Industrial historians, when pondering upon the demise of the British motor industry, rightly target the 1970s onwards. We mechanics were witnesses, and profiteers......
I struggle to think of good cars from that period. Many, otherwise good machines, were let down simply by Lucas electrical equipment. Condensers (capacitors), points (contacts), starters, etc.
And then there was poor design fed by useless management, and betrayed by abysmal production engineering, and a dissolute, dissillusioned workforce.
Vauxhall: Once the inferior steel used on the Victor had been forgotten, things improved. Until the HC series Viva, and Firenza. Though perfectly acceptable to drive, these wretched things amassed an impressive list of service failures, such as
weedy gearboxes; ignition ballast resistors igniting oil-soaked sound insulation on the bonnet (hood); collapsed pressed-steel valve rocker arms; porous inlet manifolds; brake-drum centre sections that flexed, but somehow never actually fractured (thanks to the wheels being bolted on!). Of less concern was the fact that it was anyone's guess as to which combination of brake equipment would be discovered when an HC came in. Some had all Lockheed hardware, some had all Girling. Girling master cylinder and front brakes, Lockheed rear. Or,Lockheed master, Girling everywhere else. At least the spares service was cheap and cheerful.....
Morris Marina: The later 1.3 litre could be fun to hustle along (yes, really!, far more so than the awful Allegro). The lower front suspension wore out rapidly. If the driver was constructed from anything heavier that polystyrene, the rear mountings of the driver's seat would punch ragged holes through the floor. The high-tech remedy was to apply nice big washers to the damaged areas! The 1.8, even in twin-carburettor form, was a lousy drive.
Morris Minor: Again, the lower front suspension wear problem, usually exacerbated by lack of greasing. Everyone in Britain at some time probably saw a collapsed Minor waitng for the breakdown wagon. The brake master cylinder sat neatly in a floor channel. The production line geniuses had arranged the retaining bolts with heads adjacent to the front suspension torsion bar, so one was obliged to "bend" the obstruction. Naturally, the weary mechanic would replace these bolts in the opposite direction!
Austin A40 Farina: Hydraulic brakes forard, mechanical aft. Stupid. (But it used to be good enough for Rolls-Royce.). Horrible Austin steering system, much inferior to the Minor's rack and pinion. No fun at all,...but many were RACED.
Mini: A little darling of a car to drive. Nonetheless, terribly uncomfortable for a long journey with its solid suspension, and a list of design faults too long for the space on this page.
Lost opportunities leading to the deadest of dead ends, and then the Delorean.