MGC MGC Production: 1967-1969 9,002 made (4544 MGC, 4458 MGC GT) Body style: 2-door roadster 2-door coupé Engine: 2912 cc C-Series I6
The MGC was a 2912 cc, straight-6 version of the MGB sold in the late 1960s and given the code ADO52. It was also intended as a replacement for the Austin-Healey 3000 which would have been ADO51 but this never got beyond the design proposal stage. The first engine to be considered was an Australian-designed six cylinder version of the BMC B-Series but the production versions used a development of the Morris Engines designed C-Series that was also to be used for the new Austin 3-Litre 4-Door saloon. In the twin SU carburettor form used in the MGC the engine produced 145 bhp at 5250 rpm. The bodyshell needed considerable revision around the engine bay and to the floor pan, but externally the only differences were a distinctive bonnet bulge to accommodate the relocated radiator and a teardrop for carburettor clearance. It had different brakes from the MGB, 15 inch wheels, a lower geared rack and pinion and special torsion bar suspension with telescopic dampers. Like the MGB, it was available as a coupé (GT) and roadster. A three-speed automatic gearbox was available as an option. The car was capable of 120 mph (193 km/h).
The heavy engine (209 pounds heavier than the 1798 cc MGB engine) changed the vehicle's handling, and it got a mixed press response. The MGC was cancelled in 1969 after less than two years of production.
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