Showing posts with label Morgan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morgan. Show all posts

18 Dec 2014

Memorable Moments And Amazing Cars From 2014

Speedmonkey is all about cars. I've been running the site since 2012 and don't do it for money, but for the experiences it brings. 2014 has presented me with some amazing experiences.


The year started well when Morgan Motors got in touch. The email said, "We would like to invite you to visit our factory in Malvern to get to know Morgan, the new 3 Wheeler and the other cars in our range."

Oh wow, yes was my first thought. My second was that my son would love it. He'd enjoyed a trip to Lotus Cars in Hethel in 2013 so I asked if the visit could be arranged for half term.  Of course it could replied Morgan.

So son and I travelled up to Malvern. The factory tour was an eye opener. The land it stands on, in Pickersleigh Road, was bought by HFS Morgan in December 1913 and Morgan Motors has expanded and built new buildings to become the factory that churns out Morgan cars today. Actually, 'churns out' is a rather unkind phrase - the cars are hand-built.

The term hand-built is rather stretched by some car companies but not so Morgan. I loved the fact the louvres on the Plus 8's bonnet are not only hand pressed but their placement is done by eye.

The cars we drove were fantastically bonkers, especially the 3-Wheeler which is as impractical as an ashtray on a motorcycle. The engine vibrates, the cockpit is open and cold and there is no storage space but it is a wonderful experience and quite unlike any other car available. The Plus 8 was monstrously powerful and fast - It houses a 4.8 litre V8 yet weighs only 1,100kg. Son thoroughly enjoyed his day, and especially the drive in the 3-Wheeler.

The passion for the brand was evident in the emails from legendary motoring journalist (and 3-Wheeler owner) Peter Dron who ticked me off for not conducting my own 0-60 times and from a chap who has bought the Plus 8 press car and has written his own review of it for Speedmonkey.

The year was bookended with an invitation from Rolls Royce Motor Cars to attend a factory tour and drives in some of their cars. Rolls Royce was incorporated in 1904, just one year before Morgan, and still hand builds its cars today, at the Goodwood factory, which was opened on 1 January 2003.

The Rolls Royce factory is worlds apart from Pickersleigh Road. Being only 11 years old helps but it has the atmosphere of a forensics lab, with men and women beavering away crafting, refining and ultimately creating the finest cars in the world.

Which, when you drive them, you realise they are. What struck me about the Wraith and the Ghost II (both of which I took for a 90 minute spin) is not that are simply fast, enormous, luxurious, quiet, smooth and refined but that they both have another, almost ethereal, quality about them which transcends the usual driving experience. Close the door and pull away and you are separated from the mundanities of the world in a manner that no other car is able to do.

Back to reality and a November appointment with Porsche at Silverstone to try out their 2014 range of cars at the newly extended track at their Experience Centre.

I love driving road cars on track. You are able to really go for it and test the limits of braking, acceleration and cornering without worrying about the myriad hazards on our roads. It's also bloody good fun, especially in a Porsche.

A track test allows you to find and critique the nuances of a car by pounding round the same circuit, the same corners time after time. It was after 20 or so laps of focussed driving I came to the conclusion that the Porsche Cayman GTS is perhaps the best driver's car on the road today.

I took a Porsche Macan Turbo for a spin on track then a Macan S Diesel for a drive on the roads around Silverstone. Experiencing both conditions highlighted how focussed and agile the Macan's chassis is on track but how pliant and able to soak up bumps it is on the road.

One of my favourite days of 2014 was spent in the company of Volvo and Polestar. I attended the UK launch of the Volvo V60 Polestar. We spent the morning driving through the home counties, lunched at a lovely pub near where I live then headed for Dunsfold Aerodrome, home to the Top Gear Test Track.

I was given some expert tuition by a Swedish touring car ace then let loose on my own in the V60 Polestar for several laps of the track. The car proved to be wonderful and the thrill of driving it at the Top Gear Test Track is my fondest memory of the year.

In between the factory tours and track tests I drove a variety of machinery in 2014.

Back in May I attended a Mercedes-Benz media day at its base in Brooklands. I drove the GLA, G-Class and S.  The GLA turned out to be far better than expected (I don't really like the A-Class on which it's based), the G-Class far worse (it's not a great deal better than a slightly posh Defender) and the S-Class was wonderful.

I drove two Range Rovers this year. In January I had a Range Rover Vogue SDV8 for a week. It turned out to be the best all rounder I'd ever driven, although at £85k it's not cheap. Later in the year I had a Range Rover Sport SDV6 for a few days and used it to drive to Cologne and back with four of us on board.  There could hardly have been a better car for the trip. It's spacious and utterly superb on a long journey. Does 135mph on the autobahn too.

Staying in the JLR family I got a few days with a Jaguar F-Type V8 S. Damn that thing is unhinged.  No other car flies so close to the spirit of a TVR than the V8 F.  Just tickle the throttle and the tail pops out like a an excitable Jack Russell.

The Citroen C4 Cactus was interesting in different ways. With its air bumps, shape, innovative materials, 965kg kerb weight and low price it's a brilliant car, although it is too slow for my liking. I liked the Cactus from the moment I first saw photos of it and over the course of a week it shone in a way that a similarly priced Fiesta or Corsa wouldn't.

Taking of the Corsa I attended the UK launch. The 2014 version is shockingly good compared to its predecessors.  The new 1.0 engine is a peach but the 2014 Vauxhall Corsa SRi is the one to have.

The Subaru WRX STi was relaunched in 2014 and I was there to test it for Speedmonkey. The chassis is great but the engine and huge turbo-lag are far too old school when compared to the competition.

For a similar price you could buy a Volkswagen Golf R which redefines the hot hatch class and for £25k you can buy an Audi S1 which is like the Golf R, but smaller.

In amongst the SUVs, hot hatches, mega-expensive saloons and super-pricey sports cars I spent a week with a Toyota GT86.  Now 2 years old the GT86 is still unique in its offering and still delivers razor sharp handling and an outrageously waggy tail for a reasonable price.

My last test drive of the year was in a Maserati Ghibli. Sitting in the reception area of Ferrari North Europe was quite a thrill. The car itself was rather fine but didn't have an aura of 'special' that I expected from a Maserati.

2014 was a great year although at times I did feel a slave to the constant review writing (on top of a full time day-job). In 2015 I am going to turn down at least some of the invites that come my way and   will be more selective when choosing press cars. Something like the Mitsubishi Outlander might generate hits to Speedmonkey but the week spent with it and hours spent writing about it were not much fun.

The first car I will take delivery of in 2015 for a week long test is a Jaguar XFR-S. This will set the tone.

By Matt Hubbard






10 Dec 2014

Living With - Morgan Plus 8

In March 2014 I drove the Morgan Plus 8 press car and wrote a review of it.  Morgan Motors went on to sell the car to a chap called Peter Jenks who has charmingly called it Tarka, "Because it's brown and 'otter than the Roadster."


Peter has kindly sent us his thoughts on Tarka, and compares it to his 2009 Roadster, Aldermog.
Morgan Plus 8
Peter Jenks' Morgan Plus 8

Plus 8 vs. Roadster…


They looks superficially similar, but how different are they?


I’ve now driven Tarka the 2014 Plus 8 around the roads I know, so I can start to make a comparison whilst Aldermog, our 2009 Roadster, is still fresh in my mind.

Let’s start with “Fit and Finish”. In many ways Tarka is very much improved: under the dash and into the footwells the soft leather extends as it does in my wife’s Mercedes, a vast improvement. It is actually quite difficult to see or feel any lose wires. But there are still some hangovers from the Roadster, for example the hex head screws holding the door hinges are still mild steel and have rusted: why, oh why, can’t they use stainless steel? The hinges are stainless anyway.

Moving on to comfort: this is where the difference shows. The car rides like a modern car, the suspension is controlled and the car passes over small road damage almost imperceptibly and deals with sleeping policemen without a concern. The ride is actually more controlled than that of our Mercedes E 350 Coupe. Inside the high back sports seats with seat heaters are as good as any high end seat, but for the broad of hip they might be a bit too snug! The extra 10cm cockpit width makes a big difference on a long run. I got the dealer, Williams Automobiles, to trim the inside of the side screens, this has finished off the cockpit perfectly and it is draft free. The hood has a separate lining and driving 'hood up' it is warm and dry, indeed the heater is powerful and infinitely controllable with modern electrically driven controls.

The radio is mounted in sight of the driver, a novel improvement and the car comes with a full 6 speaker installation. I’ve fitted my Alpine CDE 136 BT and it works perfectly: it is a DAB unit and as in the Roadster the DAB reception with a simple powered splitter works very well. The sound quality is as good as any other basic sound system in a modern car.

Overall the car is very significantly quieter than Aldermog, at least until the loud pedal is exercised, when it produces a wonderful rasp from the exhaust, drops a gear or two and rockets forward.

There a few in-cockpit negatives, two that are easy to sort are the lack of a transmission tunnel locker and the ever useless door straps. I’ve fitted Librands door checks: this also replaces the rusting set screws and I’m working with Austin at Williams to develop a locker to go over the transmission tunnel between the seats. It will also act as an elbow rest! The more difficult challenge is the insane open ended glove box under the dash. Quite how this has been allowed to exist is beyond me: all it needs is a small 10cm x 10cm square of aluminium attached to the base of the glove box. Easy in construction but very difficult now.

Finally, to the important bit: how does it drive? I’ve only lightly explored the envelope, due to a combination of darkness, wet roads and lack of time. But Tarka certainly has lots of power and the right foot needs to be very controlled on cold wet and greasy roads, I was driving into a supermarket car park and needed to apply a little throttle to get over some speed bumps: the back end stepped out sideways about a foot…the road was wet and perhaps there was diesel about, but the sort of care any biker will understand is needed.

On the open road it is another matter: the car can be driven as a lazy tourer, letting the smooth auto box do everything or by putting the gear lever into “Sport” and using the steering wheel paddles it becomes a quick and responsive thing. The noise when accelerating hard is sinful, it sounds exactly how a big V8 should but so often doesn’t. My “friends” at the BMW dealership were most impressed, not just with the noise but the overall product. Tarka’s unusual colour was also considered to be really good, distinctive yet subtle.

Manoeuvring in confined spaces is not as convenient as in Aldermog, other than the hydraulic power steering is a bit lighter: but not massively so. The big problem is the lock, or lack of it. The lock is worse than Aldermog, quite how that can be I’m not sure! Once on the road I like it, much faster response to input than Aldermog and some semblance of feedback, not much but more than the electric power assist on my BMW. I know there are those who feel for track use the steering is slow to respond to rapid steering inputs. Perhaps, but that isn’t going to worry me: I have little time for the “how fast is it round Nurburgring?” method of comparing cars.

Driving at night showed the 7” headlamps up as weak. I’ve asked Williams to investigate fitting a pair of Wipac auxiliary main beam lights, they are certainly needed. Meanwhile I’ll fit the head lamp units with LED sidelights I had on Aldermog, they are better than the standard units.

By Peter Jenks







5 Nov 2014

Watch How Morgan Motors Makes Its Cars

Morgan has just released a wonderful video showing how its cars are made


Fresh from my tour around the Rolls Royce factory and drives in their cars this video took me back to when I did the same with Morgan.

Morgan is a much smaller operation of course and its cars are constructed using different technologies and materials but the end result of both is a car handcrafted in England by skilled artisans.

If you haven't yet taken a tour of the Morgan factory you should, it's a treat for any petrolhead.



Morgan 3 Wheeler review
Morgan Plus 8 review

By Matt Hubbard



3 Sept 2014

Morgan Has A Special Projects Division And The SP1 Is Its First Car

Arguably every Morgan is a special project seeing as they're hand built under one roof but that obviously wasn't good enough for the Malvern firm.  As such Morgan Special Projects Division was created and they've just revealed this, the SP1.

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division
Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Rather stunning isn't it.  The SP1 will be shown at Salon Prive and is intended to showcase the skills and craftsmanship of the workforce, some of whom have worked at the factory since leaving school.

The SP1 is powered by a naturally aspirated Ford 3.7 litre V6 engine (also in the V6 Roadster) which has a bespoke engine management system and sports exhaust.

The chassis is built from rigid steel and the suspension is new and unique to Morgan.  The body is formed by hand beaten aluminium panels and the body frame is made from Ash Wood, combined with African Bubinga Red Hardwood.

Check out the photos for the rest of the detail of the Morgan SP1.
Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division
Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division
Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division
Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division
Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division
Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Add caption

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

Morgan SP1 from Morgan Special Projects Division

By Matt Hubbard




10 Mar 2014

2014 Morgan Plus 8 Review

Matt Hubbard drives the new Morgan Plus 8

2014 Morgan Plus 8

So you've got £85k to spend on a car.  It will be a second car so must be rear wheel drive, possessed of character, sound fantastic, be a convertible if possible, be a head turner as much as a performance machine and be brutally fast.

An Aston Martin might fit the bill but they start at £100k and the DB9 is being completely revised soon. A Porsche 911 Carrera cabriolet ticks most of the boxes except for the fact it's unlikely to stand out from the crowd enough, its engine note isn't that brawny and, well, it's German.  A Jaguar then.  The F Type V8 S costs £80k and comes in some rather fetching colours.  Sounds good too.

The elephant that you might not have even thought was in the room, because you might not have thought about it in the first place, is the Morgan Plus 8.

Once you have driven both the choice between the two comes down to how much you care to admit each car's character fits your character.  Here's my F-Type review.  You're reading the Plus 8 review.

The Morgan Plus 8 looks like all Morgan four wheeler cars have looked since the 1950s.  Running boards, long, narrow footprint, long bonnet with engine at the front, occupants squeezed in at the back.

But the Plus 8 isn't much like Morgans of old under the hand-formed aluminium bodywork.  The shape might look a little smoother than the 1960s Plus 4 (which still exists in largely the same form today) but the chassis is nothing like it.  Whilst a Plus 4 is constructed from wood with some aluminium the Plus 8 uses the Aero Supersports' underpinnings, and that means lots of aluminium with just a bit of wood.

An Aero Supersports costs £100k.  That means the Plus 8 is a bit of a bargain because it uses the same chassis and the same BMW sourced 4.8 litre V8, which sounds amazing and has 367bhp.  Oh, and the Plus 8 weighs 1,100kg.
2014 Morgan Plus 8

The colour of the test car was metallic brown.  It looks great in the flesh but if you don't like it you have 999 more colours to choose from.

If you plan to tour in your Plus 8 then you'll need to pack light.  It has no boot.  You can elect to buy a luggage rack but that's it.

Open the door and you'll notice that, like in Lotuses (also built from aluminium), the sills are wide.  Add in the width of the running boards and you need to either step in with something of a leap or reverse in, with backside hitting the seat before swinging your legs round.

The cabin is beautifully appointed.  The leather (you can choose pretty much any colour, or even non-leather if you're a Paul McCartney type) is rather lusciously fitted everywhere possible.  The dials look gorgeous and the metalwork of the handbrake, gear lever and pedals is top notch.

There's an airbag where you think the glovebox should be but there is a space underneath that for storage - with a handy 12v socket too.

The only let-down is the steering wheel which looks rather ordinary.  The good news (but it's a secret so shhh) is that a new steering wheel is on the way.  I've seen it and it looks fab.

Aside from the space beneath the glovebox you get leather door pockets and some space behind the seats - but not much.  The Plus 8 has no cupholder, which is remiss.  Morgan should go and take a look at Lotus' milled aluminium beverage receptacle and copy it.

The Plus 8 has a key and an ignition but you still need to press a button marked Start to fire up the engine.  In other cars this would seem frivolous but in the Plus 8 it adds to the sense of drama.

You sit low and peer through the flimsy looking windscreen down the long bonnet (which is beaten, shaped and shaved by hand) with its louvres (which are individually pressed by hand and placed by eye with no measuring tools) and you see the wheel arches and headlights.  Even at a standstill the view is emotionally moving.
2014 Morgan Plus 8

The seats are extremely comfortable and supportive.  The gear lever sits slightly under the dash but is no problem to use cleanly.  The steering wheel and pedals are perfectly placed.

Press Start and hear the V8 fire into life.  You can specify rear or side exit exhausts.  The noise from either configuration is a deep, sonorous rumble with the odd crackle.  Even at high revs it retains a deep note.  If you opted for side exit exhausts the sound is louder in the cabin, but that's a good thing.

Select Drive and off we go.

With such huge power and such light weight the Plus 8 should be a horrible, fearsome beast.  But it isn't.  Mindful of the fact it has no traction control (TVR weren't the last of the hairy chested driver's cars) you start slowly and treat the throttle with maximum respect.

But really there's no need to drive it slowly.  It has ample grip and a rather lazy power delivery, even if the amount of power it can deliver is ultimately huge.  You can quite easily lose rear end grip if you're aggressive with the throttle but when that happens it happens with lots of notice and in a rather gentlemanly fashion.

Would sir like the rear end to step out?  Yes please that would be lovely.

I've driven lots of cars with more power but who's delivery is normally muted by traction control.  Turn the power nanny off and the wheels break traction faster than a cat on an ice rink.

Not so in the Morgan.  It was designed from the off without electronic intervention so the chassis copes admirably and with warning.
2014 Morgan Plus 8 interior

This could be something to do with the aluminium underpinnings.  From the Exige to the F-Type, every aluminium chassis'd car I've tested has had superior handling and hasn't needed to resort to active suspension or four wheel steering to make up for a steel chassis.

The delivery may be slightly lazy but it isn't without ferocity if you press on.  The gearbox is more than up to the job.  It's a ZF unit so is comparable with the best in the business.

The steering is sharp.  Turn in is brilliantly compliant and grip is more than adequate.  The Plus 8 could do a passable impression of a race car but, unlike in a race car, vibrations are well damped and the ride is firm rather than jarring.

Yes, the suspension is quite stiff.  It's not overly so but more testing mileage and subsequent fettling could possibly lend it a smoother ride.

All this combines to make the Morgan Plus 8 a brilliantly fantastic car to drive.  After an hour behind the wheel I was massively enthused by it.  It's an intoxicating experience that transports the driver away from the norm and into a netherworld of cars that look and feel old but that have modern power trains and chassis dynamics.

No other manufacturer manages to achieve this.

The Plus 8 is not practical.  It has almost no storage space, the roof is manual and takes a minute to put up (and requires a knack), it consumes fuel at a vast rate and it hasn't been crash tested to death or  driven for a million miles before launch.

Consider what it is before purchase.  Know its limitations.  Understand that you cannot drive it every day through the deep mid-winter and expect it to look shiny and new come spring.  Appreciate and take account of all of this and you can't beat a Morgan Plus 8.

It is a sensationally involving car to drive, to look at and, I presume, to own.

It's also good value when you compare it to an Aston Martin or a Jag, and it depreciates slower than most cars.  The original 2012 press car cost £85k when new and is currently selling on eBay for £59k.    It has 15,000 miles on the clock which is huge for a Morgan.  Take a look at older Morgans for sale and you'll see the price will eventually start to rise.

Before I drove the Morgan Plus 8 my expectations were that it would be a reasonably involving car with plenty of poke and many foibles.  My expectations were exceeded by a factor of ten - in a good way.  If I could buy one I would - but I'd wait for the new steering wheel.

Stats:

Price - £85,200
Engine - 4.8 litre V8 petrol
Transmission - 6 speed automatic
0-60mph - 4.5 seconds
Top Speed - 155mph
Power - 367bhp
Torque - 370 lb ft
Economy - 26mpg
CO2 - 256 g/km
Kerb weight - 1,100kg
2014 Morgan Plus 8

2014 Morgan Plus 8

2014 Morgan Plus 8 dashboard

2014 Morgan Plus 8

Review by Matt Hubbard


7 Mar 2014

Speedmonkey Goes To The Geneva Motor Show (And Man Of The Show Award)

I've just flown back from two days in Geneva. But it wasn't all spent at the motor show

Volvo at Geneva Motor Show

I went to Geneva as a guest of Castrol.  I met, at Heathrow on Wednesday morning, with the Castrol team and bloggers Oliver Bock-Brown of oversteer.org.uk and Vince Pettit of TheCheckeredFlag.co.uk.

Castrol has a new product out soon called Edge Titanium FST which was ultimately the reason for our trip.  After we touched down in Geneva we checked into a rather swanky hotel, took in some very late lunch and went for a stroll along the shores of Lake Geneva which laps right up to Geneva itself.

The evening of the first day saw a trip down to the CERN Globe for the Castrol presentation.  It was part of a week of presentations to worldwide media to prepare us for the full launch of the new product this summer.  It also introduced us to something called the Titanium Trials.
The CERN globe

The first of these trials is called Titanium Strong Blackout.  The information provided on the night was scarce but it involves professional racing drivers driving in the dark around a barely lit course and will take place in late spring.

After the presentation I was still none the wiser really but when I heard about second trial, which I was told about in full (in confidence so I'm not going to repeat it here) I was pretty excited.  That promises to be a true test of man and speed.  Watch this space.

The second day was a trip to the Geneva Motor Show.  The show sees most manufacturers displaying their latest machinery in a series of vast halls.  Geneva is quite small so the centre of the city, where we stayed, is only a short shuttle hop to the exhibition centre, which itself is next door to the airport.

It's rather odd walking round a hall full of cars with not one engine being started.  In that regard the motor show at the Goodwood Festival of Speed is a more involving spectacle for the average petrolhead.

Notwithstanding that the manufacturers take the Geneva Motor Show very seriously.  They all spend a fortune on their stands and many display their latest models or concepts for the first time either in Europe or the world.

The Germans all had huge, shiny stands, Renault had a rather funky display, with Twingos displayed on little revolving hillocks, Volvo built a uniquely Swedish display of coolness and Ferrari had a small display with just a few cars, but it attracted the largest crowds.

Over the course of the next week I'll focus on some cars and manufacturers and let you know what I think were the most important cars at Geneva.

I'll end with the Speedmonkey man of Geneva award which goes to James Gilbert of Morgan.  James is a salesman, their digital dude (i.e. he's behind the Twitter and Facebook accounts), media co-ordinator (he showed me around there factory two weeks ago) and a host on the Morgan stand.

Whilst all other manufacturer PR teams had gone home (I went on the first public day) James was there pressing the flesh and flogging Morgans.  The vast majority of Morgan sales are made out of the UK so James' time in Geneva is taken up from early in the morning to late in the evening glad handing rich looking European gentlemen, answering their questions and placing their orders.

Well done James!
Morgan Motors at the Geneva Motor Show
James, on the left 

By Matt Hubbard


25 Feb 2014

2014 Morgan 3 Wheeler Review

Matt Hubbard reviews the 2014 Morgan 3 Wheeler.

2014 Morgan 3 Wheeler

In 1909 Harry (HFS) Morgan created a three wheeled car.  In 1910 he founded Morgan Motors.  In 1911 Morgan displayed three wheelers at the Olympia motor show.  In 1912 The Morgan Motor Company was created as a limited company in order to produce three wheeled cars.  Four wheel car production started in 1950.  Three wheeled car production stopped in the 1950s.

In 2011 Morgan displayed a new 3 Wheeler at the Geneva Motor Show and shortly afterwards it entered production.  Morgan builds 1,200 cars a year of which approximately 300 are 3 Wheelers.

In early 2014 the 3 Wheeler was revised.  My test car was the 2014 model.

It looks like nothing else on the market.  It is made like nothing else on the market.  It sounds and drives like nothing else on the market.

The chassis is constructed from steel tubing and ash wood.  Yes, wood.  The body is aluminium panels, formed by hand, over an ash frame.  Yes, more wood.

The engine is a 2 litre S & S V-twin motorcycle unit which produces 115bhp, of which 80bhp makes it through to the road.  The gearbox is a Mazda MX5 unit.  Final drive to the single rear wheel is via a belt.

The 2014 3 Wheeler gets improved cooling, steering response and stability, increased chassis stiffness, a wider range of graphics, a 30 month warranty and smoother power delivery and reduced vibration.

The 3 Wheeler is small.  It is essentially a long tub with the engine at the front and the passenger compartment behind, front wheels sticking out of the bodywork and the single driven wheel fared in at the very rear.

It has a boot in which the tonneau cover and a couple of squishy bags can be stowed.  Small leather pockets are sewn into the sides of the car.  The passenger footwell is very long. Unless it is occupied by someone very tall another bag, or helmet, can be stored in there.
2014 Morgan 3 Wheeler

The seats and steering wheel are fixed.  The driver gets adjustable pedals.  The seats are comfortable leather-trimmed and are figure hugging from the waist down (very tight if you are on the larger side) and supportive.  The steering wheel is quite high.

The feeling is that you sit low and peer down the bonnet.  There are separate, tiny windscreens ahead of the driver and passenger but it has no doors and no roof.

To get in the 3 Wheeler is like getting in a bespoke racing car. Step over the side, stand on the seat, adjust your..ahem...trouser area, slide yourself in and belt up.

The footwell is narrow and the pedals take up all of the room.  There's no clutch foot rest because there is simply no room for one.  The engine might be mounted at the front but the 5-speed Mazda gearbox is quite large for such a small car and steals a lot of space.

The dash controls are extremely simple.  Revs, speedo, lights, indicators, heated seats (if specified) and not a lot else.  It does have a 12 volt socket tucked away under the dash.

Insert the ignition key, flip up the Spitfire bomb release-alike cover on the Start button and hit the button itself.

Oh yes it's a V-twin motorcycle engine alright.  It sound like one and it vibrates like one.

If you hadn't smiled yet you start to do so at this point.  The twin exhausts (one down each side) and engine create an equally mellifluous racket.  Dab the throttle and the V-twin makes even more noise and produces even more vibrations.

The floor hinged clutch (beautifully engineered if you care to look down the footwell) is heavy.  Engage first gear via the delightfully smooth gearbox and pull away.
2014 Morgan 3 Wheeler

You know how I said before the 3 Wheeler drives like nothing else.  Multiply that by ten.  The first half mile feels plain weird.  Your elbow hangs over the side of the car (you could touch the ground if you wanted to but I'd advise against it), you look down the bonnet with the tiny windscreen half in and half out of your vision, you try to deal, mentally, with the cruiser motorcycle sound and power delivery and you pray it doesn't rain.

The car is narrow but road placement is initially difficult, because you can see the front wheel on the drivers side.  You drive too close to the centre of the road.  The steering is light, it has no power assistance - the car only weighs 550kg - and doesn't need it.

Power delivery is linear.  Lots of torque and an easy going gearbox make progress smooth and rapid.  Very rapid.  0-60mph takes 4.5 seconds*.

Whilst the power delivery might be smooth in terms of acceleration it's not smooth in terms of the occupants being shaken to pieces.  A V-twin is by its nature unbalanced.  This is felt throughout the car, despite the engine being rubber mounted.  The wing mirrors vibrate, the rear view mirror vibrates, the fillings in your teeth vibrate.

The steering is precise - race car precise.  Initial turn in is fantastically good for a car with such skinny tyres and grip through the corners, whilst not quite like a cat on a velcro carpet, is impressive.

If you're going to lose traction it will be from take-off and it's the single driven wheel that will let go with a squeal and a rise of revs.  The front end, on normal roads and at legal speeds won't lose grip.
2014 Morgan 3 Wheeler

The driving experience is raw, exposed, focussed, brilliant, addictive, intoxicating and quite unique.  The sheer force of character of the car is seen at a standstill and felt through every fibre of your body on the go.

Above 40mph the effect of the exposed cockpit and low sides starts to be felt.  The wind in your hair becomes the wind in your eyes, mouth, nostrils and down the back of your neck.  If you wear a hat it will blow off unless it is secured in place.  This adds to the experience, but precautions should be taken if driving in winter - coat, gloves, goggles, hat that ties up under the chin.  Maybe even a helmet.

You can cruise through town and attract stares from onlookers or you can hoon along your favourite roads and have a better and more thrilling time than you would on a roller-coaster.

Every corner is a visceral thrill.  Driving at speed in a straight line is tremendous fun.  Communication with the road is direct and undiluted.  Minute adjustments to the controls deliver  instant results.  At 70mph you try and yell a joyous affirmation to the world that is the best car you could be driving on this road at this point in time but find you can't because the wind has taken your breath and voice away.

The Morgan 3 Wheeler is a completely impractical proposition, but if you want practical then go buy an SUV and die of boredom.  3 Wheeler owners will have another car for ferrying the family around, travelling long distances and attending business meetings but they will use their Morgan on any other journey.  If you have one you will want to use it.

As with any other Morgan the 3 Wheeler is built on site in Malvern, you can choose from one of 1,000 colours, a range of designs, graphics and options and you can go and watch your car being built if you like.  Alternatively you can opt to purchase a photographic record of its construction.

The Morgan 3 Wheeler is the most unusual car I have ever driven, but it is one of the best.

* Note: An owner has written to me disputing the 0-60mph time and saying just under 7 seconds is nearer the mark.

Stats:


Price - £31,140
Engine 2 litre V-twin
Transmission - 5 speed manual
0-60mph - 4.5 seconds
Top Speed - 115mph
Power - 85bhp
Torque - N/A
Economy - N/A
Weight - 550kg
CO2 - N/A
2014 Morgan 3 Wheeler

2014 Morgan 3 Wheeler

2014 Morgan 3 Wheeler

Review by Matt Hubbard


23 Nov 2013

Spotted - £30k-odd sportscars, which would you buy?

Graham King needs some theoretical car buying advice.


In a parallel universe somewhere, I have £30k-£40k to spend on a daily-driver sportscar. I want a manual gearbox, a 0-60mph time of five seconds or less and powerslides on demand. The choice is mind-boggling. Where would your money go?

Aston Martin V8 Vantage One for sale
Engine: 4282cc V8 Power: 380bhp 0-60mph: 4.9secs Top speed: 175mph

Pros
Gorgeous outside and in.
Sublime handling.
Surprisingly practical.
It’s an Aston.

Cons
Doesn’t feel all that fast.
Very wide.
Bit of a WAG’s car.
Useless sat nav.

Audi R8 4.2 V8 One for sale
Engine: 4163cc V8 Power: 414bhp 0-60mph: 4.5secs Top speed: 187mph

Pros
Four-wheel-drive security.
Very comfortable and refined.
It’ll never break.
Open-gated gearlever.

Cons
A lot of tastelessly modified ones about.
Spec can be a bit stingy.
Gigantic blind spots.
Do you really want an Audi?

BMW M3 4.0 V8 One for sale
Engine: 3999cc V8 Power: 414bhp 0-60mph: 4.6secs Top speed: 155mph

Pros
Gloriously driftable chassis.
Searing engine and slick gearbox.
Your mates can come along.
With their luggage.

Cons
Limited top speed.
Rather plain styling and interior.
Can be hard work on long journeys.
Would cost a lot in rear tyres.

Honda NSX One for sale
Engine: 3179cc V6 Power: 276bhp 0-60mph: 5.5secs Top speed: 170mph

Pros
Masterpiece of an engine.
Senna-tuned handling.
Unburstable reliability.  
Telling people you drive a Honda.

Cons
Least quick of this group.
Terrible interior.
20-odd year-old design.
Ride quality.

Lotus Evora One for sale
Engine: 3456cc V6 Power: 276bhp 0-60mph: 4.8secs Top speed: 163mph

Pros
Trademark epic handling.
Great ride.
Toyota engine should be reliable.
It might do 30mpg.

Cons
Not much space.
Questionable build quality.
Nasty aftermarket entertainment system.
Styling not all that exciting.

Morgan Aero 8 One for sale
Engine: 4398cc V8 Power: 333bhp 0-60mph: 4.4secs Top speed: 160mph

Pros
Seriously quick.
Wonderful craftsmanship.
Massive charisma.
You’ll feel like Biggles.

Cons
Challenging styling.
Ludicrously hard ride.
Tiny boot.
You’ll spend a lot of time defending yourself.

Noble M12 GTO-3R One for sale
Engine: 2967cc V6 Power: 352bhp 0-60mph: 3.7secs Top speed: 170mph

Pros
Extremely quick.
Telepathic handling.
Surprisingly comfortable.
Wastegate woosh.

Cons
Not even slightly practical.
Where would you get parts?
“Doesn’t it have a Mondeo engine?”
Perhaps too racy for everyday use.

Porsche 911 Carrera S One for sale
Engine: 3824cc F6 Power: 350bhp 0-60mph: 4.6secs Top speed: 182mph

Pros
It’s a 911.
Fantastic ride, handling, performance.
Everyday usability.  
The best all-rounder of this group?

Cons
It’s a 911.
Do you really trust the handling?
Spec-sensitive.
Too much bullshit spouted about it.


So that’s the choice. Personally, it would be a toss-up between Aston, Audi and Honda. But which would you buy? Comment or tweet to let us know your thoughts.

Incidentally, though I buy into the ‘many worlds’ theory that suggests there’s an infinite number of universes with an infinite number of Grahams, living an infinite number of different lives, it brings up one crucial question. If it’s true, why am I stuck in this universe, not the one where I have an eleven figure bank balance and I’m married to Mila Kunis?

Article by Graham King