RE: Monogram Chromactive MG TF 160 for sale
RE: Monogram Chromactive MG TF 160 for sale
Yesterday

Monogram Chromactive MG TF 160 for sale

Flipping heck!


There’s nothing like a bold paint scheme or livery to really announce a car. Whether it’s a sticker set for Le Mans, something from a manufacturer's individual selection, or a never-before-seen custom effort, there’s a huge amount of the buyer’s character in the original colour choice. And while dull colours do still tend to dominate, things don’t seem quite as black and white (literally) as they once did. Whether it’s MG 4 orange, the funky yellow Peugeot 208s or the Mean Green fast Fords when they were around, some buyers do seem to be a bit bolder than in recent years. Instagram might be good for something, after all… 

Tell you what social media would love more of in 2026: flip paints. Sometimes seen these days on very special million-dollar supercars, they were much more common back in the '90s. Like all the cool things were. Nissan would paint a Micra or Primera GT in a chameleon finish, TVR of course became legendary for offering a ChromaFlair option, and into the 21st century, MG Rover dabbled as well through its Monogram Bespoke Build programme. There were two, in fact: Monogram Chromactive and Monogram Chromescent.

The effect of the former, as can be seen on this TF, was extraordinary to say the least. There’s little that can rival a flip paint for attention-grabbing drama, like a piece of Willy Wonka confectionery on four wheels; here it transforms a humble mid-engined sports car into something that’ll draw eyes like a true exotic. Maybe. 

Even more encouraging for anyone brave enough to consider a TF like this (anyone know the colour name?) is the fact that the paint appears in decent condition. Repairs on a finish as special as this are surely going to be ruinous. But the purple, green, gold, yellow, brown and whatever else is here still looks really smart 20 years later. Hopefully an original owner willing to spend the extra on a TF in 2006 kept their MG garaged, which subsequent keepers have stuck to. 

There’s further appeal beyond the obvious (or to help you overlook it). This TF has the 160hp version of the K Series, for seven-second-to-60 potential; it’s covered just 40,000 miles with three owners; and the most recent MOT couldn’t find fault with it. On a 56-plate, it’s probably one of the last original batch of TFs, and as one of only two ever painted this way it’s got to have some collectable value. 

Whether it’s collectable enough to be worth £15k is another matter. Good examples of the F and TF have been appreciating in the past few years, as the survivors become the classic MG sports car for the 21st century, but £15,000 is a very different proposition. Still, it’s more affordable than a TVR painted similarly. And probably even rarer…


SPECIFICATION | MG TF

Engine: 1,795cc four-cyl
Transmission: 6-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 160@6,900rpm
Torque (lb ft): 128@4,700rpm
MPG: 37
CO2: 179g/km
First registered: 2006
Recorded mileage: 32,000
Price new: c. £15,000
Yours for: £15,000!  

See the original advert

Author
Discussion

Turbobanana

Original Poster:

8,171 posts

227 months

Yesterday (22:59)
quotequote all
It's always intrigued me what you put on the V5 under "Colour".

Green. No, purple. Oh, bronze. Wait...

Code Black

170 posts

75 months

Yesterday (23:00)
quotequote all
I really like the paint work and I’d like to try the 160 in a ZS, but £15K for this? No thank you.

carinaman

24,831 posts

198 months

Yesterday (23:04)
quotequote all
In a PH retro look at that thread in PH someone posted an ad. last week for a Chromaflair MG TF in Bristol for £2,500 I think.

It had had a HG and cambelt.

only1ian

730 posts

220 months

Yesterday (23:11)
quotequote all
Turbobanana said:
It's always intrigued me what you put on the V5 under "Colour".

Green. No, purple. Oh, bronze. Wait...
I had a split paint nuvelo blue Alfa GTV V6 back in the day. On the v5 it said silver…

Nickp82

3,868 posts

119 months

Yesterday (23:30)
quotequote all
I believe that’s called ‘Shot Silk’ but there were a few that looked similar.

Dombilano

1,414 posts

81 months

Yesterday (23:53)
quotequote all
£15k! Get te fook. Autotrader has low mileage 'good' ones for under £6k, so what are you paying for aside from trippy paint?

Had to check, Migraineactive paint was an £1800 option in 2006, roughly 10% the value of the car depending on options when new. So what we're saying is that the paint is now adding 150% to the value.

Edited by Dombilano on Tuesday 23 June 00:03

200Plus Club

13,212 posts

304 months

Needs lowering by about a foot and ten grand in price...

Rusty Old-Banger

7,131 posts

239 months

30k miles? So only another 30k until the head gasket goes.

thejaywills

627 posts

133 months

Turbobanana said:
It's always intrigued me what you put on the V5 under "Colour".

Green. No, purple. Oh, bronze. Wait...
"Catch me if you can" laugh

hammo19

7,425 posts

222 months

That paint looks better on the Primera GT.

PRO5T

7,241 posts

51 months

My kids love, love a flip coloured car. There’s an early Mini Cooper that’s parked pride of place at the entrance to a mates estate that always looks utterly mint.

was at Substede Porsche festival last weekend where they had a Sonderwunche section with that tree of life thing and half a dozen or so others on display. £100k option for them to do it these days I heard.


Andy86GT

986 posts

91 months

Turbobanana said:
It's always intrigued me what you put on the V5 under "Colour".

Green. No, purple. Oh, bronze. Wait...
hehe

baconsarney

12,340 posts

187 months

Code Black said:
I really like the paint work and I d like to try the 160 in a ZS, but £15K for this? No thank you.
Not relevant to thread but I had a ZS180 back when, handling and grip was astonishing….

Taz73

438 posts

38 months

Code Black said:
I really like the paint work and I d like to try the 160 in a ZS, but £15K for this? No thank you.
Agree the paintwork looks cool, but this engine was only in the ZR, as well as the TF. ZS had the 1.6 110, 1.8 120, and 2.5 v6 180. On the ZT there was a 160 but it was a turbo charged 1.8 or the lower tune v6. Plus diesels.

Taz73

438 posts

38 months

I really like this, these are very under rated, including the f before it, they don’t usually structurally rust out like my na eunos, hgf is a permanent fix now and subframes are replaceable. They’re great fun to drive and the k series revs really well and sounds great doing it.

£15k seems steep but TFs like this must be rare, not just the paint but with aircon as well and the colour coded hard top. £8-10k seems more appropriate since £5-6k gets a good one anyway.

Edited by Taz73 on Tuesday 23 June 07:11

v8notbrave

359 posts

39 months

Solid 1 star from me, had one back in 2000, so many woefully made parts it became ruinous. I'm sure they improved a bit but once a turd always a .........

PRO5T

7,241 posts

51 months

v8notbrave said:
Solid 1 star from me, had one back in 2000, so many woefully made parts it became ruinous. I'm sure they improved a bit but once a turd always a .........
Oh I agree about the car...

When I'd had my MR2 Spyder for a while a mate was working at Rover selling these and lent me one to feel one out as a replacement-it was some sort of special edition, cream with red leather interior?

It was a terrible driving experience after the MR2. When they went bust he moved to Honda and then lent me an S2000 and even that didn't compare (although much better than the TF).

Rusty Old-Banger

7,131 posts

239 months

My neighbour has one, has had it since new I think. He loves it, and it's not like he's unaware of what it's like - it's outlasted Porsches, Astons, classic MGs etc.

Oiyou

158 posts

132 months

Not sure about 15k! but these are pretty underrated. Lively and engaging to drive, 160 versions are quick enough.

I bought a TF160 on a whim and had a ball taking it to track days. Endless joy surprising folks that was actually very capable out of the box - could keep the 2L Clios honest.

Obviously the build quality is naff and they have constant niggles, but nothing horrendous. HG failure on a K is old news, they are all either fine or it's been replaced with one that works.

donkmeister

12,232 posts

126 months

Lovely, and very unusual to have a 2006-registered 160!

List price of a TF160 was over £20k, and the hardtop wasn't a cheap option. So either the "price when new" is wrong or this was an absolute bargain following the closure of MG Rover.