Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,701 pages of information and 247,104 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Morris: Minor (1928-1934)

From Graces Guide
1928.
1928.
1929. Exhibit at the Heritage Motor Centre. Reg No: RD 1169.
October 1929.
1930. Publicity Shot. Reg No: JO 764.
1930. Publicity Shot. Reg No: JO 764.
1930. Reg No: JO 764.
1930. Morris Minor Tourer. Reg No: UR 7238.
1930 Morris Minor. Exhibit at Haynes Motor Museum. Reg No: RFP 374B.
1930.
May 1931. Morris Minor S.V.
Reg No: OG 6215.
1931. Exhibit at the National Motor Museum. Reg No: DG 8580.
1932 Post van. Exhibit at Bradworthy Transport Museum. Reg No: GGH 452.
1932. Morris Minor Tourer. Reg No OW 1920.
1932 Minor 8 hp, Reg No. YD 4067. Four owners, 81,000 miles.
1932. Reg No: VSU 309.
1933.
Reg No: UF 7767.
Reg No: UF 7767.
Reg No: BF 4989.

Note: This is a sub-section of Morris

The Minor was Morris's attack on the small-car market that had really been created by the Austin Seven.

The Morris Minor was produced by Morris Motors in two versions.

  • 1928 to 1932 the cars had an 847 cc overhead-camshaft engine. 39,087 of the overhead-camshaft type made.
  • 1932 to 1934 The engine was replaced by a more conventional side-valve unit of the same capacity until production ended. 47,231 of the side-valve version were made.

Although the company's main assembly plant was at Cowley, outside Oxford, the chassis and running gear were designed at one of the company's subsidiaries, E. G. Wrigley and Co, a Birmingham-based gearbox maker who had been bought out of receivership and renamed Morris Commercial Cars. The engine was based on one designed by Wolseley who were by then owned by William Morris personally. It was largely a new design, much smaller than any existing Wolseley unit, with the overhead camshaft driven by a geared shaft that passed through the dynamo carrying the armature. A single SU carburettor was fitted and coil ignition used. The engine produced 20 bhp at 4,000 rpm allowing a top speed of 55 mph. The electrical system was 6 volt.

The 78-inch wheelbase chassis was built of channel-section steel and the suspension was by half-elliptical springs all round with rigid front and rear axles. Brakes were on all wheels and cable operated. Initially the only body types offered were a 2-door fabric-bodied saloon and a four-seat tourer but during production up to a dozen different body styles were used.

At the launch at London's 1928 Motor Show, the saloon cost £135 and the tourer £125. Steel-bodied cars and a van were added for 1930.

The engine was proving to be expensive to make and suffered from oil getting into the dynamo, therefore in 1931 a simplified side-valve version was designed giving nearly the same power output, 19 bhp at 4,000 rpm. For a while both version were produced with the overhead-camshaft unit surviving until 1932 in the four-door model, which also gained hydraulic brakes. The use of hydraulics distinguished the Minor from the competing Austin 7 with its less reliable cable brakes. The lower cost of the new engine allowed the Minor to be sold for the magic £100 as a stripped-down two-seater.

In 1932 the body was slightly restyled with a more rounded look and the fuel tank moved from the scuttle area below the windscreen to the rear of the car. An electric fuel pump was fitted. 1933 saw a four-speed gearbox replacing the three-speed unit on the more expensive models and in 1934 this was fitted with synchromesh on the top ratios. All models now had hydraulic brakes.

1934 The Minor was replaced by the Morris Eight

See Also

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Sources of Information

  • [1] Wikipedia
  • [2] Pre-War Minor Network