The Midget name goes way back in MG history, to the M
orris Garages Limited company in 1928. That’s when the M-Type Midget went on sale, and lots of other Midgets followed over the next few decades. This generation of Midget began life as a 1961 model, and it was an Austin-Healey Sprite
with MG badges installed. Sprites and Midgets were essentially identical (and were collectively known as “Spridgets”), but the Sprite got the axe after 1971 while Midgets were built through 1980.
In 1976, the MSRP of a new Midget was $3,895, or about $21,252 in 2023 dollars. The 1976 Triumph Spitfire was lighter (1,828 pounds versus the Midget’s 1,854 pounds), but its sticker price was $4,250 ($23,189 now) and it had three fewer horses under the hood.
Of course, those horsepower numbers were hilariously low for both cars (which, starting in 1974, shared variations of the same 1.5-liter Standard SC engine). This one was rated at 55.5 horsepower.
Earlier US-market Midgets had dual SU carburetors, but a single Stromberg was used for the Malaise Era versions.
Federal emissions regulations really strangled the output of US-market MG engines (which were ancient-technology pushrod mills in the first place) during the mid-to-late 1970s. Catalytic converters were very restrictive back then, and there was a power-sucking air pump bolted to the engine as well.
On top of that, American bumper and headlight-height regulations meant that hideous and enormous rubber-covered bumpers were bolted to these cars and the suspension was lifted. Say what you will about 1974-1980 Midget bumpers, but the Spitfire’s bumpers were even worse
.
I’ve put many miles on 1970s Midgets, and I can say from that experience that they feel a lot quicker than they actually are (a same-year Honda Civic will eat up a Midget in just about any kind of race). So what? MG Midgets are lovable.
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