Just occured to me, as it does from time to time, the thing I really really like about my moggy. It's the fact that you draw up behind ordinary boxes in a traffic queue with that bonnet mascot imposing itself in their rear mirror, just encroaching into their rear window!! Suppose a Rolls driver would feel a little more superior, but we do it cheaper! Also keep wondering why people stare as I go by- then realise that the car I am taking for granted is sitting in their "wow-look at that" department (or maybe its just my driving!) And of course theres the long lingering fart on the overrun
Any aspects which really stand out for you?
none at all really,
i had vans for good work horses and the car is nice to
but must admit never really classed themma s classics, and in my day they were old bangers and the only cars we could afford
I have often wondered this. Without trying to get all freudian on you I believe there must be something warm and motherly about them. It's the only car my kids travel in that is guarenteed to send them off to sleep - even at the age of 11 !
Older and more confused than I could ever imagine possible.
I like the steering wheel, it seems a proper size!!...the one in my plastic eurobox ( aka pretend car!!) is tiny and you seem to have to turn it loads of times to get the thing to change direction! Life in the Mog is simple, one turn in either direction at most is all you need!
Life is too short to own only one Minor
Gulliver 1969 Traveller, Green Machine 1967 2 door, Roxy 1967 4 door, Delilah 1960 convertible, Pheonix 1958 4 door, Francis 1953 4 door, Marilyn 1949 lowlight (1970 pick up & 1971 van both awaiting restoration)
I like the fact that I look under the bonnet and can tell what everything does. I don't always manage to but I at least feel that if anything goes Phut I could at a minimum change it, if not strip it down rebuild it and get it working again.
Paulk
[img]http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b359/paulk235/DSCF0807.jpg[/img]
1959 2dr Milly
Has now sat in back garden for 5 years :(
http://www.sadmog.morrisminor.com/
I love the exhaust note on the overrun and the fact that my friend's traveller convinced a man from accross the pond that "they even have Tudor cars" referring to his mother's Traveller.
For me its the Smile Factor.
When I first started driving they were still current (just) cars and were thought of as a little boring but if you wanted reliability and a car to start in all conditions that was cheap to run the Moggie it had to be
Cheers
Kevin
Lovejoy 1968 Smoke Grey Traveller (gone to a new home after13 years)
Yep, one small child standing next to his mother in a supermarket queue said "Mummy there's a car out there with a garden shed stuck to it's back!" They always make you smile
There is something about the view over the Morris Minor bonnet. The Beetle became an icon but the Morris is equally distinctive. Stand and look at one and the shape is great - just right, not cute, just timeless.
I like any car that can be fixed... and my cars seem to need a lot of that
Minors I love because they were just so well designed for their era. They have an amazing lack of major defects* which is a testament to the skill and dedication of the design team.
* - engine top steady and exhaust clamp are pretty much the only inherent faults which is amazing, unless you count the limited power and robustness of the early a-series running gear** which was foisted on morris by politics.
[** Having said that, the early A-series running gear is still as good as some of the competition at the time]
Ray. MMOC#47368. Forum moderator.
Jan 06: The Minor SII Africa adventure: http://www.minor-detour.com
Oct 06: back from Dresden with my Trabant 601 Kombi
Jan 07: back from a month thru North Africa (via Timbuktu) in a S3 Landy
June 07 - back from Zwickau Trabi Treffen
Aug 07 & Aug 08 - back from the Lands End to Orkney in 71 pickup
Sept 2010 - finally gave up breaking down in a SII Landy...
where to break down next?
2013... managed to seize my 1275 just by driving it round the block
One that has just occured to me as I waited, shivering at the side of the road (not my breakdown this time, more anon!), is that you can lounge back onto that bonnet and the warm curve wraps round your lower back a treat. Keep your shiatsu massagers, I'll have a moggy bonnet any day!