Background
The MGB, unveiled in 1962, had been an enormous international success for the British Motor Corporation. So when the conglomerate decided towards the end of the 1960s that it needed to to replace the much-loved Austin-Healey 3000 - the shape of which did date back to 1953, after all - using the MGB shell as a basis seemed a jolly good idea. Things had worked pretty well with the Austin-Healey, which had begun as a four-cylinder sports car before a bigger engine with an extra two cylinders was shoehorned under its bonnet, so surely BMC could repeat the same trick with the popular MGB? And also save itself having to pay royalties to Healey, which it had been doing with every Austin-Healey 3000 sold.
The six-pot MGC of 1967 was created by installing BMC’s new six-cylinder C-Series engine - as also used in the new Austin 3-Litre saloon - into an MGB bodyshell. In reality, it was all much more complex than just dropping the new engine in and hoping for the best. Although the cars, in Roadster and Coupe form, looked pretty much like humbler MGBs, a lot of work was needed to the engine bay and floorpan to get the engine to fit, with a bulge in the bonnet giving away the fact that there was something a bit more substantial than usual at the heart of the car. The brakes were also upgraded to cope with the extra performance, while the wheels were also enlarged to 15 inches, the steering set-up tweaked and the suspension upgraded.
Unfortunately, when it was new, the MGC didn’t quite spark people’s affections in the same way its Austin-Healey predecessor had done. The MGB was a very well-balanced sports car with very good handling; the 209lb heavier and longer C-Series engine meant that the MGC couldn’t quite match its road manners - although it didn’t help that, in classic BMC comedy style, the launch cars were given to journalists with incorrect tyre pressures. That didn’t exactly help the press reviews. The fact that the C didn’t look that different to the more common-or-garden B probably didn’t help its case much either. Still, Prince Charles was a fan, buying one in 1967. It’s still around, having been passed onto Prince William.
The 145bhp MGC lasted for just two years, with only 8999 constructed between 1967 and 1969. And of those, there were only 2034 right-hand drive GTs, as here. However, the decades since then have been very kind to the MGC. As classics, the cars have been properly reappraised and consequently become very desirable, offering all the practicality, familiarity and style of an MGB but with 120mph performance and the capability to sprint to 60mph in around 10 seconds. Try managing that in a four-cylinder version…







