Rover’s marketing department decreed that the ‘F’ of MGF should always be seen in print as an italic character, so becoming MGF.  Seen by some – motoring magazines included – as a bit of marketing frippery at the time, this slightly idiosyncratic feature in the appearance of the printed name of the car has endured in many circles to this day, 30 years later – not here, though, in the interests of being easier on the eye!

The Motoring Press Fell in Love with the MGF

At the 1995 launch, and for the four years following, the MGF was available in two versions, one with a standard 1.8 litre K Series twin cam engine producing 120bhp and the other with the same capacity engine but fitted with variable valve timing ‘VVC’) which raised maximum power to 145bhp.  Sales were very bouyant, quickly settling to around 14,000 cars per year, enough to ease the Mazda MX5 out of the top slot in UK and European sports car sales.

An Opportunity Lost Across the Atlantic

Refinements Arrive: The Mk II MGF

In 1999 the MGF range was expanded and the car was refreshed with a revised interior and other detailing changes.  Known by the factory from the start as the Mk II MGF, the car was never badged as thus, the quick identifier if you saw one in the street being that the windscreen surround was body coloured, rather than black.  While the 1.8L and 1.8L VVC models were retained in the range, they were joined by a new entry level 1.6L and an uprated and bewinged version of the 1.8L VVC called the Trophy 160, the ‘160’ parading the Trophy’s maximum engine power being 15bhp more than the standard VVC at 160bhp.

In 2000, more proposed updates and changes were in the pipeline when everything was thrown into the air by BMW’s decision to divest itself of the majority of Rover Group.  Rover’s Small & Medium Car Business Unit at the Longbridge factory complex was sold to Phoenix Venture Holdings, minus the still under development ‘new’ Mini, which was moved from Longbridge to the Oxford factory that BMW had decided to retain.  When the dust settled (if it ever really did), the Longbridge engineers working for Phoenix’s MG Rover company recommenced their development work on the next MGF.

Come 2002, the new car was presented to the world as the MG TF, a car still very recognisably deriving from the MGF though much changed and improved in several areas, a very good car laid low by the misfortunes and struggles of MG Rover culminating in the company’s demise in April 2005.  That’s a story with many twists and turns in it, and a story for another time.

A Legacy to Be Proud Of

Happy 30th birthday, MGF.  Can’t believe you’re that old already.

Pete Taylor, Editor.


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