Why you’d want a BMC ‘Farina’ car
Prince Philipʼs well-intentioned comments about the looks of the British Motor Corporationʼs saloons not matching up to the European competition resulted in a whole new family of cars growing on the Austin A55 Cambridge platform.
Pinin Farina drew up the ADO9 and BMC productionised the design into Austin, Morris, Wolseley, MG and Riley variants.
For the first time, all shared Austin running gear – a backward step in areas such as the cam-and-peg steering, when Morris and Wolseley cars had used rack and pinion since WW2.
Lever-arm dampers integral with the top wishbones and long kingpins needing frequent greasing were also somewhat dated, but with BMCʼs global market including much rougher roads than those in the UK, the robustness did make sense, as did the standardisation.
Surprisingly, it was the Wolseley that was launched first – followed by Austin, MG, Morris and finally Riley.
The Austin and Morris models were the most affordable, with the Wolseley an upmarket (wood and leather) version of the base variants, then MG and Riley had the upmarket trim plus twin carburettors to give a modicum of extra performance.