The MG Midget is a small two-seater lightweight sports car produced by MG Cars from 1961 to 1979. It revived a name that had been used on earlier models such as the MG M-type, MG D-type, MG J-type and MG T-type.
Mechanically the car was identical to its Austin-Healey counterpart, retaining the rear suspension using quarter-elliptic leaf springs and trailing arms from the 'frogeye'. The engine was a 948 cc A-Series with twin producing at 5500 rpm and at 3000 rpm. Brakes were drums all round. A hard top, heater, radio and luggage rack were available as factory-fitted extras.
In October 1962, the engine was increased to 1098 cc, raising the output to at 5500 rpm and at 3250 rpm, and disc brakes replaced the drums at the front. This change greatly improved braking at speed, as the original tiny drum setup originated from the Morris Minor, and was wholly inadequate in the Midget. 13x4" wire-spoked wheels became available. These early 1098 cc engines were not as reliable as the 948 cc units, as the 1098 cc versions suffered from crankshaft bearing failures when run hard.
The doors had no external handles or locks and the windows were sliding Perspex side-screens. A heater was an optional extra.
Production was 16,080 of the small-engined version and 9601 of the 1098cc version.
A car with the 948 cc engine was tested by the British magazine The Motor in 1962 and had a top speed of and could accelerate from 0- in 18.3 seconds. A fuel consumption of was recorded. The test car cost £689 including taxes on the UK market.
A total of 26,601 were made.
In late 1967 (1968 model year), US-spec cars received several safety additions: a padded fascia (dashboard) with smaller main gauges, collapsible steering column, scissor-type hood hinges, a third windshield wiper, additional side marker lights, and anti-burst door latches.
In Dec 1968, beginning s/n 66236, the rear axle gear ratio was increased from 4.22:1 to 3.90:1, giving for every 1000 rpm. This increased final drive ratio gave better fuel economy, but reduced acceleration.Original Sprite and Midget, Terry Horler, p. 107.
MG made minor facelift changes to the body trim in late 1969 (1970 model year), with the sills painted black, a revised recessed black grille, and squared off taillights as on the MGB. The 13-inch Rubery Owen "Rostyle" wheels were standardized, but wire-spoked ones remained an option, fitted with either 5.20x13 Crossply tyres or 145HR13 Pirelli Cinturato CA67. These revised cars were initially presented with a matte-black-painted windscreen surround which proved so unpopular, the Midget reverted to the original brushed alloy after only a few hundred had been manufactured.
In August 1971, the compression ratio on North American engines was reduced to 8.0:1. Engine power output fell to at 5500 rpm and at 3250 rpm.
The square-shaped rear wheel arches became rounded in January 1972. Also in this year, a Triumph steering rack was fitted, giving a gearing that was somewhat lower than earlier Midgets. A second exhaust silencer was also added in 1972. Alternators were fitted instead of dynamos (generators) from 1973 onwards.
Seven months into the 1974 model year, oversized rubber bumper blocks, nicknamed "Sabrinas" after the well-endowed British actress, were added to the chrome bumpers to meet the first US bumper impact regulations.
The round-arch Midgets with chrome bumpers marketed for model years 1972-1974 started leaving the Abingdon factory in late 1971. Between 1966 and the 1969 face lift, 22,415 were made, and a further 77,831 up to 1974.
In the US market, British Leyland struggled to keep engine power at acceptable levels as the engines were loaded with air pumps, EGR valves, and catalytic converters to keep up with new US and California exhaust emission control regulations. The U.S market model's dual SU HS2 carbs were swapped for a single Zenith-Stromberg 150 CD4 unit catalytic converter carb in 1976 and all models after came with the Zenith-Stromberg 150 CD4T.1500 workshop manual British Leyland UK limited Power fell to at 5000 rpm and 67 lb-ft of torque at 2500 rpm. The round rear-wheel arches were now square again, to increase the body strength,Sports Car Market, October 2007 and the front arches were lowered to minimize the gap from raising the suspension. The last car was made on 7 December 1979, after 73,899 of the last version had been made. The last 500 home-market cars were painted black.
As the MG Midget model was developed, it gained considerable weight and a higher ride height. Despite larger displacement engines, the later cars are slower and handling is adversely affected. Many in the U.S. consider the 1967 model year to exhibit the best stock performance; the 1275 cc engine was unencumbered by power-sapping smog equipment and the added weight of later giant bumpers.
MG Midget MkIII (1966–1974)
MG Midget 1500 (1974–1980)
ADO34
MG Midget racing coupés
See also
Further reading
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