Why you’d want an MGB roadster
Don Hayter’s masterwork, the MGB roadster is one of the best-proportioned sports cars ever built.
It’s also one of the easiest to drive, most reliable and most practical to own.
Bold claims? Not really – its huge sales success speaks for itself, through 18 years of production, despite few mechanical changes (and the addition of large polyurethane bumpers to meet 5mph collision regulations).
It’s popular to knock the B as nothing special, but what made it so was the fact that it was, well, just right.
Today the MG remains a really enjoyable car to own and drive, with no vices and very little in the way of major expenses to consider.
Any modern-classic roadster needs new cambelts regardless of mileage and has complex electronics that can fail if unused; a B has none of those.
If you only drive a few hundred miles a year it doesn’t suffer; if you do thousands, it laps it up.
Rust has long been the only major enemy of the B: it can be a real killer, but, with every panel available – even complete shells – it needn’t be the end of the road.