Cut off in its prime: MG Metro 6R4

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s far as Austin Rover and their parent company BL were concerned, 1981 had marked a sea change in the attitudes of company executives and dealer principles across the land. No longer were they apologetic for the state of their ageing range of cars, but shored up by the warm reception given to the Austin miniMetro and the fact that new models were in the pipeline, they felt as though there was now light at the end of a very dark and long tunnel.

It was in this climate of optimism that the then Austin Rover Motor sport chief John Davenport hatched a plan. Now that the TR7 V8 and TR8 rally cars had hung up their competitive boots as it were, following the 1980 Lombard RAC rally, he wanted to replace it with something more in the mould of the ill-fated Ford Escort RS 1700T – a "silhouette" rally car, that employed the classic front engine and rear wheel drive transmission package.

Unlike the stubby Ford, Davenport soon decided to follow the lead of Audi and go with a permanent 4WD transmission, married to a near ideal mid-engined layout. Funds were tight (as one can imagine) and it took some persuasion at board room level to obtain funding for the project. Davenport: "I managed to persuade our director Tony Ball to part with £50,000 for a special NEC Show project car." Once the first hurdle was cleared, the next was the development of the car itself – something removed from the traditional art of producing a rally car based on an existing model. Davenport had no quarms about collaborating with the world of Formula one in order to get him the type of quick thinking and focussed engineers in order to get the project off the ground in double quick time. The best team in the world in 1981 was Williams – and their chief engineer and designer was Patrick Head – so logically, an approach was made.

"We nipped down the road to see Patrick and said let's see if we can design a rally car", as Davenport put it – of course it was a easy decision to make as, at the time, the company was sponsoring the Williams team. The decision to base the new competition car on the Metro was an easy one to make, also:

·   The Metro was small, and short in wheelbase;

·   The BL board were always more likely to sanction the plan if it were based on a production car.

In 1982, Patrick Head and Williams engineer, John Piper got down to the task of actually building the car – and as Head himself estimates, he spent approximately forty per cent of his working hours on the MG. A new chassis was built from the ground up and it consisted of a floorpan fashioned into a seam welded tubular chassis – old hat in F1 terms of the day, but still a very effective solution. Williams designed the gearbox, which was produced by their own contractors; the differentials were produced by 4WD experts, Ferguson (of Jensen FF fame). The finished car was delievered to Austin Rover in Cowley as promised in December 1982 – and in-house development begun.

The car arrived in kit-form and it was up to BL motorsport to assemble it and test it in anger. For the purposes of comparison, they run it against a Group A-spec Rover 3500 and an Audi Quattro, THE rally car of the time. Even in these early stages of development, the Metro turned in a more than competitive performance despite its underpowered(!) 240bhp development engine. What the first prototype lost in straightline speed, it made up for in agility.

In terms of an engine, there was little consideration given to using an existing ARG engine (supercharged or turbocharged), but due to what they were likely to be up against, the brave decision was taken to produce a bespoke engine for the new car. Two engines were apparently tried in development prototypes during late 1983: the Honda V6, due to appear in the Rover 800 in 1986 – and the Rover V8. Needless to say, Patrick Head preferred something lighter and more compact – and pushed for an all-new V6 loosely based on the Rover V8.


The initial versions of the 6R4 looked almost tame compared with the final, definitive version: As can be seen in this picture, the February 1984 version was based, cosmetically, around the original Metro. The front air dam and sidepods would grow significantly and the rear spoiler had yet to make an appearance. Here, Tony Pond is at the wheel – and he would perform the majority of the test and development driving.

The MG Metro 6R4 (ie: 6-cyclinder, 4-wheel-drive rally car) made its first public appearance at the end of February 1984 in a hastily prepared press launch at the Excelsior Hotel, London Airport. The reason for this was that press speculation was mounting – and in order to undergo a full development programme, Austin Rover could do without the added hassle of playing hide and seek with scoop photographers.

At the launch, Tony Pond drove the car onto stage and said of it; "It's fantastic! You go into a corner deep, get the back end out under braking – and then drift through with the power on. If you go in too deep you simply use more power".

The rest of 1984 was used to finalise the 6R4: a final engine needed to be developed and the aero package also needed more work.

The cut-and-shut Rover V8 engine of the development car was replaced by the specially designed and built four-cam, 24-valve, normally aspirated 3-litre V6. The power output was quoted at 410bhp at 9000rpm at the car's official launch in May, 1985 – and it was promised that this would soon be improved upon. The aero package was indeed modified and took the rulebook to the extreme, stretching the credibility of the "silhouette racer" ideal to breaking point. It did, however reflect the then current Group B thinking also followed by Peugeot 205T16 and Lancia Delta S4 – and looking back at it now, it is easy to see that the cars were becoming completely over the top for their task in hand.

Specifications:
Engine Capacity:2991cc, Bore: 92mm, Stroke: 75mm
Valve Gear:DOHC, 4 valves per cylinder, toothed belt camshaft drive
Compression ratio:12:1, Lucas mapped electronic fuel injection
Configuration:Longways/mid mounted, 6 cylinders in 90 deg, V, dry liners, 4 main bearings, water cooled
Maximum Power:410bhp at 9000rpm, Maximum torque: 270lb ft at 6500rpm

Austin Rover Motorsport announced at the time that the MG Metro 6R4 would be competing in the 1986 World Rally Championship – and would be competing against such definitive cars as the Audi Quattro S1, Lancia Delta S4 and Ford RS200. Group B rallying had entered a truly exciting – and as we would soon see, terrifying – era.

Autocar magazine meanwhile strapped their timing gear to the Clubman (250bhp) and International (410bhp) versions of the 6R4 and produced some simply awesome acceleration figures (The figures for the International version are quoted):

0-30mph0-40mph0-50mph0-60mph0-70mph0-80mph0-90mph0-100mph0-110mph
1.2s1.7s2.4s3.2s4.0s5.2s6.5s8.2s10.0s

Obviously the magazine came away impressed (who wouldn't after turning in those figures), and it was John Davenport who, when asked by Autocar whether the MG Metro 6R4 would win rallies, summed up the company's optimism about the car's chances: "Yes. I see no reason why it shouldn't. I think the car is quite capable of doing it, and I think my drivers are more than up to the job".

Sadly, it was not to be: in the Portugese rally of 1986, Henri Toivinen at the wheel of a Ford RS200, was involved in a heavy collision which proved fatal for several spectators – The FISA immediately ruled that Group B rally cars were simply too fast, and therefore dangerous to rally and banned them from competition immediately. The international career of these Group B cars was now over – and the book on the promising 6R4 was closed prematurely.

Austin Rover Motorsport gave up on rallying at this point – and it would not be until 2001 that we would see another factory backed MG rally effort.

The car lived on in a couple of ways: road versions were eventually sold off at a bargain £13,000 a piece, many entering private hands to be used in rallycross events across Europe. The car's engine also would make a re-appearance in heavily modified, 3.5-litre form – in the back of the 217mph Jaguar XJ220.


The works MG 6R4 rally car caught during testing.


Copyright © 2002 Keith Adams

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Related pages:

·The MG revival index
·After the MGB: the Eighties MGs
·The MGB is reborn: the MG RV8
·The new age arrives: MGF/TF
·MGs for a new millennium: from X to Z

·Metro development story