I helped make the first Miata, and now I love its ancestor
I had never owned a car like this, one with pre-war roots, and I wasn’t looking for it. But if you’re bored and hunting on Craigslist long enough, you usually run across something that catches your eye. Something you probably shouldn’t buy.
That’s how I met Abigail.
Abigail is a 1952 MG TD. The TD is part of MG’s “T-Series” family, five models produced, one after the other, from 1936 to 1955. The TA came first, then the TB, the TC, the TD, and the TF. Each is a variation on the same basic idea. They all have long and flowing fenders, a long-stroke four-cylinder, a four-speed gearbox, and an ash-framed body. The TC, TD, and TF were built after World War II, but like so many cars of the era, their engineering basically dated to the 1930s.
The 54-hp TD met the world in 1949. It was really just a restyle and a light mechanical update of the TC. Both cars were relatively affordable and handled well. On the Miata project (See postscript: The author was a development engineer on the original Mazda Miata —Ed.) we had cited the T-Series as helping start this country’s sports-car craze, so I had a vague interest in owning one. Having just sold Edna, my ’64 Chrysler Imperial—the widest, largest, and most powerful American car made in its model year—it felt somehow right to be entranced by a diminutive lightweight like the TD.
The ad called the car an “older restoration,” noting that the owner needed to move it along to fund other projects. The following weekend, I visited the owner at his small farm near North Carolina’s coast and was smitten by the TD’s tomboy charm. It was essentially an upright piano on skinny tires.
We rolled the MG out into the sunshine. The owner started it with a simple pull of the starter knob. The engine sounded like a sewing machine. The car was indeed an excellent example, having received a frame-off restoration about eight years prior. The TD appeared to have been reassembled in the aisle of the Moss Motors warehouse—every rubber part was new, along with all the gaskets and trim. The metal bits had just enough patina to make the car look real to me.
In whole, it looked about like a 40,000-mile TD from, say, 1958. Not showroom-new, but not tattered, either—just the way I like my cars. The owner let the TD idle in the summer sun, no concern for overheating. I was impressed. Watching an English car idle for 30 minutes in 95-degree weather is like seeing a 90-year-old man do 100 push ups.
We struck a deal. I made plans to return the next weekend with either a trailer or a tow truck. On the 200-mile drive home, I texted a friend—let’s call him Q. He was a fellow Brit-sports-car aficionado. (Translation: patient with flaws, curious and willing to learn, steadfast in times of trouble. Good qualities in a car person or a friend).
Q said that he could help me pick up the MG with his trailer. But he’d only agree to help, he said, if we drove the TD back home.
“This car has not been on the road in eight years,” I said.
“Don’t wuss out,” he retorted. “What could go possibly wrong?”
And so the plan was made to drive together to get the car, then drive back in tandem, bracing for the possibilities that lay buried deep inside every one of that 70-year-old TD’s 1500-some-odd parts. The chase vehicle would be my 30-year-old Miata.
Yes, this is what counts as adventure in our man-bunned, flip-flop-wearing world: a three-hour drive on a paved road, in two cars, with no lions, tigers, or even bears.
At home, I made up a spares package. If you bring the tool/part/item, I figured, you probably won’t need it. A spare car battery fully charged: onboard. Gorilla tape and a small butane torch, plus some 12-gauge wire and solder: of course. Fix-a-flat and a jack: check. Carb cleaner and a length of fuel line: yep. We planned a route that avoided highways, sticking to interesting two-lanes with pull-off room and low traffic. (This was not our first British-sports-car rodeo.) I joined the Hagerty Driver’s Club and elected for the 150-mile towing option, then drew a circle of that radius around my home, which I called the “circle of safety.” Like an RAF pilot trying to get back across the English Channel, I knew that if I could just get the TD inside that radius—see the white cliffs of Dover—all would be well.
The following Saturday, we left to get the car. The trip there was uneventful, as most Miata trips are. When we arrived at the barn, the owner had the TD out in the sun and ready to go.
He looked around for a trailer, then back at us. “You’re going to drive this to Charlotte?”
“Any reason we shouldn’t?”
The man looked into my eyes for a double-count, the cash I had given him still palmed in his right hand. “Keep an eye on the fuel tank,” he said. “She clogs up now and then . . . ”
With that, we were off. It was noon. Plenty of margin for a three-hour drive on a lovely Saturday afternoon. I let Q drive first. First, I wanted to watch for any unusual behavior as the MG went down the road. Second, as a practical matter—I wanted to be able to see (and then collect) any parts that might fall off as Q got up to speed.
Speed being a relative term, of course, with a TD. When the car was new, it had a top-top-top speed of 74 mph. That number came in fourth gear, at the dizzying engine speed of 5500 rpm (a.k.a. the precipice of valve float).
The third reason I wanted to follow the car on that first leg? I am a visual person. Watching the MG bumble across eastern North Carolina was going to be fun.
That three-hour estimate would prove optimistic. At first, everything seemed fine. Ten minutes in, however, the car began to lose speed. Q raised his left arm and signaled—TDs don’t have visible turn signals—to pull off into a parking lot. The words of Road & Track’s Peter Egan arose from deep in my consciousness: It’s always the points.
I prepared myself for a little roadside diagnostics. This would be the first stop of more than a dozen. Over the next seven, not three, hours.
Pulling the distributor cap and rocking the car around in gear showed that, indeed, the gap on the MG’s ignition points was too small. Q assumed the kneeling position beside the engine, a posture familiar to T-Series owners (and to owners of early Porsche 911s—it’s a position of petition and humility, as if praying to the electrical gods). He made a quick adjustment and then we were off again, confident in our roadside tune-up.
Ten miles later, Q’s left hand waved once again. One more time, we pulled over to inspect the points. They were out of adjustment again, so we realigned them once more. We were only 10 miles closer to my circle of safety, and progress was agonizingly slow.
Ten more miles. Left hand up again. The points gap was now somehow too small. While messing around with the distributor, we realized the distributor had roughly half an inch of play, left to right, from a perished bushing. You could vary the points gap simply by pushing on the distributor’s body. On a subsequent stop, we took some zip ties and some spare fuel hose and used them to jam the distributor against a nearby object—in this case, the engine’s generator—forcing it into something like one position.
Setting off, we were emboldened, confident.
Ten minutes later, we were once again in a parking lot, once again looking at the distributor. The point gap was holding at an acceptable level. Emboldened by our diagnostic prowess, we quickly condemned the ignition condenser, a part that can cause intermittent poor running. There was a new one in a box of spares that came with the car. On it went. Back on the road we went.
At this point, I took over driving, having seen my fill of the TD’s rear and Q’s insistent hand signaling. We were about 20 miles to the edge of our tow range, and I was determined to make it. I was instantly reminded of how special old British sports cars are: tight steering, excellent shifters and transmissions, responsive brakes. I ran through my list of known English-girl names and settled on Abigail. The only real hiccup was a severe shimmy at speed, which I chalked up to flat-spotted tires. The whole chassis shook up and down, side-to-side, and in the yaw axis, all at once.
No matter—two miles later, the car was coughing and sputtering again. I pulled into the parking lot of an auto-parts store, ready to buy anything.
The seller’s parting words came back to me: She clogs up now and then.
I lay on the ground to inspect the fuel lines. A T-Series carries its fuel like a backpack, in a wedge-shaped slab tank just behind the body. When I opened one of the barbed fuel fittings beneath the tank, nothing came out. The barb’s innards were caked with flakes of rust.
Ah, I thought: It had never been the ignition! Our short stops to adjust the points had given the fuel system enough time to weep a few ounces of gas into the line, letting the engine restart. After which it would inevitably stall again, once fuel stopped flowing. A simple probe with a small stick cleared the line and got fuel gushing from the nipple. Once the gasoline ran clear, I put the hose back in place and moved to the front of the car, to the feed line at the carburetors. Fuel ran clear there pretty quickly, and then we were back on the road.
Well, almost. Along the way, the battery had grown too weak to turn the engine over, so we had to push-start the car.
I was reminded, once again, of the advantages of a lightweight sports car: You can push-start them when needed.
I sprinted out of the parking lot with bouts of full-throttle TD acceleration (a.k.a. barely keeping up with traffic). All was again great with the world. For 20 miles. Then my hand went up, and I repeated the fuel-purge routine. Nine more times, we performed this choreography, before reaching home, once every 15 miles or so. Toward the end, we got it down to a 90-second pit stop for both tank drain and carb-line purge.
We were well inside the towable radius now, but we felt we had licked the symptoms, if not the disease. Getting Abigail home under her own power had become a challenge. (On one of the purge routines, I noticed that the left rear brake cylinder was leaking. Something to address later—we were having trouble with propulsion, not stopping.)
In between these regular purge routines, I took inventory. The engine really didn’t mind going 5000 rpm at 65 mph. The steering was precise, the ride comfortable. A T-Series steering wheel is the size of an extra-large pizza and perfectly complements the wooden dash. The whole package worked well, and the attraction was undeniable. As a bonus, it was one of those cars so lovely to look at that you almost don’t mind taking in that beauty while sitting on the side of the road, wondering why the thing won’t run.
A few miles down the road, I looked in the mirror to see Q signaling from the Miata. I dove into a church’s parking lot, curious as to what could possibly could be wrong with our Japanese car. Q pulled up alongside.
“My phone’s weather app says we are driving into a rainstorm.” Then, in one of those I only have to run faster than the bear moments, he flipped up the Miata’s top with one hand and drove off.
I waved him back. We spent 10 minutes unfolding and erecting the MG’s prehistoric top. The car came from the factory with side curtains—clip-on fabric windows—but we didn’t have them. The TD’s roof amounted to a little more than a lousy umbrella, but it was better than no top at all. With that, we were off, into dark clouds ahead.
And rain it did. So on we drove, one-handed, with Q in the serene comfort of a watertight Mazda and me in what was essentially a wooden sailboat caught in a squall. Two more fuel-line purges were required to get through the storm, and we reached the outskirts of Charlotte with a sigh of relief.
The rain stopped, the sun came out, and the TD, somehow, settled down into a happy zone of peace and harmony. The shimmies from the flat-spotted tires finally worked themselves out. I became comfortable with a 5000-rpm cruise. The car ran wonderfully, and we came to terms with each other. The fuel tank pulled one last clogging routine, but we made it the last 10 miles to my house without incident, arriving just as the sun was setting. I pulled into my driveway and let Abigail idle for a moment, rechecking her gauges and thanking her for making it all the way home without a tow.
We had accomplished something together, she and I, and it felt good. I switched off the ignition and listened to the engine tick and gurgle as it cooled. Abigail deposited a cup of engine oil on the driveway, as if to mark her spot. Seven hours of noise melted into a nice moment of joy.
Life with Abigail is now bliss. She is a joy to drive, now that I’ve over-engineered her fuel system and fixed that leaky wheel cylinder. And people in town love her. Everyone waves and smiles when they see her coming. There is something endearing about a ridiculous car and the fool who loves her, as if we were made for each other.
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Norman Garrett was the Concept Engineer for the original Miata back in his days at Mazda’s Southern California Design Studio. When he’s not curating his small collection of dysfunctional automobiles and motorcycles, he teaches automotive engineering classes at UNC Charlotte’s Motorsports Engineering Department, in Charlotte, North Carolina.
I agree. What a great story. It got me thinking about naming my cars…
Great article, but please post more pictures of the dog!
Brings back memories. My 51 TD was my first car – bought when I turned 16 with savings from various teen and pre-teen jobs. It was a wonderful introduction to the world of sports cars – rallies, auto-crosses and races. Over the subsequent years I swapped and traded many Brits – including another TD, 2 MGAs , 2 TR3s, a Bug eye sprite , and the most outstanding design of them all – a MGTF. My current 20 year old Boxster which was a present to myself when I retired in 2001 is an engineering marvel in comparison to those old Brits- but oh my -it sure doesn’t turn heads like the 3 post war MG T models.
Someone posted this article over on the miata.net forum, and I just wanted to say thanks for writing this enjoyable story. My wife heard once – and it’s true, we’ve verified it ourselves – that the worst travel decisions make the best stories and I think this qualifies. I’m a Miata lover (have owned a 2004 Mazdaspeed since 2009) and I bought the Miata because it was the reliable Japanese-made version of the LBC, but I still find myself wanting a TD or TF Midget because they’re just such gorgeous cars. Maybe some day one will randomly appear on my radar as well.
Having owned and operated two TDS over the last 56 years I suggest that 5500 rpm may not be conducive to engine longevity. I have found 4500 rpm and anMGA rear end makes a good tourer
The question that should never be posed: “What could go possibly wrong?”.
Also the question you don’t really want to know the answer to.
I wonder just how many of us have traveled the same path with an MG of some era and a Miata? My dad had a 1968 MGB-GT in Primrose Yellow. As a boy I used to wash it for free(!) so I could shift on trips to the Post Office with my dad. Fast forward 40years and I bought ‘Pumpkin’, a 1972 MGB-GT that damn near killed me on the way on the Altamont Pass as I drove it home from Fresno (the suspension was shot). 4 years and constant maintenance and I was done with the novelty and the drain on my wallet. But, I still had a ‘hankering’ for something small and fun to drive. A Miata didn’t enter the thought process until I sat in a friends NA and discovered that I fit, just, at 6’4” as I figured I was too tall. My 1997 STO brings a smile to my face every time I drive her, and brings back a memory of shifting that 1968 MGB-GT with my dad. Thank you Mazda….
Great story! Do you know about the NC MG car club? https://ncmgcarclub.org
In 1991, I bought a 1971 MGB in Arkansas and spent a couple days getting to know the car. I then took off for home, 850 miles away in Wisconsin, by myself, with no cell phone. The only trouble I had was a horn that just started blowing for no apparent reason. Without taking my foot off the gas, I simply removed the horn cover, pulled out the rigged up bic pen contact and continued on my way. Still my daily driver in the summer. Only stranded once when the aftermarket fuel pump died.
Great Article! Having owned my current 71 MGB for 46 years, I can relate to some of your challenges (mostly Lucas)! Are you familiar with Catawba County British Motor Club based in Hickory, NC? Very active club with lot of members, activities and a myriad of cars.
A lovely story, full of charming anecdotes, 10 miles at a clip.
Funny how the first diagnosis (points/distributors) makes sense, until it doesn’t.
Anchoring bias!
Oh, it’s a fuel feed issue, now I see it.
Been there, done that many times.
I too always thought the Miata owed more to the Lotus Elan in concept, but thank God not in execution. So thank you for your engineering contribution to the early Miata, which reopened the sports car world to a whole new audience in 1990 (had one from ’90-’95, absolutely trouble free)
Great turn of a phrase, “…ridiculous cars and the fools who love them”.
I still get a huge kick out of the openly astonished and friendly reaction of strangers to my Super Seven , a mouse amongst giants.
The real ancestor to the Miata is the Lotus Elan. Mazda bought several for their project engineers to drive. I have had mine from new 53 years ago & it still brings a smile to my face whenever I drive it.
As a poor college student in the 80s who couldn’t understand why the timing light would locate the mark in a different place with every flash on my $1200 70s Subaru wagon, I eventually learned how important distributor bushings are to ignition timing.
Still poor, which makes me the perfect 1991 Miata SE owner today. Thanks for contributing to its existence and for the great storytelling.
Great read! Having owned both an MGTD (in high school) and an NA Miata (today), I felt this story was written just for me! Thanks!
I love how you ended, “deposited a cup of engine oil on the driveway, as if to mark her spot.” That made me laugh out loud! Great story.