1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 1 de 134)
134
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 1 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 2 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 3 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 4 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 5 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 6 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 7 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 8 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 9 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 10 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 11 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 12 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 13 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 14 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 15 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 16 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 17 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 18 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 19 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 20 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 21 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 22 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 23 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 24 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 25 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 26 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 27 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 28 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 29 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 30 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 31 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 32 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 33 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 34 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 35 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 36 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 37 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 38 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 39 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 40 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 41 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 42 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 43 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 44 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 45 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 46 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 47 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 48 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 49 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 50 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 51 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 52 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 53 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 54 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 55 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 56 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 57 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 58 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 59 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 60 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 61 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 62 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 63 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 64 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 65 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 66 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 67 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 68 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 69 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 70 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 71 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 72 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 73 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 74 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 75 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 76 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 77 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 78 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 79 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 80 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 81 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 82 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 83 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 84 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 85 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 86 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 87 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 88 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 89 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 90 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 91 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 92 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 93 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 94 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 95 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 96 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 97 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 98 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 99 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 100 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 101 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 102 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 103 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 104 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 105 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 106 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 107 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 108 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 109 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 110 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 111 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 112 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 113 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 114 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 115 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 116 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 117 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 118 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 119 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 120 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 121 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 122 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 123 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 124 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 125 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 126 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 127 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 128 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 129 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 130 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 131 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 132 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 133 de 134)
1946 MG TC En venta (imagen 134 de 134)
Puja ganadora
25.750 £

1946 MG TC

Highlights

  • One of the first thousand TCs built
  • Upgraded with Ford Type 9 gearbox and wide wheels
  • Enormous history file stretching back to 1955
  • In single ownership for over 45 years from 1967

The Background

Having started out by selling tuned, sports-bodied versions of Morris Oxfords and Cowleys in the 1920s, the first cars to be built wholly as MGs appeared in 1928, and the company had only been constructing cars for eight years when it struck gold with the T-type.
Appearing in 1936, the TA Midget was the latest in a line of cars to carry the Midget nomenclature, and it was considerably more refined than its predecessors. It appealed enormously to sports-car enthusiasts and sold well until 1939, when it was superseded by the very similar TB, but war soon halted production. Counting TAs and TBs together, the T-type had become MG’s best-selling model.
Like all manufacturers at the return of peace, MG had not been able to develop anything new during the war so was forced to revive a pre-war model. Fortunately, it didn’t need a new model, so popular was the T-type. It re-entered production in 1945 as the TC, having received some slight modifications to its spring mountings. The well-known 1250cc XPAG engine which débuted with the TB returned, unchanged save for an alteration to the oil filter and the addition of a timing chain tensioner for noise reduction. The characteristically pre-war body appeared unaltered but was four inches wider.
Although the TC depended on quite dated engineering, demand for it outstripped supply, and British enthusiasts in particular thirsted for it as the government’s Export or Die decree meant that, at first, most were shipped overseas. Though this was Britain’s loss, when TCs started to arrive in America they were responsible perhaps more than anything else for initiating the Americans’ love affair with the British sports-car.
Tested in The Autocar, the TC was praised for its hill-climbing ability and the more comfortable ride resulting from the few modifications. The Motor remarked that with its leather interior and nippy performance, it was a very high-quality car for the price asked. 

A cruising speed of 55 to 60 m.p.h. and a 0 to 60 m.p.h. time of 21 seconds were very impressive figures for a small car of its day. Production ended in 1949 after 10,001 had been built, almost three times as many as the TA and TB combined, but the TD and TF kept the T-type tradition going until 1955.

The History

This car was the 976th TC built and was originally registered FOY 30 on 5th July 1946, but that number is now on a modern car. Tracing its history back to 1955, it was painted green and its earliest recorded owner was one Peter Heaton Gilder of Luton. In 1963 ownership passed to Donald Robert Champken of Caddington, a village outside of Luton. In 1965 it had two owners in Harpenden, Martin Curl and David John Brenchley respectively.
In 1966, the MG returned to Luton in the ownership of Jonathan Carr Selway, and then in 1967 it was purchased by Roger Philip Saunders of Letchworth, although he kept the car in Oxford. After changing hands so many times, it must have been relieved to end up in the ownership of Anthony Smith of Oadby, Leicestershire, in December 1967. Smith had the colour changed to red in 1970, moved to Leighton Buzzard in 1973, and remained there with the MG until at least as recently as 2012. He gave the car a great deal of upkeep and attention throughout the 1960s and ’70s and lavished yet more on it when he overhauled it in 2012.
In recent years, it has formed part of the collection of a sports-car enthusiast with a penchant for Morgans and MGs. Owning a number of cars which were strictly period-correct, the TC appealed to him on account of a few subtle upgrades which make it much more at home in modern traffic.

The Paperwork

Besides the V5C, this MG’s history file also includes an old buff logbook showing the ownership history from 1955 to 1973. Mr. Smith kept a very thorough record of invoices pertaining to the TC, and the earliest ones run from 1968 to 1978. 

There is also a collection of invoices dating from 2012. Further historic paperwork includes two M.o.T. certificates and tax discs dated 1973, ’77, ’78 and ’79.

The Interior

As the reviewer in The Motor commented, you really are spoiled somewhat in the MG TC. When most small sports-cars typically scrimped on creature comforts, Abingdon gave its customers polished wooden dashes and soft leather seats. We know that the car has been the recipient of some recent restoration work and it is obvious that the interior was included in this as the leather looks almost like new.
The upholstery is a good match for the original MG colour Vellum Beige, and is in exceptionally good condition. The seats are soft and smooth and far more comfortable than one might expect from the nature of the car. The black carpet is also clean and in good overall condition. Behind the seats, the small compartment for luggage has been kept clean and tidy.
The wooden dashboard is of a wonderfully rich hue, and has acquired a pleasing patina over time. The gauges are all in lovely condition and the Bluemels Brooklands steering wheel looks great with its polished centre and the very soft patina which is just beginning to show on its spokes. Bidders will note that the gear knob has deliberately been fitted the wrong way round to indicate where reverse is in the Type 9 gearbox.

The Exterior

From outside, the TC is a delightful sight, looking every inch the traditional British sports-car. The handsome green paint is a little darker than Shires Green, in which 1946 TCs were originally offered, but that doesn’t matter. It’s British Racing Green, and every British sports-car looks good in that.
We don’t know exactly what condition the car was in when it was renovated in 2012, but Mr. Smith purchased an entire new steel body for it, complete with scuttle and doors, from the Hutson Motor Company at a cost of around £5000. The body then had to receive its trimmings, many of which were sourced from Moss Bradford, so components such as the door handles were brand-new parts.
As far as the condition of the paint goes, the photos illustrate that it’s in a superb state, albeit with just a couple of small blemishes. The paint has a few bubbles under it at the tip of the nearside front wing, and there is a small scratch in the passenger door, but aside from those the paint is almost perfect.
The chrome is excellent. We know some small parts are new, but we expect much of it has been rechromed. The headlight bowls have a nice patina, so they have not been, but the chrome on that magnificent centrepiece, the proud upright radiator, shows barely any sign of age. We should point out that the radiator has the smallest of dents in the nearside top corner, but you’d probably not have noticed if we hadn’t told you.
The handsome beige hood is in such good condition and so clean that we believe it is also a new item, and the plastic window is free of creases. The windscreen and all the light lenses are in great order, too.
Perhaps you’ve noticed the wheels and are thinking that they look particularly meaty. Indeed they do, for they are MWS 16-inch wires with Blockley tyres, wider than standard for improved road-holding, not to mention a distinctly muscular look.

The Mechanics

We are not aware of any major mechanical work having been undertaken on the MG, but we do know it received all the usual work that goes with a light overhaul or recommissioning in 2012. All we can say is that it starts and runs nicely, pulls away easily with a very light clutch and sounds great. The brakes seem to be working well and the steering is not unduly heavy, despite the extra rubber on the ground.
Naturally, the gearbox doesn’t feel like a 1940s ’box because it isn’t one. Like many T-types, this car has been upgraded with a Ford Type 9 gearbox, as originally used in the Mk. III Capri and Sierra. This gives the MG five speeds rather than four, and generally makes it much more user-friendly than a totally original car.
Without an M.o.T., we can make no guarantees as to the car’s roadworthiness, but we think you can see for yourself how good it is and to what a high standard it has been built.

The Appeal

If you’ve always fancied a traditional British sports-car but can’t quite decide what to buy, don’t overcomplicate things. The MG TC pretty much defines the breed. And if you like what you see but you’re not sure how you’d like a driving experience which is essentially pre-war, you’ve nothing to fear from this car with its five-speed gearbox and wider wheels which satisfy modern expectations of gear-changing and road-holding.
With a whole new body fitted only 10 years ago, you can feel confident that this MG isn’t hiding anything from you and will last for a long time. All you need is a TC like this, the British countryside and a nice rural inn to aim for, and you’ll discover, if you haven’t already, just why the traditional sports-car is loved by so many thousands of people.
Notice to bidders
Although every care is taken to ensure this listing is as factual and transparent as possible, all details within the listing are subject to the information provided to us by the seller. Car & Classic does not take responsibility for any information missing from the listing. Please ensure you are satisfied with the vehicle description and all information provided before placing a bid.
All bids are legally binding once placed. Any winning bidder who withdraws from a sale, is subject to our bidders fee charge. Please see our FAQs and T&C's for further information. Viewings of vehicles are encouraged, but entirely at the seller’s discretion.
Puja ganadora
25.750 £
Vendido
MG logo

¿Vendiendo tu MG?


Anuncia a 4 millones de visitantes mensuales en Car & Classic

Vender en subasta

Detalles de la subasta

  • Año1946
  • MarcaMG
  • ModeloTC
  • ColorGreen
  • Cuentakilómetros6,674 Millas
  • Cilindrada1250cc
  • Tipo de vendedorComercio
  • CondadoBerkshire
  • PaísReino Unido
  • Termina la subasta

Historial de pujas

12 pujas de 9 pujadores

nmanfie••••
Puja
25.750 £
05/08/22
nmanfie••••
Puja
25.500 £
05/08/22
3affici••••
Puja
24.750 £
05/08/22
DA11MOG
Puja
24.500 £
05/08/22
DA11MOG
Puja
23.500 £
05/08/22
nmanfie••••
Puja
22.000 £
04/08/22
simon-c••••
Puja
21.500 £
04/08/22
H7x••••
Puja
15.000 £
02/08/22
VZ2••••
Puja
10.000 £
30/07/22
Kermit0••••
Puja
6500 £
29/07/22

Comprar con Car & Classic

Cómo funciona la subasta

Todo lo que necesitas saber sobre el proceso de puja en Car & Classic

animation

Cinco pasos para comprar con seguridad

Lo hacemos seguro y fácil para asegurar tu clásico soñado

animation

Envío y transporte

Información útil sobre cómo recoger tu nuevo vehículo

animation

Pagos seguros

Cómo te protegemos a ti y a tu dinero, para que Car & Classic sea el lugar más seguro para comprar y vender

Más Preguntas frecuentes

Galería