MG Y

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MG Y-Type
1947 MG YA
Manufacturer MG Car Company
Production 1947-1953
8,336 built - all models
Predecessor MG VA
Successor MG ZA Magnette
Class sports saloon
MG YA
1950 MG YA
Production 1947-1951
6,151 built
Body style sports saloon
Engine 1250 cc XPAG 4 Cylinders Single SU Carburettor

The MG Y-Type was a small saloon car built by the MG Car Company between 1947 and 1953.

When production ceased in 1953 8,336 “Y” Types had been produced, the breakdown being: 6,151 “YA”s (including 9 cars supplied to Swiss and Italian custom coachbuilders for special bodies), 1,301 “YB”s and 884 “Y” Tourers.

Contents

[edit] Development and Launch

In the years immediately before the Second World War, MG had sought to supplement their popular range of ‘Midget’ sports cars with three saloons of various sizes and engine capacities. These were the “S”, “V” and “W” models. The MG factory at Abingdon on Thames had grown by developing what were in essence Morris based products and they were always to be closely associated with what was to become the Nuffield Organisation (Morris, Wolseley and later Riley). The “WA” had an engine capacity of 2,561 cc, the “SA” 2,288  cc and the smallest of the group, the “VA”, had an engine of 1,548 cc. The next development to the range was to include one more saloon, of smaller engine capacity than the “VA”, and for a component base the Cowley design office turned to Morris’s Ten-Four Series M saloon, which was introduced during 1938, and the smaller Eight Series E which was launched at the Earls Court Motor show the same year.

The prototype “Y” Type was constructed in 1939 with an intended launch at the Earls Court Motor show, the following year. However, as a result of the hostilities the public had to wait a further eight years before production commenced. All prototypes originating from the MG Factory at Abingdon were allocated numbers prefixed by the letters EX; this practice continued until the mid-fifties. Although the prototype of the MG “Y” Type was primarily a Morris concept from Cowley, much of the ‘fleshing out’ was completed at Abingdon. As a result it was allocated the prototype number EX.166.

When the car was launched the MG Sales Literature stated “A brilliant new Member of the famous MG breed. This new One and a Quarter Litre car perpetuates the outstanding characteristics of its successful predecessors – virile acceleration, remarkable ‘road manner,’ instant response to controls, and superb braking. A ‘lively’ car, the new One and a Quarter Litre provides higher standards of performance.” The UK price of the car was £525.0.0 ex works plus purchase tax of £146.11.8d.

[edit] Body and Chassis

Gerald Palmer was responsible for body styling and, in essence he took a Morris Eight Series E four-door bodyshell in pressed steel, added a swept tail and rear wings, and also a front-end MG identity in the shape of their well-known upright grille. The MG 1 1/4 Litre Saloon would retain the traditional feature of separately mounted headlights at a time when Morris was integrating headlamps into the front wing and it was also to have a separate chassis under this pressed-steel bodywork, even though the trend in the industry was towards ‘unitary construction’.

The car featured an independent front suspension layout designed by Gerald Plamer and Jack Daniels (an MG Draughtsman). Independent front suspension was very much the latest technology at the time and the “Y” Type became the first Nuffield product and one of the first British production cars with this feature. The separate chassis facilitated the ‘Jackall System’, which consisted of four hydraulically activated rams that were clamped to the chassis, two at the front and two at the rear. The jacks were connected to a Jackall Pump on the bulkhead that enabled the front, the back, or the entire car to be raised to facilitate a wheel change.

[edit] Engine

The power unit was a single carburettor version of the 1,250 cc engine used in the latest [[MG TB Midget|“TB” Midget]]. This engine, the XPAG, went on to power both the “TC” & “TD” Midgets. The MG Y Type saloon developed 46  bhp at 4,800rpm, with 58.5lb ft of torque at 2,400 rpm, the YT Tourer (with the higher lift camshaft and twin carburettors) develop 54 bhp. With the exception of only the Rover Ten, which managed 2 additional bhp, the “Y” Type had more power than other British saloons of similar size. Indeed at the time many manufacturers were still producing side valve engines.

[edit] Interior

The MG “Y” Type had an extremely high standard of interior furnishing and finish, in accordance with the best British traditions. The facing surfaces of all seats were leather, as were the door pockets. The rear of the front seats were made from Rexine, a form of leathercloth, which matched the leather fronts, as were the door panels themselves. A roller blind was fitted to the rear window as an anti-dazzle mechanism (not a privacy screen as many think).

Considerable use of wood was made in the internal trim of the “Y” Type, where it was a major feature of the inside finish. Door windows, front and rear screens were framed in burl walnut, and the instrument panel was set in a bookmatched veneer panel offsetting the glove box in front of the passenger.

The Instruments themselves, a speedometer (and clock) and a three-gauge cluster of oil pressure, fuel and charging (amps), were cleverly placed behind octagonal chrome frames. A subtle carry through of the MG badge theme that was to be replicated later in the MG TF.

The “YT” Tourer did not benefit from ‘displayed’ woodwork but had the same standard of seat trim. It did have more intsrumentation, in that there was a tachometer (or Rev counter) in front of the driver, the speedometer was positioned in front of the passenger with a central bank of subsidiary dials in the centre giving a similar sporting appearance to the TC with a "double scuttle" dash.

[edit] The YT Tourer

MG YT
Production 1948-1950
884 built
Body style 4-seat open tourer
Engine 1250 cc XPAG 4 Cylinders Twin SU Carburettors

In 1948 several (currently believed to be 9) “Y” Types (consisting of chassis, engines and some body parts) were imported into Switzerland and given cabriolet bodywork by various coachbuilders, such as J. H. Keller and Reinbolt & Christé.

The idea of the open four-seat tourer had been popular before the war and in theory there was still a market. As a result a “TC” specification of the XPAG engine was married to a pressed-steel open body with fully folding hood and coach built doors.

The MG “Y/T” was launched at the Motor Show in 1948. However, it was available for export only but would be available in both Right and Left hand drive models. Only 884 of these cars were produced when production ceased in 1950 - it was not the success that MG had hoped for, and indeed other British manufacturers were also having problems selling open tourer versions of their saloons.

[edit] The YB

MG YB
1952 MG YB
Production 1951-1953
1,301 built
Body style sports saloon
Engine 1250 cc XPAG 4 Cylinder Single SU Carburettor

In 1952 MG Car Company updated the “Y” Type and an improved model was launched, known as the “YB”. The “YB” had a completely new Lockheed braking system and a much more modern hypoid type of back axle.

Road holding was also improved by the introduction of smaller 15 inch wheels (the “Y” and the “Y/T” both had 16 inch wheels). The “YB” also had an anti-roll bar fitted to the front of the car and stronger shock absorbers, or dampers, were fitted.

Little else was changed about the car, which was by now looking extremely dated as single unitary body (or monocoque construction) was becoming common place. The YB soldiered on until the end of 1953 and the MG ZA Magnette was introduced in 1954.

[edit] References

Greater detail is provided in the specialist books on the subject: 'Let There Be Y’s' by David Lawrence, 'Y Type Saloons and Tourers' by John Lawson and 'MG Saloon Cars' by Andres Ditlev Clausager all of which are available from the MG Car Club Y Register. Please see the Book Review page on our website (http://www.mgytypes.org) for a review of these, and other books.

[edit] External links

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