RE: Morgan Plus Six: Geneva 2019

RE: Morgan Plus Six: Geneva 2019

Tuesday 5th March 2019

Morgan Plus Six: Geneva 2019

Turbocharged BMW power and an all-new platform, but the looks remain reassuringly familiar...



Sadly the corporate time machine is in use today - we're trying to bring Emerson Fittipaldi's hair back from the early 'seventies - so we won't be able to conduct any experiments with the Morgan Plus Six. Because what we'd really love to do is to send what we're told is an all-new car back in time to see if anybody noticed.

Its name answers the question of how Morgan plans to replace the recently retired Plus 8, and its sonorous BMW V8 engine. The Plus Six offers what looks certain to be a very similar driving experience but sits on a newly-developed chassis and uses BMW's B58 3.0-litre turbocharged six-cylinder engine. As such, it is the first Morgan to leave the factory with a turbo engine. It produces 335hp, 32hp less than the 4.4-litre N62 V8 of the Plus 8 managed, but a reduction in mass to a svelte 1,075kg dry means that the Six is actually quicker, Morgan claiming a 4.2-second 0-62mph time compared to the Plus 8's 4.7.

But the more important statistic is probably the reduced price tag. Morgan has always struggled to sell its aluminium-chassis models in anything like the volumes it manages for its far older-tech classic line-up - the ones with chassis that stopped evolving in the late 1940s. The last-of-line 50th Anniversary Plus 8 cost a very serious £126,000; the Plus Six is a far more palatable £77,995 - or £89,995 in slightly plusher First Edition form.


While exterior design has changed to a modest extent that few people will immediately notice, the Plus Six sits on what is an almost entirely new platform. This CX architecture still uses the Lotus-like bonded aluminium construction that Morgan has been using since the late 1990s, but it is lighter and stronger - the company claims a 100 per cent improvement in torsional rigidity, which sounds like it should be impossible. Dimensions have been rejigged, too - at 3,890mm in length the Plus Six is 120mm shorter than the 8 was while its 2,510mm wheelbase is 20mm longer. Remarkably, Morgan reckons it has found 200mm of extra leg room as well, plus more luggage space; an indication of just how cramped the old car was.

Although Morgan claims that just one per cent of parts have been carried over from the old car, many of the fundamentals remain unchanged. Bodywork is still made hand-beaten alloy and is mounted to the chassis via an ash frame, similar to those the company has been using for more than a hundred years. That's one tradition the brand will almost certainly never get rid of.


Switching to the 3.0-litre engine makes plenty of sense, especially given the emissions-enforced retirement of the N62. But it does mean the Plus Six will miss the characterful wuffle that made spirited roof-down progress in the Plus 8 so much fun. It also seems to mean the loss of the manual gearbox, with the official release suggesting the Six will be auto-only using the eight-speed ZF transmission.

Plus Six buyers are also going to get an unprecedented level of tech for a "Moggy", including such fripperies as remote control central locking, automatic headlights and even a small digital display screen.

This isn't the first Morgan planned around a BMW six-cylinder engine. The Morgan Eva was going to be a four-seat coupe using an earlier version of the 3.0-litre unit. It was abandoned after the huge cost led to a boardroom putsch which saw the ousting of former boss Charles Morgan. The Plus Six is a far more traditional take, but it won't be the last car to use the platform, with Morgan having already told us it plans to launch pure electric models in the medium-term future. Tally ho!











Author
Discussion

WolfAir

Original Poster:

456 posts

135 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
How is such a beauty not more popular?
If I had to make a choice between this (or an aero 8) and say a Lamborghini Gallardo or Ferrari I would pick this.
Or am I comparing wrong cars?


rix

2,781 posts

190 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
That gear knob, in that car?? Sure the most deserving bit of investment for a bespoke item...

rare6499

656 posts

139 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
Wow, this is a dream car for me. Absolutely stunning.


Numeric

1,396 posts

151 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
For me a manual would be a must have in a Morgan - it is surely all about the 'Old Fashioned Charm' of the car and while I think this would have been on my lottery win list - that gear box, while utterly brilliant when I have used it - would just not suit the whole character of the experience I am seeking in a car like this.

I am sure it is the best package they do - but mastering the thing must be much of the charm rather than point and squirt and let the box sort it out.

JackReacher

2,127 posts

215 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
The B58 is a good engine but its no V8. It's a shame it's auto only, much like the use of this engine in the new Supra. BMW mated this engine with a manual box in the m240i for a short period so it can be done, and would make a lot of sense in the Morgan.




NJJ

434 posts

80 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
I'm still in my thirties (just) and I find myself loving this so Morgan must be doing something right or, I'm just ageing quicker than I thought. Super desirable and at the opposite end of the spectrum from the new 992 but I find myself lusting after this more and pocketing some change in the process.

SOL111

627 posts

132 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
rix said:
That gear knob, in that car?? Sure the most deserving bit of investment for a bespoke item...
My thoughts exactly.

I'd pay for a bespoke knob/lever. Something wooden preferably.

Stunning otherwise though.

MikeT66

2,680 posts

124 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
Numeric said:
For me a manual would be a must have in a Morgan - it is surely all about the 'Old Fashioned Charm' of the car and while I think this would have been on my lottery win list - that gear box, while utterly brilliant when I have used it - would just not suit the whole character of the experience I am seeking in a car like this.

I am sure it is the best package they do - but mastering the thing must be much of the charm rather than point and squirt and let the box sort it out.
Fabulous-looking thing - I love the hard-top... but I'd agree - manual gearbox is a must in an 'analogue' car like this. I can't imagine you'd want to buy one of these with its inherent flaws and not want the manual transmission.

A Morgan is on my lottery-win list too... but definitely a manual one.

RedAndy

1,230 posts

154 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
side on it look too short n stubby.

and whats going on with the door in the side-on pic with the roof on?

definitely a lovely car though.

RumbleOfThunder

3,554 posts

203 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
+1 on that awful beemer gear stick.

RumbleOfThunder

3,554 posts

203 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
What on earth are they thinking by using the the ZF 8 speed? That's just plain laziness. No Morgan owner wants an auto.

giveitfish

4,031 posts

214 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
Beautiful car. Is this where the Aston Martin Vanquish chassis platform ended up or is that with some Chinese electric startup? Or even back to Lotus with Geely? ( https://uk.motor1.com/news/279305/vanquish-plans-b... )

If so, that must mean that 90% of British sports cars are now built using the bonded/riveted extruded alloy tech developed for the Elise in 1996. All Lotus models use it, I believe all Astons since the 2001 Vanquish use a licensed development of it too, and now Morgan?

I spot an Evora steering wheel in car above too smile

MikeyC

836 posts

227 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
If it ain't broke, don't fix it !

Yeah, that's very nice iteration of their 'Classic Look' (still can't get on with the look of the Aero tho!)

Agreed with previous comments re: the gearstick ....

Robert-nszl1

401 posts

88 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
Agree, this should be manual. Unclear where it leaves the Roadster which I think they still make. 6 cylinder naturally aspirated putting out almost the same power (280bhp), with a manual box..... Perhaps makes it slightly more attractive, even in the narrow body form. Have often thought of owning one of these, and briefly looked at the run out version. Those that are available at the moment in the classifieds are autos though.

Edited by Robert-nszl1 on Tuesday 5th March 09:11

David87

6,656 posts

212 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
That's a really beautiful car. rofl at the gear selector, though.

CABC

5,575 posts

101 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
big change here is the chassis as the old one really was a bedstead. but a Mog is not for traffic and so a manual is essential. certainly not a bmw auto selector.

GroundEffect

13,836 posts

156 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
That shifter would cost around $0.5M to engineer and $1M to tool up if you wanted a new one. It's an eShifter, not just a bit of metal and rubber to the transmission - it carries a lot of safety protocol overheads.


cheddar

4,637 posts

174 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
Odd juxtaposition between old and new - neither one thing or the other - holds no appeal for me, when really it should

Deerfoot

4,902 posts

184 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
Utterly magnificent.

Green please with oxblood interior.

DonkeyApple

55,255 posts

169 months

Tuesday 5th March 2019
quotequote all
WolfAir said:
How is such a beauty not more popular?
If I had to make a choice between this (or an aero 8) and say a Lamborghini Gallardo or Ferrari I would pick this.
Or am I comparing wrong cars?

Fundamentally because they’ve not been able to engage with the younger demographic. This is a stunning car but I suspect an awful lot of people put off their purchase until they retire which is a terrible shame.