The Morris Ital is a medium-sized car that was built by British Leyland (BL) from 1980 to 1984. A successor to the Morris Marina, it was available in a variety of bodystyles.
Italdesign had been involved in a consultancy role, to help design new tooling and assembly methods, and work out how to integrate the altered parts of the new car into the existing Marina production chain. As such, despite bearing the studio's name the Ital is absent from lists of styling jobs handled by the firm. It was originally planned to brand the car as the Morris Marina Ital but, for most markets, the Marina name was dropped on the orders of British Leyland CEO, Michael Edwardes, and only the Ital name was used. Marina/Ital Development Story, AROnline
The Ital had revised exterior styling, but retained the Marina's 1.3- and 1.7-litre and rear-wheel drive chassis. The dashboard and interior of the Marina were also carried over largely unaltered, including the main fascia panel, which faced 'away' from the driver. The Marina's coupé variant was not produced in Ital form, but the four door saloon, the five-door station wagon, and the pickup truck and van versions, were carried over from the Marina range.
From October 1980 an automatic version of the Ital was available with the 2.0-litre O-Series power unit, as the range topping 2.0 HLS. With a very short production run, only about 1,000 models were sold and it remains the rarest Ital model. In November 1981, all HL and HLS models were fitted with upgraded interior trim.
In 1982 the Ital production line was moved from Plant Oxford to Longbridge plant; this was to allow the former to be refitted for the upcoming start of production of the Austin Maestro, and the Ital's ultimate replacement – the Austin Montego. Finally, in September of that year, a revised Ital range was introduced. The L and 2.0-litre models were dropped, and the HL and HLS were replaced by the SL and SLX models. Front suspension was changed to telescopic front dampers across the range, and Leaf spring were also fitted, together with additional soundproofing and improved trim.
Thus cropped, the range then consisted of the 1.3 SL and SLX saloon, 1.3 SL estate, 1.7 SLX saloon, and the 1.7 SL saloon and estate. The saloon models were dropped in February 1984, with the estate models remaining in production until the summer of that year.
During the 1970s British Leyland had been working on the development of an all-new car to replace the Morris Marina and the Ital was only ever intended as a stop gap replacement between the demise of the Marina and the launch of its replacement in the form of the Austin Montego, which did not happen until April 1984.
The British Leyland factory in Setúbal (IMA) then switched to producing the Mini Moke.
After the introduction of the Opel Ascona C / Vauxhall Cavalier Mark II in August 1981, the Ital and Ford's Ford Cortina (and later Ford Sierra) were the only European mass volume cars in the sector to retain rear wheel drive.
The saloon was dropped from the line in February 1984 with the van and estate completing outgoing contracts for another six months, until they too were axed. From this point, the Morris marque was kept alive solely by the Metro van, and three years later the Morris badge had finally been consigned to history after 75 years, when it was removed from the van version of the Metro.
The Ital's successor was the Austin Montego, launched in April 1984 as a four-door saloon, with a five-door estate arriving in October 1984, the van versions being succeeded by the van bodystyle of the Austin Maestro.
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