BRITISH MOTOR CORPORATION


The 'British Motor Corporation' (BMC) was a UK vehicle company, formed by the merger of the Austin Motor Company and the Nuffield Organisation (parent of the Morris car company, MG, Riley and Wolseley) in 1952.

Contents
Organisation
BMC Farina
BMC Cars
"Inherited" Models
BMC Designs
Austin
MG
Morris
Riley
BMC Project Numbers
BMC Commercial Vehicles
Car based light vans
Light Vans
Light Trucks
BMC agricultral vehicles
The end of BMC
See also

Organisation


A BMC share certificate.

BMC was the largest British car company of its day, with (in 1952) 39 percent of British output, producing a wide range of cars under brand names including Austin, Morris, MG, Austin-Healey, Wolseley as well as commercial vehicles and agricultural tractors. The first chairman was Lord Nuffield (William Morris) but he was replaced in August 1952 by Austin's Leonard Lord who continued in that role until his 65th birthday in 1961 but handing over, in theory at least, the managing director responsibilities to his deputy George Harriman in 1956.
A 1963 Austin Mini Super-Deluxe
The Mini was BMC's all time best seller

BMC's headquarters were at the Austin plant at Longbridge, near Birmingham and Austin was the dominant partner in the group mainly because of the chairman. The use of Morris engine designs was dropped within 3 years and all new car designs were coded ADO from "Austin Drawing Office". The Longbridge plant was up to date, having been thoroughly modernised in 1951, and compared very favourably with Nuffield's 16 different and often old fashioned factories scattered over the English Midlands. Austin's management systems however, especially cost control and marketing were not as good as Nuffield's and as the market changed from a shortage of cars to competition this was to tell. The biggest selling car, the Mini, was famously analysed by Ford Motor Company who concluded that BMC were losing £30 on every one sold. The result was that although volumes held up well throughout the BMC era, market share fell as did profitability and hence investment in new models, resulting eventually in the merger with Leyland Motor Corporation.
At the time of the mergers, there was a well established dealership network for each of the marques. Among the car-buying British public there was a tendency of loyalty to a particular marque and marques appealed to different market segments. This meant that marques competed against each other in some areas, though some marques had a larger range than others. The Riley and Wolseley models were selling in very small numbers. Styling was also getting distinctly old fashioned and this caused Leonard Lord, in an unusual move for him, to call upon the services of an external stylist.

BMC Farina


A 1965 Riley 4/72

In 1958, BMC hired Pinin Farina to redesign its entire car line. This resulted in the creation of three "Farina" saloons, each of which was badge-engineered to fit the various BMC car lines:
The compact Farina model bowed in 1958 with the Austin A40 Farina. This was the first hatchback car ever produced. A Mark II A40 Farina appeared in 1961 and was produced through 1967. These small cars used the ''A-Series'' engine.
The mid-sized Farinas were launched in 1958 with the Wolseley 15/60. Other members of the group included the Riley 4/68, Austin A55 Cambridge Mk. II, MG Magnette Mk. III, and Morris Oxford V. Later, the design was licensed in Argentina and produced as the Di Tella 1500/Traveller/Argenta. The mid-size cars used the ''B-Series'' straight-4 engine.
Most of these cars lasted only through to 1961, though the Di Tellas remained for four more years. They were replaced with a new Farina body style and most were renamed. These were the Austin A60 Cambridge, MG Magnette Mk. IV, Morris Oxford VI, Riley 4/72, and Wolseley 16/60. These mostly remained in production until 1968, with no rear wheel drive replacement produced.
Farina also designed a large car. Launched in 1959 as the Austin A99 Westminster, Vanden Plas Princess 3-Litre, and Wolseley 6/99, it used the large ''C-Series'' straight-6 engine. The large Farinas were updated in 1961 as the Austin A110 Westminster, Vanden Plas Princess 3-Litre Mk. II, and Wolseley 6/110. These remained in production until 1968.

BMC Cars


"Inherited" Models


Austin



Austin A125 Sheerline 1947-1954

Austin A135 Princess 1947-1956

Austin A40 Sports 1950-1953

Austin A70 Hereford 1950-1954

Austin A30 1951-1956

Austin A40 Devon 1947-1952

MG



MG TD 1949-1953

MG Y 1947-1953

Morris



Morris Minor 1948-1971

Morris Oxford (Series MO)1948-1954

Morris Six 1948-1953

Riley



Riley RM series 1945-1955

Wolseley



Wolseley 4/50 1948-1953

Wolseley 6/80 1948-1954

Wolseley Oxford Taxi 1947-1955


BMC Designs


Austin


Austin A40 Somerset 1952-1954

Austin A40 Cambridge 1954-1958

Austin A90 Westminster 1954-1968

Austin Metropolitan 1954-1961

Austin A35 1956-1959

Austin Princess IV 1956-1959

Austin A40 Farina 1958-1967

Austin A55 Cambridge 1959-1969

Austin Mini 1959-1989

Austin 1100/1300 1963-1974

Austin 1800 1964-1975

Austin 3-Litre 1967-1971

Austin-Healey



Austin-Healey 100 1953-1959

Austin-Healey 3000 1959-1968

Austin-Healey Sprite 1958-1971
MG


MG A 1955-1962

MG Magnette ZA/ZB 1953-1956

MG Magnette Mk III/Mk IV 1959-1968

MG Midget 1961-1974

MGB 1962-1980

MG 1100/1300 1962-1973

MGC 1967-1969
Morris


Morris Oxford 1954-1971

Morris Cowley 1954-1959

Morris Isis 1955-1958

Morris Major 1958-1964 (Australia Only)

Morris Mini-Minor 1959-2000

Morris 1100/1300 1963-1974

Morris 1800 1964-1975

Riley


Riley Pathfinder 1953-1957

Riley 2.6 1958-1959

Riley 1.5 1957-1965

Riley 4/68 1959-1961

Riley 4/72 1961-1969

Riley Elf 1961-1969

Riley Kestrel 1965-1969

Vanden Plas



Vanden Plas 3 litre 1959-1964

Vanden Plas 1100/1300 1963-1974

Vanden Plas Princess 4 litre R 1964-1968

Wolseley



Wolseley 4/44 1952-1956

Wolseley 6/90 1954-1959

Wolseley 15/50 1956-1958

Wolseley 1500 1957-1965

Wolseley 15/60 1958-1961

Wolseley 16/60 1961-1971

Wolseley 6/99 1959-1961

Wolseley 6/110 1961-1968

Wolseley Hornet 1961-1969

Wolsleley 1100/1300 1965-1973

Wolseley 18/85 1967-1972


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BMC Project Numbers

A 1953 Morris Minor

A 1966 MGB

Most BMC projects followed the earlier Austin practice of describing vehicles with an 'ADO' number (which stands for 'Austin Design Office'). Hence cars that had more than one marque name (eg Austin Se7en and Morris Mini Minor) would have the same ADO number:

★ ADO6 Austin FX4 Taxi

★ ADO8 Austin A40 Farina

★ ADO9 Austin A55 Cambridge

★ ADO10 Austin A90 Westminster

★ ADO13 Austin-Healey Sprite

★ ADO14 Austin Maxi

★ ADO15 Mini

★ ADO16 1100/1300

★ ADO17 1800/2200

★ ADO20 Mini MkIII and Clubman

★ ADO23 MGB

★ ADO26 Austin_Healey 3000 MkIII

★ ADO27 Austin Kimberley

★ ADO28 Morris Marina

★ ADO31 MGA 1600

★ ADO34 Pininfarina design for 2 seat roadster based on Mini.

★ ADO37 Vanden Plas Princess 3 litre

★ ADO40 Wolseley 24/80

★ ADO41 Austin-Healey Sprite MkII

★ ADO47 MG Midget MkI

★ ADO50 Mini Cooper and Cooper S

★ ADO52 MGC

★ ADO53 Austin A110 Westminster

★ ADO59 Morris Minor 1000

★ ADO61 Austin 3-Litre

★ ADO66 Vanden Plas Princess 4-litre R

★ ADO67 Austin Allegro

BMC Commercial Vehicles


Most BMC era commercial vehicles were sold as Morris but there were sometimes Austin equivalents. Radiator badges on the larger vehicles were often BMC.
Car based light vans

A Morris Cowley MCV Van


★ Morris Z-series ¼-ton (Morris Eight Series E) 1940-1953

★ Morris ¼-ton O-Type (Morris Minor van) 1953-1971

★ Morris Cowley MCV (Morris Oxford van) 1950-1956

Austin A30 van 1954-1956

Austin A35 van 1956-1968

Austin A35 pick-up 1956-1957

★ Morris ½-ton (Morris Oxford Series III van) 1956-1962

Austin A55/A60 van 1958-1972

Austin A55/A60 pick-up (Australian built) 1958-1972

Mini van 1960-1982

Mini pick-up 1961-1982

Austin A40 Farina van (export only) 1961-1967
Light Vans

A 1957 Morris JB Van


★ Austin K8 1948-1954

Morris J-type 1949-1960

★ Morris LD 1952-1968

★ Morris J2 1956-1967

Austin/Morris J4 1960-1974
Light Trucks


★ Morris LC4 1952-1954

★ Morris LC5 1954-1960

★ Morris FV-series (Series I) 1948-1954

★ Morris FV-series (Series II) 1954-1955

★ Morris FE-series (Series III) 1955-1959

★ Morris FG 1960-1968

★ Morris FM 1961-1968

★ Morris WE 1955-1964

★ Morris WF 1964-1981

★ Morris FF 1958-1961

★ Morris FH 1961-1964

★ Morris FJ 1964-1968

BMC agricultral vehicles


With the merge of the Nuffield and Austin interests, the Nuffield Organisation's tractors became part of BMC.

Nuffield Universal

BMC Mini

The end of BMC


In 1966 BMC and Pressed Steel merged with Jaguar Cars to form British Motor Holdings (BMH). In 1968 there was a further wave of mergers in the British car industry, and BMH merged with the Leyland Motor Corporation (LMC) to form the British Leyland Motor Corporation (BLMC), the original BMC mass-production, and MG sports car products being brought together into the ''Austin Morris'' division of the new organisation. In 1975 BLMC was nationalised and became British Leyland Limited.

See also





Bathgate Lorry Plant

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