Well with a little work it does, quite nicely actually as it’ll go on the front of the original MGB box and with some carefully made engine mounts drop in the engine bay without any metal cutting. Trouble was during the devolpment work the MGB’s GT bodywork rusted away so badly that needed a full rebuild too. Rather than embarking on a full body restoration I went out and found a rust free American Roadster shell and I’m just about to weld that up (they rarely are truly rust free are they?) before reshelling the car with Rover T16 power.
I admit it, I like MGBs. Okay it’s not something I’m proud of but it’s probably best I get it out in the open straight away. Since first being diagnosed with the affliction I’ve probably had more than ten bouts of MGB, some cases were worse than others. Full restorations, Heritage shells, V8s, Roadsters with dodgy Bermuda roofs, I’ve had them all, but my current project started off as the most boring of the lot.
It began life as a 1973 MGB GT, I got it six years ago and ran it around in standard form for the first two years. Then I found out the family history of the Rover 800 turbo engine. It turns out the Rover engine was a development of the the O-series engine, and the O-series engine was a development of the original B-series engine. With an illustruisous family heritage like that I had to find out if the Rover
(T-16) engine would fit an MGB, well you would wouldn’t you.
Kevin Leaper
Has more cars than most main dealers and more projects than South-Central LA. Almost none of them work.
Website: www.ppcmag.co.uk/kevin-leaper.html



