1981 Austin miniMetro poverty edition in bright snot

1981 Austin miniMetro poverty edition in bright snot

Author
Discussion

itcaptainslow

Original Poster:

4,123 posts

151 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
I’ve known this car for a while - a mate bought it in 2019, had it restored, sold it to another mate, who I’ve just purchased it from.

It’s delightfully terrible - slow (998cc with 42bhp, maybe), noisy, it makes my right leg go numb and the radio is MW/LW only. It’s a step away from having to go outside to change gear.

And yet, I’m utterly charmed by it. 60mph feels like 140, it makes every journey feel like an event and loads of people wave, beep and want to talk to you.

It needed setting up properly, a wheel alignment and a proper service, but now that’s all done it sings up the road.










Lincsls1

3,701 posts

155 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
Love it!
Congratulations on having such a superb example of this little classic.
It looks great and I can see why you are charmed with it.
Super comfortable I'd think.

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,532 posts

58 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
That's a great example. Applejack green is a fantastic colour.
Ideal for car shows or just a nice weekend drive.

itcaptainslow

Original Poster:

4,123 posts

151 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
One of three left in this colour, I believe, two of which are on the road (a Metro beard may correct me on that).

I’m having to relearn how to set up carbs and where my imperial tools are, and it’s rather fun!

W i d e body

4,799 posts

94 months

Saturday 12th April
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That's even more basic than my 1992 Panda ,no rear wiper .

But do you have 2 speed front wipers ?......mine doesn't ! biggrin

Superb condition though ,well done .

Sticks.

9,336 posts

266 months

Saturday 12th April
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That's lovely, really good to see something like that in such good condition and being enjoyed. Not full poverty spec though, my Metro City ('stty') had no radio or ciggy lighter. That didn't make it go any faster, though fond memories. smile


ARHarh

4,761 posts

122 months

Saturday 12th April
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When i got my first mortgage back in 1987, a rather nice Metro 1.3 HLS was all I could afford as transport. I say afford but someone gave it to me as they were going to scrap it. I did 42k miles in that car after good service and some new brakes. Mind it was proper tatty, duck tape over holes in the wings and paint peeling off. My friendly MOT tester even wrote "surface rust almost everywhere except windows and tyres" in the comments on one MOT. The engine lived on to power a mk1 mini.

Loved those old Metros, I had a few as cheap transport, even a Turbo at one point. They did all rust away though in the end.

generationx

8,359 posts

120 months

Saturday 12th April
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My driving instructor taught me in one of these, a one litre rocket in light metallic blue. Dear god it was slow, especially when it had the giant wind-break driving school sign on the roof limiting it to about 60mph. Never again.

This is in delightful condition though, so rare now!

ARHarh

4,761 posts

122 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
But a 1981 golf GTi would only do 114 mph and 0-60 in 9 seconds, and back then the GTi was a fast car.

The metro had performance equal to most similar spec cars at the time.

Ambleton

7,065 posts

207 months

Saturday 12th April
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That's bloody awful hehe


Terrible car in a mingin colour with a horrendous interior.


I love it. More photos please.

Doyliestag

259 posts

60 months

Saturday 12th April
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Lovely early example, you must be so pleased with it.

Mikebentley

7,362 posts

155 months

Saturday 12th April
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Dear god, what an absolutely wondrous conveyance.

outnumbered

4,611 posts

249 months

Saturday 12th April
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Very nice. I passed my driving test in one of these in 1981 having never driven one before the day of the test, the instructor just turned up in her new car (indicators being on the opposite side to what I'd been learning in too).

Please never be tempted to do "a few subtle mods".

dibblecorse

7,099 posts

207 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
superb

j4r4lly

683 posts

150 months

Saturday 12th April
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That’s absolutely fabulous.

I had a 1.0L HLE Metro for 5 years. We bought it at 3 years old as my wife had just passed her driving test and she’d done all her lessons in a BSM Metro. It seemed a good idea to help her build up her confidence and experience in a car she was familiar with. We sold my Golf GLS to buy the Metro which was depressing.

However, over 5 years and 60K miles it proved to be utterly reliable, cheap as chips to run and quite good fun to drive down hill on a twisty B road. I’ve never recovered from the driving position and to this day still sit at an odd angle to the steering wheel.

Tango13

9,526 posts

191 months

Saturday 12th April
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My dad had a Metro of that era in yellow, LMC 25W rings a bell for the registration.

I see the occasional Metro on the road and compared to modern stuff they're tiny

wibble cb

3,906 posts

222 months

Saturday 12th April
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It’s a 1980’s Morris Minor, love it!

Len Clifton

399 posts

5 months

Saturday 12th April
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Superb. Growing up in the 80s, my mate kept telling me how his parents were going to buy him a Golf GTI when he passed his test. He did, and they bought him one of these instead, same spec, but blue. He fitted rally spotlights to the front of it and drove it flat out everywhere. Hilarious fun. Well done!

Skyedriver

20,575 posts

297 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
LightweightLouisDanvers said:
That's a great example. Applejack green is a fantastic colour.
Ideal for car shows or just a nice weekend drive.
Was thinking "Snapdragon" but likely wrong.
Bought my first Metro, a 1980, 998, ex NHS, at an auction in Birtley.
Followed that up with a Primrose one, a silver one, a 1.3HLE, an MG, a Turbo. And I seem to think at least one more.
Front wings rotted out but were bolt on and cheap. People criticise them now but they were so much better built than the mini.

Alex Z

1,786 posts

91 months

Saturday 12th April
quotequote all
That’s simultaneously abysmal and awesome.

Great to see it being enjoyed.