Grace's Guide

The Best of British Engineering 1750-1960s

Morgan Motor Co

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‎‎
 April 1907.
April 1907.
 November 1909.
November 1909.
 October 1923.
October 1923.
 October 1923.
October 1923.
 October 1923. Models, prices and specifications.
October 1923. Models, prices and specifications.
 1923. Morgan Aero
1923. Morgan Aero
 February 1928
February 1928
 1928. Exhibit at the National Motor Museum.
1928. Exhibit at the National Motor Museum.
 1932. Morgan Super Sport.
1932. Morgan Super Sport.
 1932.
1932.
 October 1933.
October 1933.
 October 1933.
October 1933.
 October 1933.
October 1933.
 1935. Morgan Super Sport MX2.
1935. Morgan Super Sport MX2.
 February 1935.
February 1935.
 February 1935.
February 1935.
 1938. Morgan Super Sport. Exhibit at Haynes Motor Museum.
1938. Morgan Super Sport. Exhibit at Haynes Motor Museum.
 May 1949.
May 1949.
 October 1949.
October 1949.

of Malvern Link is a British automobile manufacturer.

  • 1906 Produced a 24 h.p. shaft-drive model. [1]
  • 1907 'Adler' car advertised.
  • 1910 The company was founded by H. F. S. Morgan and was run by Peter Morgan, son of H.F.S., until his death in 2003. The early cars were two seat three-wheelers, and thus count as cyclecars. They were designed to avoid a British tax on cars by being classed as motorcycles. Competition from the likes of the Austin 7, with comparable economy and price and better comfort, made cyclecars less attractive. Morgan's first four-wheeler was the 4/4, for four-cylinder engine and four wheels.
  • 1910 Private company.
  • 1913-1917 For a list of the models and prices see the 1917 Red Book.
  • In spite of their traditional design, Morgans have modern sports car performance, due to their very low weight. The Morgan Plus 8, which for many years used the 3.5L (215ci) aluminium V8 licenced from GM (shared with Rover), though later versions of the engine were provided in 3.9L, 4.0L and 4.6L capacities. This was powered by a fuel-injected 196 hp Rover V8 in its final iteration and could accelerate from 0-60 mph in 5.6 seconds. Enthusiasts work on the engine, exhaust and electronic chip management to improve this figure.
  • 1961 Manufacturers of the "Morgan" three and four wheeler sports cars. [2]
  • 1963 Motor Show exhibitor. Showed 'Plus Four' models. [3]
  • For a few years in the 1980s, Plus 8s were imported into the United States after conversion to run on LPG (propane) as fuel to pass the U.S. emissions regulations. Modern Morgans are legally imported into the United States once more.
  • In 2000, the Morgan Aero 8 was introduced and, as always, the wooden body substructure was ash. (Contrary to popular myth, however, the chassis is metal; aluminium for the Aero 8). The Aero 8, with a BMW V8 engine in a car half the weight of the BMW, is even faster than the Plus 8, delivering what Autoweek magazine termed super car performance.
  • In 2004, the Morgan Roadster was launched to replace the Plus 8 which had to be withdrawn once the supply of suitable V8 engines was exhausted.
  • The factory is located in Malvern Link (an area of Malvern in Worcestershire) and has 155 employees. All the cars are assembled by hand. The waiting list can be up to a year. Production is nine cars a week and each car takes three months to build.

[edit] List of Models

  • F4/F-Super 3 wheeler 1936-51

[edit] See Also

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[edit] Sources of Information

  1. The Automobile Vol. III. Edited by Paul N. Hasluck and published by Cassell in 1906.
  2. 1961 Dun and Bradstreet KBE
  3. 1963 Motor Show