EXCERPT FROM "THE SPRITES AND MIDGETS" BY ERIC DYMOCK
"There are cars which inspire respect and there are cars which demand it. There are cars which inspire awe and there are cars which deserve it. There are cars which remain unloved and cars which invite derision. But a few earn something special. Perhaps because they are relatively cheap and likely to crop up in the early years of a motoring lifetime, because they display special qualities of performance or handlnig, or perhaps through a reputation for strength and reliability, or even because they tend to be used purely for pleasure, some cars inspire real affection. |
EXCERPT FROM "THE SPRITES AND MIDGETS" BY ERIC DYMOCK
The Austin-Healy Sprites and MG Midgets, whose production spanned the 21 years between 1958 and 1979, were cars on which successive generations of (mostly) young drivers learned the feel of a sensitive, responsive, small sports car. There were cars on which the impecunious and the enthusiastic could work without tears, or too many special tools. They were cars which could be bought cheaply and run for next to nothing. There were cars upon which even the ungenerous insurance companies would sometimes look kindly because they were never so fast as to constitute an unacceptable risk."* |