Why you’d want an MG Midget & Austin-Healey Sprite
After WW2, British sports cars were largely aimed at the US market – the few sold in the UK were too expensive for most motorists.
A thriving industry emerged for sports cars in kit form using more mundane parts (siring the likes of Lotus and Lola).
Leonard Lord at the British Motor Corporation saw an opportunity and commissioned Donald Healey to develop a prototype using Austin A30 running gear.
Healey snaffled rack-and-pinion steering from the Morris Minor, added hydraulic rear brakes and quarter-elliptic rear leaf springs.
The resulting Austin-Healey Sprite – and soon-to-follow MG Midget – showed that sports cars didnʼt have to be faster than the average saloon.
Sporting looks and sweet handling were enough, and for those who wanted (and could afford) a bit more, there was a huge range of factory tuning options available.
In 1960, Innocenti introduced a snappy, modern-looking version as the Italian-market Sprite; BMC followed a year later with the restyled MkII Sprite and MkI MG Midget, giving them subtly different trim (even different optional hardtops), positioning the Sprite as a no-frills version of the more pricey Midget.