RE: MG F Cheetah | PH Auction Block
RE: MG F Cheetah | PH Auction Block
Monday 19th May 2025

MG F Cheetah | PH Auction Block

MG pondered building a supercharged F, but it never came to be. Thank goodness the aftermarket stepped up...


The year is 1995 and MG has just announced a new, two-seat sports car that has all the hallmarks of a Mazda MX-5 beater. Looks by Gerry McGovern (now head of design at Jaguar Land Rover), a rorty K-Series engine behind the cabin and power to the rear axle sounded like a recipe for guaranteed sales - which it was. Granted, it wasn’t able to reclaim the budget sports car crown from the MX-5, but the fact MG shifted over 77,000 examples proves it did at least give Mazda a run for its money.

Back to the present and the MG F is now one of the cheapest ways to get your hands on something mid-engined, fun and topless, especially compared with an original NA MX-5. And just like its Japanese nemesis, there’s a whole bunch of factory specials. The Trophy was the quickest one offered from factory, with 160hp on tap and a lowered suspension setup, though MG Rover had mulled the idea of a supercharged version with the windscreen-less Super Sports concept. It probably never had a chance of making it to production, but it was the bolt of inspiration the aftermarket was looking for, as proven by this bonkers MG F Cheetah.

Cobbled together by SP Performance, an MG dealer-turned-tuner, the Cheetah was supposedly a response to MGF customers demanding more grunt - and more noise -  from their dinky roadster. Apparently, SP had neither the means nor the know-how to make its own components, so it amassed a team of top tuners to do its bidding. The first being Turbo Technics, which developed a bespoke Rotrex Supercharger that would bolt onto the existing 1.8-litre engine alongside a new ECU to manage the air and fuel mixture. Then, the company enlisted Milltek to come up with a fruitier exhaust to unlock a bit more noise. The whole package brought peak output up to a nice round 200hp, which, in something as diminutive as an MGF, must be fairly amusing. 

Now with nearly 40 per cent more power, attention turned to upgrading the chassis. The standard Hydragas suspension was replaced with competition-grade springs and dampers used in the French MG F Trophy series, while the brakes were uprated (albeit lightly) with Mintex pads. Brakes aside, the Cheetah was a comprehensive upgrade over the standard car and came with a suitably scaled-up price tag to go with it. SP sold the Cheetah for just shy of £30k in the late '90s, which is almost double the going rate for an entry-level MG F. Yowch.

What you didn’t get, however, is the bodykit you see on the car destined to go under the PH auction hammer. Admittedly, it does appear quite aggressive and those skirts probably aren't going to make friends with your local sleeping policeman - but it’s pretty smart when paired up with the 17-inch Superlite alloys it’s currently wearing. More curious is the Mini Cooper S side vents on the front wings, though presumably any of the modifications can be reverted to normal if you wish. Well, except maybe the interior. And frankly, where's the fun it that anyway? 

Either way, it’s a 39k-mile car that has clearly been the pride and joy of its one and only owner. That’s very little info on production numbers, but it's certainly believable that fewer than 10 were ever built, given the sky-high cost of entry. We’ll find out how much it’s worth in 2025 when the auction kicks off next Thursday, but it'll surely be gold dust for someone after the MG equivalent of a BBR-tuned MX-5. 


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

quitequiet

Original Poster:

9 posts

9 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
I thought it was a Suzuki Cappucino at first glance...very 90s, i'd have to remove the steering wheel and the supercharged on the dashboard but apart from that it's pretty well done

T697JVS

99 posts

14 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
It’s certainly an acquired taste (if you’re being kind).

tr7v8

7,531 posts

250 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
Don't dislike MGFs as standard but that bodykit is dire. Makes some of the Maxpower abominations in my youff look subtle.

Nobody13

696 posts

224 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
quitequiet said:
I thought it was a Suzuki Cappucino at first glance...very 90s, i'd have to remove the steering wheel and the supercharged on the dashboard but apart from that it's pretty well done
I agree about the Suzuki Cappuccino looks (a bit), however, I would prefer a Suzuki Cappuccino than this. It doesn't do anything for me.

Luke.

11,774 posts

272 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
Gosh. That's horrendous.

georgeyboy12345

4,195 posts

57 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
What in the Max Power is this?! That interior is horrendous

TheMilkyBarKid

828 posts

51 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
Gosh that really looks like the worst of mid-90’s Max Power excess to me. Maybe there’ll be someone that connects with, but it’s definitely not for me.

Arsecati

2,722 posts

139 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
Bit early for Shed of the Week isn't it? (And even then, I'd still take that Grandeur over this abomination!).

Mikebentley

8,235 posts

162 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
Oh dear that’s grim.

Syndrome280

294 posts

133 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
I was thinking yesterday that the 90s was a real high point for car design. What I hadn’t considered, looking through my rose tinted glasses, is it was simultaneously one of the lowest points.

Motorsport3

564 posts

214 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
My first sports car was a second hand 97 MGF. At the time I really wanted an Elise S1 but would be hard / expensive to insure.

I remember it was actually very well set, positive steering feel, easy to park and reasonably interesting engine note.

Rust on the subframe was the main issue with mine but otherwise was a nice little fun car .

kambites

70,614 posts

243 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
The mechanical mods sound good.

The visual ones, less so!

Dog Biscuit

1,601 posts

19 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
Looks wk

cerb4.5lee

41,230 posts

202 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
I do like 2 seater roadsters usually, but this is definitely doing it's best to put me off them though! hehe

DaveyBoyWonder

3,507 posts

196 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
I really dislike MGFs but theres something weirdly appealing about that in the same way theres something weirdly appealing about Angela Rayner. You know its wrong on all levels though...

WelshPetrolhead

943 posts

157 months

Tuesday 20th May 2025
quotequote all
I like MGs but that looks like the weekend car for the type of person that would daily drive a PT Cruiser. What a mess.

bmv6197

99 posts

125 months

Tuesday 20th May 2025
quotequote all
When I got to double digits with my list of things I’d have to replace / remove before I could even hit the road, I realised it was a clear no…

What it with stick on vents? There’s loud and shouty (like a red centre console), then there’s just naff and trashy…

M138

1,027 posts

13 months

Tuesday 20th May 2025
quotequote all
Motorsport3 said:
My first sports car was a second hand 97 MGF. At the time I really wanted an Elise S1 but would be hard / expensive to insure.

I remember it was actually very well set, positive steering feel, easy to park and reasonably interesting engine note.

Rust on the subframe was the main issue with mine but otherwise was a nice little fun car .
In standard form the MGF has really aged well looks wise unlike a lot of manufacturers attempt at a convertible of a similar era.

daqinggregg

5,335 posts

151 months

Tuesday 20th May 2025
quotequote all
At first glance, I thought I like that, but on closer inspection, it seems one would need a rather large bin for all the chromed plastic accoutrements/tat, to go in, once finished, there wouldn’t be much left.

https://www.pistonheads.com/buy/listing/18353820

I’m sure with a few spondoolies spent ‘One’ could up the ponies on this little beauty, imagine the time saved on superfluous tat removal. Anyone in the know will tell you, the Fetching shade of BRG, is a well known performance enhancement.



BeastieBoy73

771 posts

134 months

Tuesday 20th May 2025
quotequote all
You can’t polish what was already a steamy turd.