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The following is a list of cars marketed under the British MG marque. The marque was owned, and the cars produced, by Morris Garages (1924–1930), M.G. Car Company (1930–1952), British Motor Corporation (1952–1967), British Motor Holdings (1967–1968), British Leyland (1968–1992), Rover Group (1992–2000), MG Rover Group (2000–2006), Nanjing Automobile Group (2006–2011), and MG ...
The first car that can be described as a new MG, rather than a modified Morris was the MG 18/80 of 1928, which had a purpose-designed chassis and the first appearance of the traditional vertical MG grille. A smaller car was launched in 1929 with the first of a long line of Midgets starting with the M-Type based on a 1928 Morris Minor chassis ...
Later, a new chassis was designed so as to seat the driver lower in the car with even cleaner bodywork resulting in the EX 175 prototype. The later MG prototype EX 182 was very close to the final production MGA and was the car actually raced at Le Mans in 1955. Three MGA prototypes were entered in the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans. Two of the cars ...
Here are the other car models with the best resale value that round out KBB’s top 10: Toyota GR Supra: Starting price of $47,535 and five-year resale value of 57.2% Toyota Prius: Starting price ...
11. Purple. Depreciation: 7.3% less than average After coming in near the bottom of the rankings last year, purple and other jewel tones performed well this year, holding value better than average.
Buying a new car, truck, or SUV? Find out which car colors have the best and worst resale values when it comes to trade-in time, based on a study by iSeeCars. Buying a new car, truck, or SUV? ...
MG Motor followed up the release of the GS with a smaller SUV, the ZS, which went on to become the most popular MG model globally. In 2018, the GS was replaced by the MG HS. The first production electric car from MG is the eZS (ZS EV outside China), which was announced at the 2018 Guangzhou Auto Show in November. [48]
The car featured BMC's 1489 cc B type engine but, in the MG Magnette III (and its Riley sibling), performance was enhanced by fitting twin S.U. H.D.4 carburetters. [10] The interior featured a walnut veneer facia panel, door cappings and leather upholstery as well as safety glass windows. [10] A Mark III was tested by The Motor magazine in 1959.