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The Advertiser
3 days ago
- Automotive
- The Advertiser
2025 Frontline MGA review: Quick drive
Australia and the MGA go way back. From 1957 to mid-1962 more than 2000 MGAs were assembled in factories at Enfield and Zetland in Sydney. In a streetscape then dominated by chunky Holden sedans and blocky Bedford trucks, the British sports car was a sensation, turning heads like Ferraris or Lamborghinis do today. Under its sheet metal this MG still had the separate chassis, lever-arm shocks, leaf-spring live rear axle and wooden floor of the vintage vibe TC, TD, and TF models that preceded it. But it looked modern, with streamlined bodywork styled by MG's chief designer Syd Enever that was inspired by the rebodied TD roadster he had created in 1951 for the Le Mans 24 Hour race. Six decades later, the MGA is back – and this one's going to turn heads, too. Developed in Britain by MG restoration and restomod specialist Frontline Cars, the new Frontline MGA looks like a carefully restored classic. But under the skin is a modern powertrain, plus redesigned and upgraded suspension, brake, and steering hardware, that combine to make it a brilliantly beguiling sports car. The Frontline MGA follows the formula established with the company's long line of MGB restomods. "The MGA was the natural next step for us," explains Tim Fenna, founder and chief engineer of Frontline Cars. "It's an icon of British motoring, but one that was always crying out for more performance and refinement." Australian market versions of the car will be manufactured, sold and serviced by Sydney-based Frontline Cars Australia, a subsidiary of Modern Classic Cars Foundation, which has built Frontline MGBs for the past 10 years. Frontline Australia MGAs start with an Australian market donor car – a roadster, or the rarer coupe – that can either be sourced by Frontline or supplied by the customer. The chassis is strengthened and fitted with a redesigned front suspension that features Nitron telescopic shocks and fabricated upper links in place of the vintage lever-arm shocks that were standard on the original MGA. The original leaf-sprung banjo rear axle is swapped for a late model MGB unit that's been modified to allow coil springs and Nitron shocks and is located by upper and lower trailing links and a Panhard rod. Other chassis upgrades include disc brakes all round, the front rotors vented and clamped by four-piston calipers, and electronic rack and pinion steering. Customers can choose between traditional-style 15-inch wire wheels or 15-inch Dunlop alloys that look like the wheels fitted to Jaguar's D-Type and Lightweight E-Type racers during the 1950s and 60s. Customers can choose between two naturally aspirated Mazda engines, one a 2.0-litre unit that develops 168kW of power at 7200rpm and 241Nm of torque at 4500rpm, the other a 2.5-litre unit that develops 216kW at 7100rpm and 330Nm at 4200rpm. They drive the rear wheels through a Mazda five-speed manual transmission. Each engine features a bespoke individual throttle body induction system, revised camshaft profiles, a new ECU, and a tuned stainless steel exhaust system. The 2.5-litre engine's balance shaft has been removed to reduce frictional losses and improve throttle response. All the mechanical hardware is topped with a body that retains its stock dimensions but has been carefully reworked to improve its structural rigidity, primarily by way of the addition of an aluminium honeycomb floor (British-built models have a steel floor) that now tightly ties together the bodysides. Detail bodywork changes include the removal of the front indicators – they are now located within the modern LED headlight units – and the deletion of the octagonal MG badge from the boot lid. Look closely and you'll also see discreet Frontline badging near the vents either side of the narrow bonnet, but otherwise the Frontline MGA looks just like a beautifully restored original car. The cockpit is more luxuriously trimmed, in leather or Alcantara, than that of any original MGA, however. The dash features Frontline-branded Smiths dials, and there's an audio system with two speakers, two tweeters, an amplifier, and a Bluetooth module all controlled by a discreetly hidden head unit. The modern luxuries don't stop there. Customers can specify heated versions of Frontline's optional aluminium-framed bucket seats, and one-touch electric windows are available on the coupé. Air-conditioning is also available as an option. Australian-spec cars get a host of minor detail changes – everything from ADR-approved seat belts to steel brake lines – that allow the Frontline MGA to be registered on Australian roads. We had the chance to get behind the wheel of the first Frontline MGA built, a British-spec car fitted with the 2.0-litre engine, and a relatively tall 3.07 diff rather than the 3.4 or 3.7 ratios typically used in the Frontline MGBs because the owner wanted the car to feel relaxed while cruising. And relaxed it is: At 80km/h in fifth gear the Mazda engine, which will rev enthusiastically to 7750rpm, is turning just 2000rpm. The engine sounds properly rorty-snorty when you take it through the gears, like an old-school British performance four-cylinder engine. And though the Mazda four has much more top-end bite than any of those old Brit engines, it has a similarly solid swathe of mid-range torque you can exploit with the transmission's tightly packed ratios. The Mazda powertrain weighs 60kg less than the vintage MG hardware, which takes weight off the front axle and means the Frontline MGA tips the scales at about 900kg. So, despite its tall diff ratio, the little MG felt marvelously alive on British B-roads, easily scooting to 130km/h or 145km/h between the corners. The ride is tightly controlled, but it's not harsh, thanks to the way the Nitron shocks deal with sharp inputs and the absorptive quality of the generously sidewalled 185/65 R15 Bridgestone Turanza tyres. The electronic power steering assists up to about 50km/h, then drops away. Feel and feedback through the steering wheel rim is terrific. You can have manual steering if you want. Don't bother. It'll only make you sweat muscling the woodrim steering wheel at low speeds. Like all old-school rear drive sports cars, the Frontline MGA likes to be braked in a straight line, then turned into a late apex as you get on the throttle. Get too ambitious with your right foot, though, and the abundant traction from the standard Quaife limited-slip differential will push the nose wide. Brake feel is very good, and the well-placed pedals, combined with the beautifully crisp throttle response and the short throws of the transmission, make heel-and-toe downshifts a cinch. What stands out about the Frontline MGA, however, is how taut and tight it feels. There's no scuttle shake – none – and no vibration back through the steering. Suspension noise and impact harshness are very well suppressed. Though it's very light, and with a live rear axle, the car feels astonishingly planted and composed, even on indifferent roads. In terms of the way it drives the Frontline MGA is a truly stunning piece of work. Indeed, there are modern sports cars that don't feel as coherent as this reworked MG. For sheer fun and driver engagement the modern sports car that comes closest to the Frontline MGA is – ironically, given its powertrain – Mazda's MX-5 roadster, a car that is 47mm shorter, with an 80mm shorter wheelbase, but 262mm wider and at least 170kg heavier. There's something else in the MX-5 comparison, too: The idea that less is more. Tim Fenna says the 2.0-litre Frontline MGA takes about 5.0 seconds to sprint from 0 to 100km/h (the 135kW MX-5 takes at least 6.0 seconds). The 2.0-litre Frontline car is thus just 0.7 seconds slower to 100km/h than the 2.5-litre model, and both versions have a top speed of 250km/h. Increased cost of the bigger engine aside, we suspect its extra power and torque could make the Frontline MGA, which has neither traction control nor ABS, a bit of a handful, especially on a wet road. The 2.0-litre model feels the sweet-spot car. The original MGA was a relatively affordable sports car. The Frontline MGA is not, with prices starting at about $290,000 plus taxes and shipping and the cost of a donor car, according to Frontline Australia CEO David Dyer. "The major reason for building the car in Australia is the customer can get involved," Dyer says. It also means access to a reasonable stock of relatively rust-free right-hand drive donor cars – 81,000 of the 101,000 MGAs built between 1955 and 1962 were exported to the US, and fewer than 1900 right-hand drive cars are believed to exist in the UK. What's more, the Australian-built Frontline MGA doesn't attract the imported vehicle luxury car tax. Yes, the Frontline MGA is expensive. But for the money you get a genuinely bespoke, joyously analogue driver's car that's thoroughly engaging at real-world speeds on real-world roads. And it will turn more heads than any run-of-the-mill modern Ferrari or Everything MG Content originally sourced from: Australia and the MGA go way back. From 1957 to mid-1962 more than 2000 MGAs were assembled in factories at Enfield and Zetland in Sydney. In a streetscape then dominated by chunky Holden sedans and blocky Bedford trucks, the British sports car was a sensation, turning heads like Ferraris or Lamborghinis do today. Under its sheet metal this MG still had the separate chassis, lever-arm shocks, leaf-spring live rear axle and wooden floor of the vintage vibe TC, TD, and TF models that preceded it. But it looked modern, with streamlined bodywork styled by MG's chief designer Syd Enever that was inspired by the rebodied TD roadster he had created in 1951 for the Le Mans 24 Hour race. Six decades later, the MGA is back – and this one's going to turn heads, too. Developed in Britain by MG restoration and restomod specialist Frontline Cars, the new Frontline MGA looks like a carefully restored classic. But under the skin is a modern powertrain, plus redesigned and upgraded suspension, brake, and steering hardware, that combine to make it a brilliantly beguiling sports car. The Frontline MGA follows the formula established with the company's long line of MGB restomods. "The MGA was the natural next step for us," explains Tim Fenna, founder and chief engineer of Frontline Cars. "It's an icon of British motoring, but one that was always crying out for more performance and refinement." Australian market versions of the car will be manufactured, sold and serviced by Sydney-based Frontline Cars Australia, a subsidiary of Modern Classic Cars Foundation, which has built Frontline MGBs for the past 10 years. Frontline Australia MGAs start with an Australian market donor car – a roadster, or the rarer coupe – that can either be sourced by Frontline or supplied by the customer. The chassis is strengthened and fitted with a redesigned front suspension that features Nitron telescopic shocks and fabricated upper links in place of the vintage lever-arm shocks that were standard on the original MGA. The original leaf-sprung banjo rear axle is swapped for a late model MGB unit that's been modified to allow coil springs and Nitron shocks and is located by upper and lower trailing links and a Panhard rod. Other chassis upgrades include disc brakes all round, the front rotors vented and clamped by four-piston calipers, and electronic rack and pinion steering. Customers can choose between traditional-style 15-inch wire wheels or 15-inch Dunlop alloys that look like the wheels fitted to Jaguar's D-Type and Lightweight E-Type racers during the 1950s and 60s. Customers can choose between two naturally aspirated Mazda engines, one a 2.0-litre unit that develops 168kW of power at 7200rpm and 241Nm of torque at 4500rpm, the other a 2.5-litre unit that develops 216kW at 7100rpm and 330Nm at 4200rpm. They drive the rear wheels through a Mazda five-speed manual transmission. Each engine features a bespoke individual throttle body induction system, revised camshaft profiles, a new ECU, and a tuned stainless steel exhaust system. The 2.5-litre engine's balance shaft has been removed to reduce frictional losses and improve throttle response. All the mechanical hardware is topped with a body that retains its stock dimensions but has been carefully reworked to improve its structural rigidity, primarily by way of the addition of an aluminium honeycomb floor (British-built models have a steel floor) that now tightly ties together the bodysides. Detail bodywork changes include the removal of the front indicators – they are now located within the modern LED headlight units – and the deletion of the octagonal MG badge from the boot lid. Look closely and you'll also see discreet Frontline badging near the vents either side of the narrow bonnet, but otherwise the Frontline MGA looks just like a beautifully restored original car. The cockpit is more luxuriously trimmed, in leather or Alcantara, than that of any original MGA, however. The dash features Frontline-branded Smiths dials, and there's an audio system with two speakers, two tweeters, an amplifier, and a Bluetooth module all controlled by a discreetly hidden head unit. The modern luxuries don't stop there. Customers can specify heated versions of Frontline's optional aluminium-framed bucket seats, and one-touch electric windows are available on the coupé. Air-conditioning is also available as an option. Australian-spec cars get a host of minor detail changes – everything from ADR-approved seat belts to steel brake lines – that allow the Frontline MGA to be registered on Australian roads. We had the chance to get behind the wheel of the first Frontline MGA built, a British-spec car fitted with the 2.0-litre engine, and a relatively tall 3.07 diff rather than the 3.4 or 3.7 ratios typically used in the Frontline MGBs because the owner wanted the car to feel relaxed while cruising. And relaxed it is: At 80km/h in fifth gear the Mazda engine, which will rev enthusiastically to 7750rpm, is turning just 2000rpm. The engine sounds properly rorty-snorty when you take it through the gears, like an old-school British performance four-cylinder engine. And though the Mazda four has much more top-end bite than any of those old Brit engines, it has a similarly solid swathe of mid-range torque you can exploit with the transmission's tightly packed ratios. The Mazda powertrain weighs 60kg less than the vintage MG hardware, which takes weight off the front axle and means the Frontline MGA tips the scales at about 900kg. So, despite its tall diff ratio, the little MG felt marvelously alive on British B-roads, easily scooting to 130km/h or 145km/h between the corners. The ride is tightly controlled, but it's not harsh, thanks to the way the Nitron shocks deal with sharp inputs and the absorptive quality of the generously sidewalled 185/65 R15 Bridgestone Turanza tyres. The electronic power steering assists up to about 50km/h, then drops away. Feel and feedback through the steering wheel rim is terrific. You can have manual steering if you want. Don't bother. It'll only make you sweat muscling the woodrim steering wheel at low speeds. Like all old-school rear drive sports cars, the Frontline MGA likes to be braked in a straight line, then turned into a late apex as you get on the throttle. Get too ambitious with your right foot, though, and the abundant traction from the standard Quaife limited-slip differential will push the nose wide. Brake feel is very good, and the well-placed pedals, combined with the beautifully crisp throttle response and the short throws of the transmission, make heel-and-toe downshifts a cinch. What stands out about the Frontline MGA, however, is how taut and tight it feels. There's no scuttle shake – none – and no vibration back through the steering. Suspension noise and impact harshness are very well suppressed. Though it's very light, and with a live rear axle, the car feels astonishingly planted and composed, even on indifferent roads. In terms of the way it drives the Frontline MGA is a truly stunning piece of work. Indeed, there are modern sports cars that don't feel as coherent as this reworked MG. For sheer fun and driver engagement the modern sports car that comes closest to the Frontline MGA is – ironically, given its powertrain – Mazda's MX-5 roadster, a car that is 47mm shorter, with an 80mm shorter wheelbase, but 262mm wider and at least 170kg heavier. There's something else in the MX-5 comparison, too: The idea that less is more. Tim Fenna says the 2.0-litre Frontline MGA takes about 5.0 seconds to sprint from 0 to 100km/h (the 135kW MX-5 takes at least 6.0 seconds). The 2.0-litre Frontline car is thus just 0.7 seconds slower to 100km/h than the 2.5-litre model, and both versions have a top speed of 250km/h. Increased cost of the bigger engine aside, we suspect its extra power and torque could make the Frontline MGA, which has neither traction control nor ABS, a bit of a handful, especially on a wet road. The 2.0-litre model feels the sweet-spot car. The original MGA was a relatively affordable sports car. The Frontline MGA is not, with prices starting at about $290,000 plus taxes and shipping and the cost of a donor car, according to Frontline Australia CEO David Dyer. "The major reason for building the car in Australia is the customer can get involved," Dyer says. It also means access to a reasonable stock of relatively rust-free right-hand drive donor cars – 81,000 of the 101,000 MGAs built between 1955 and 1962 were exported to the US, and fewer than 1900 right-hand drive cars are believed to exist in the UK. What's more, the Australian-built Frontline MGA doesn't attract the imported vehicle luxury car tax. Yes, the Frontline MGA is expensive. But for the money you get a genuinely bespoke, joyously analogue driver's car that's thoroughly engaging at real-world speeds on real-world roads. And it will turn more heads than any run-of-the-mill modern Ferrari or Everything MG Content originally sourced from: Australia and the MGA go way back. From 1957 to mid-1962 more than 2000 MGAs were assembled in factories at Enfield and Zetland in Sydney. In a streetscape then dominated by chunky Holden sedans and blocky Bedford trucks, the British sports car was a sensation, turning heads like Ferraris or Lamborghinis do today. Under its sheet metal this MG still had the separate chassis, lever-arm shocks, leaf-spring live rear axle and wooden floor of the vintage vibe TC, TD, and TF models that preceded it. But it looked modern, with streamlined bodywork styled by MG's chief designer Syd Enever that was inspired by the rebodied TD roadster he had created in 1951 for the Le Mans 24 Hour race. Six decades later, the MGA is back – and this one's going to turn heads, too. Developed in Britain by MG restoration and restomod specialist Frontline Cars, the new Frontline MGA looks like a carefully restored classic. But under the skin is a modern powertrain, plus redesigned and upgraded suspension, brake, and steering hardware, that combine to make it a brilliantly beguiling sports car. The Frontline MGA follows the formula established with the company's long line of MGB restomods. "The MGA was the natural next step for us," explains Tim Fenna, founder and chief engineer of Frontline Cars. "It's an icon of British motoring, but one that was always crying out for more performance and refinement." Australian market versions of the car will be manufactured, sold and serviced by Sydney-based Frontline Cars Australia, a subsidiary of Modern Classic Cars Foundation, which has built Frontline MGBs for the past 10 years. Frontline Australia MGAs start with an Australian market donor car – a roadster, or the rarer coupe – that can either be sourced by Frontline or supplied by the customer. The chassis is strengthened and fitted with a redesigned front suspension that features Nitron telescopic shocks and fabricated upper links in place of the vintage lever-arm shocks that were standard on the original MGA. The original leaf-sprung banjo rear axle is swapped for a late model MGB unit that's been modified to allow coil springs and Nitron shocks and is located by upper and lower trailing links and a Panhard rod. Other chassis upgrades include disc brakes all round, the front rotors vented and clamped by four-piston calipers, and electronic rack and pinion steering. Customers can choose between traditional-style 15-inch wire wheels or 15-inch Dunlop alloys that look like the wheels fitted to Jaguar's D-Type and Lightweight E-Type racers during the 1950s and 60s. Customers can choose between two naturally aspirated Mazda engines, one a 2.0-litre unit that develops 168kW of power at 7200rpm and 241Nm of torque at 4500rpm, the other a 2.5-litre unit that develops 216kW at 7100rpm and 330Nm at 4200rpm. They drive the rear wheels through a Mazda five-speed manual transmission. Each engine features a bespoke individual throttle body induction system, revised camshaft profiles, a new ECU, and a tuned stainless steel exhaust system. The 2.5-litre engine's balance shaft has been removed to reduce frictional losses and improve throttle response. All the mechanical hardware is topped with a body that retains its stock dimensions but has been carefully reworked to improve its structural rigidity, primarily by way of the addition of an aluminium honeycomb floor (British-built models have a steel floor) that now tightly ties together the bodysides. Detail bodywork changes include the removal of the front indicators – they are now located within the modern LED headlight units – and the deletion of the octagonal MG badge from the boot lid. Look closely and you'll also see discreet Frontline badging near the vents either side of the narrow bonnet, but otherwise the Frontline MGA looks just like a beautifully restored original car. The cockpit is more luxuriously trimmed, in leather or Alcantara, than that of any original MGA, however. The dash features Frontline-branded Smiths dials, and there's an audio system with two speakers, two tweeters, an amplifier, and a Bluetooth module all controlled by a discreetly hidden head unit. The modern luxuries don't stop there. Customers can specify heated versions of Frontline's optional aluminium-framed bucket seats, and one-touch electric windows are available on the coupé. Air-conditioning is also available as an option. Australian-spec cars get a host of minor detail changes – everything from ADR-approved seat belts to steel brake lines – that allow the Frontline MGA to be registered on Australian roads. We had the chance to get behind the wheel of the first Frontline MGA built, a British-spec car fitted with the 2.0-litre engine, and a relatively tall 3.07 diff rather than the 3.4 or 3.7 ratios typically used in the Frontline MGBs because the owner wanted the car to feel relaxed while cruising. And relaxed it is: At 80km/h in fifth gear the Mazda engine, which will rev enthusiastically to 7750rpm, is turning just 2000rpm. The engine sounds properly rorty-snorty when you take it through the gears, like an old-school British performance four-cylinder engine. And though the Mazda four has much more top-end bite than any of those old Brit engines, it has a similarly solid swathe of mid-range torque you can exploit with the transmission's tightly packed ratios. The Mazda powertrain weighs 60kg less than the vintage MG hardware, which takes weight off the front axle and means the Frontline MGA tips the scales at about 900kg. So, despite its tall diff ratio, the little MG felt marvelously alive on British B-roads, easily scooting to 130km/h or 145km/h between the corners. The ride is tightly controlled, but it's not harsh, thanks to the way the Nitron shocks deal with sharp inputs and the absorptive quality of the generously sidewalled 185/65 R15 Bridgestone Turanza tyres. The electronic power steering assists up to about 50km/h, then drops away. Feel and feedback through the steering wheel rim is terrific. You can have manual steering if you want. Don't bother. It'll only make you sweat muscling the woodrim steering wheel at low speeds. Like all old-school rear drive sports cars, the Frontline MGA likes to be braked in a straight line, then turned into a late apex as you get on the throttle. Get too ambitious with your right foot, though, and the abundant traction from the standard Quaife limited-slip differential will push the nose wide. Brake feel is very good, and the well-placed pedals, combined with the beautifully crisp throttle response and the short throws of the transmission, make heel-and-toe downshifts a cinch. What stands out about the Frontline MGA, however, is how taut and tight it feels. There's no scuttle shake – none – and no vibration back through the steering. Suspension noise and impact harshness are very well suppressed. Though it's very light, and with a live rear axle, the car feels astonishingly planted and composed, even on indifferent roads. In terms of the way it drives the Frontline MGA is a truly stunning piece of work. Indeed, there are modern sports cars that don't feel as coherent as this reworked MG. For sheer fun and driver engagement the modern sports car that comes closest to the Frontline MGA is – ironically, given its powertrain – Mazda's MX-5 roadster, a car that is 47mm shorter, with an 80mm shorter wheelbase, but 262mm wider and at least 170kg heavier. There's something else in the MX-5 comparison, too: The idea that less is more. Tim Fenna says the 2.0-litre Frontline MGA takes about 5.0 seconds to sprint from 0 to 100km/h (the 135kW MX-5 takes at least 6.0 seconds). The 2.0-litre Frontline car is thus just 0.7 seconds slower to 100km/h than the 2.5-litre model, and both versions have a top speed of 250km/h. Increased cost of the bigger engine aside, we suspect its extra power and torque could make the Frontline MGA, which has neither traction control nor ABS, a bit of a handful, especially on a wet road. The 2.0-litre model feels the sweet-spot car. The original MGA was a relatively affordable sports car. The Frontline MGA is not, with prices starting at about $290,000 plus taxes and shipping and the cost of a donor car, according to Frontline Australia CEO David Dyer. "The major reason for building the car in Australia is the customer can get involved," Dyer says. It also means access to a reasonable stock of relatively rust-free right-hand drive donor cars – 81,000 of the 101,000 MGAs built between 1955 and 1962 were exported to the US, and fewer than 1900 right-hand drive cars are believed to exist in the UK. What's more, the Australian-built Frontline MGA doesn't attract the imported vehicle luxury car tax. Yes, the Frontline MGA is expensive. But for the money you get a genuinely bespoke, joyously analogue driver's car that's thoroughly engaging at real-world speeds on real-world roads. And it will turn more heads than any run-of-the-mill modern Ferrari or Everything MG Content originally sourced from: Australia and the MGA go way back. From 1957 to mid-1962 more than 2000 MGAs were assembled in factories at Enfield and Zetland in Sydney. In a streetscape then dominated by chunky Holden sedans and blocky Bedford trucks, the British sports car was a sensation, turning heads like Ferraris or Lamborghinis do today. Under its sheet metal this MG still had the separate chassis, lever-arm shocks, leaf-spring live rear axle and wooden floor of the vintage vibe TC, TD, and TF models that preceded it. But it looked modern, with streamlined bodywork styled by MG's chief designer Syd Enever that was inspired by the rebodied TD roadster he had created in 1951 for the Le Mans 24 Hour race. Six decades later, the MGA is back – and this one's going to turn heads, too. Developed in Britain by MG restoration and restomod specialist Frontline Cars, the new Frontline MGA looks like a carefully restored classic. But under the skin is a modern powertrain, plus redesigned and upgraded suspension, brake, and steering hardware, that combine to make it a brilliantly beguiling sports car. The Frontline MGA follows the formula established with the company's long line of MGB restomods. "The MGA was the natural next step for us," explains Tim Fenna, founder and chief engineer of Frontline Cars. "It's an icon of British motoring, but one that was always crying out for more performance and refinement." Australian market versions of the car will be manufactured, sold and serviced by Sydney-based Frontline Cars Australia, a subsidiary of Modern Classic Cars Foundation, which has built Frontline MGBs for the past 10 years. Frontline Australia MGAs start with an Australian market donor car – a roadster, or the rarer coupe – that can either be sourced by Frontline or supplied by the customer. The chassis is strengthened and fitted with a redesigned front suspension that features Nitron telescopic shocks and fabricated upper links in place of the vintage lever-arm shocks that were standard on the original MGA. The original leaf-sprung banjo rear axle is swapped for a late model MGB unit that's been modified to allow coil springs and Nitron shocks and is located by upper and lower trailing links and a Panhard rod. Other chassis upgrades include disc brakes all round, the front rotors vented and clamped by four-piston calipers, and electronic rack and pinion steering. Customers can choose between traditional-style 15-inch wire wheels or 15-inch Dunlop alloys that look like the wheels fitted to Jaguar's D-Type and Lightweight E-Type racers during the 1950s and 60s. Customers can choose between two naturally aspirated Mazda engines, one a 2.0-litre unit that develops 168kW of power at 7200rpm and 241Nm of torque at 4500rpm, the other a 2.5-litre unit that develops 216kW at 7100rpm and 330Nm at 4200rpm. They drive the rear wheels through a Mazda five-speed manual transmission. Each engine features a bespoke individual throttle body induction system, revised camshaft profiles, a new ECU, and a tuned stainless steel exhaust system. The 2.5-litre engine's balance shaft has been removed to reduce frictional losses and improve throttle response. All the mechanical hardware is topped with a body that retains its stock dimensions but has been carefully reworked to improve its structural rigidity, primarily by way of the addition of an aluminium honeycomb floor (British-built models have a steel floor) that now tightly ties together the bodysides. Detail bodywork changes include the removal of the front indicators – they are now located within the modern LED headlight units – and the deletion of the octagonal MG badge from the boot lid. Look closely and you'll also see discreet Frontline badging near the vents either side of the narrow bonnet, but otherwise the Frontline MGA looks just like a beautifully restored original car. The cockpit is more luxuriously trimmed, in leather or Alcantara, than that of any original MGA, however. The dash features Frontline-branded Smiths dials, and there's an audio system with two speakers, two tweeters, an amplifier, and a Bluetooth module all controlled by a discreetly hidden head unit. The modern luxuries don't stop there. Customers can specify heated versions of Frontline's optional aluminium-framed bucket seats, and one-touch electric windows are available on the coupé. Air-conditioning is also available as an option. Australian-spec cars get a host of minor detail changes – everything from ADR-approved seat belts to steel brake lines – that allow the Frontline MGA to be registered on Australian roads. We had the chance to get behind the wheel of the first Frontline MGA built, a British-spec car fitted with the 2.0-litre engine, and a relatively tall 3.07 diff rather than the 3.4 or 3.7 ratios typically used in the Frontline MGBs because the owner wanted the car to feel relaxed while cruising. And relaxed it is: At 80km/h in fifth gear the Mazda engine, which will rev enthusiastically to 7750rpm, is turning just 2000rpm. The engine sounds properly rorty-snorty when you take it through the gears, like an old-school British performance four-cylinder engine. And though the Mazda four has much more top-end bite than any of those old Brit engines, it has a similarly solid swathe of mid-range torque you can exploit with the transmission's tightly packed ratios. The Mazda powertrain weighs 60kg less than the vintage MG hardware, which takes weight off the front axle and means the Frontline MGA tips the scales at about 900kg. So, despite its tall diff ratio, the little MG felt marvelously alive on British B-roads, easily scooting to 130km/h or 145km/h between the corners. The ride is tightly controlled, but it's not harsh, thanks to the way the Nitron shocks deal with sharp inputs and the absorptive quality of the generously sidewalled 185/65 R15 Bridgestone Turanza tyres. The electronic power steering assists up to about 50km/h, then drops away. Feel and feedback through the steering wheel rim is terrific. You can have manual steering if you want. Don't bother. It'll only make you sweat muscling the woodrim steering wheel at low speeds. Like all old-school rear drive sports cars, the Frontline MGA likes to be braked in a straight line, then turned into a late apex as you get on the throttle. Get too ambitious with your right foot, though, and the abundant traction from the standard Quaife limited-slip differential will push the nose wide. Brake feel is very good, and the well-placed pedals, combined with the beautifully crisp throttle response and the short throws of the transmission, make heel-and-toe downshifts a cinch. What stands out about the Frontline MGA, however, is how taut and tight it feels. There's no scuttle shake – none – and no vibration back through the steering. Suspension noise and impact harshness are very well suppressed. Though it's very light, and with a live rear axle, the car feels astonishingly planted and composed, even on indifferent roads. In terms of the way it drives the Frontline MGA is a truly stunning piece of work. Indeed, there are modern sports cars that don't feel as coherent as this reworked MG. For sheer fun and driver engagement the modern sports car that comes closest to the Frontline MGA is – ironically, given its powertrain – Mazda's MX-5 roadster, a car that is 47mm shorter, with an 80mm shorter wheelbase, but 262mm wider and at least 170kg heavier. There's something else in the MX-5 comparison, too: The idea that less is more. Tim Fenna says the 2.0-litre Frontline MGA takes about 5.0 seconds to sprint from 0 to 100km/h (the 135kW MX-5 takes at least 6.0 seconds). The 2.0-litre Frontline car is thus just 0.7 seconds slower to 100km/h than the 2.5-litre model, and both versions have a top speed of 250km/h. Increased cost of the bigger engine aside, we suspect its extra power and torque could make the Frontline MGA, which has neither traction control nor ABS, a bit of a handful, especially on a wet road. The 2.0-litre model feels the sweet-spot car. The original MGA was a relatively affordable sports car. The Frontline MGA is not, with prices starting at about $290,000 plus taxes and shipping and the cost of a donor car, according to Frontline Australia CEO David Dyer. "The major reason for building the car in Australia is the customer can get involved," Dyer says. It also means access to a reasonable stock of relatively rust-free right-hand drive donor cars – 81,000 of the 101,000 MGAs built between 1955 and 1962 were exported to the US, and fewer than 1900 right-hand drive cars are believed to exist in the UK. What's more, the Australian-built Frontline MGA doesn't attract the imported vehicle luxury car tax. Yes, the Frontline MGA is expensive. But for the money you get a genuinely bespoke, joyously analogue driver's car that's thoroughly engaging at real-world speeds on real-world roads. And it will turn more heads than any run-of-the-mill modern Ferrari or Everything MG Content originally sourced from:

Associated Press
5 days ago
- Business
- Associated Press
Cue the Confetti! BABY born's New Birthday Collection Adds Color-Changing, Mess-Free Fun
LOS ANGELES, May 29, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- MGA Entertainment (MGA), the largest privately held toy and entertainment company in the U.S., is introducing the new BABY born® Birthday Baby Doll collection – the perfect birthday gift for kids. Available now, the Birthday Baby Doll features a magical color-change effect on the face – when kids dip the included 'cake' in ice-cold water or put it in the freezer then swipe it on the lips and cheeks, colorful 'frosting' appears for imaginative birthday play. Perfect for children ages three and up. The BABY born Birthday Baby Doll is party-ready in a festive pink mesh dress with flocked dots and white shoes. The doll's special feature allows children to feed her cake and watch her face transform from clean to messy, just like a real baby! Put the cake slice in the freezer for 30 minutes or soak in ice-cold water, then press it to the doll's lips and cheeks to reveal a delightful color change, adding an extra layer of birthday fun! 'BABY born has been a trusted brand for more than 30 years around the world, known for encouraging nurturing play and empathy in children,' said Josh Hackbarth, Chief Marketing Officer of MGA Entertainment. 'BABY born has always had interactive features within our collection, from crying real tears to taking 'first' steps, taking pretend play to a whole new level. The new Birthday Baby Doll adds a new feature to the play pattern centered around the magic of birthday celebrations.' After the birthday fun winds down, children can gently wipe the doll's face clean using the included cloth napkin and warm water. After a joyful day of birthday celebrations, the doll can be laid down for a nap. Her eyes gently close, adding a sweet, nurturing touch to the play experience. Available in three styles — Annabell, Ava, and Harper — the dolls feature a range of skin tones and eye colors allowing children to choose the one that best reflects their own style and preferences. With rooted hair styled in cute top knots, the doll is a delightful companion for all kinds of imaginative play. The BABY born Birthday Baby Doll is available at all major retailers in the U.S. including Target, Walmart, and Amazon, as well as global retailers and the MGA Shop. The set includes a baby doll, party dress, undergarment, shoes, toy cake and cake slice, cloth napkin, party hat, and cake stand. To stay up to date with the latest news and content from BABY born, visit the brand's official website and social media platforms: Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube. About MGA Entertainment MGA Entertainment is the largest privately held toy and entertainment company in the U.S., known for its commitment to creativity, quality, and innovation. Headquartered in Los Angeles with offices globally, the company creates innovative, proprietary, and licensed consumer products and entertainment properties, including toys, games, dolls, apparel, consumer electronics, home décor, stationery, sporting goods, movies, and television series. The MGA family includes award-winning brands such as L.O.L. Surprise!™, Little Tikes®, Rainbow High™, Bratz®, MGA's Miniverse™, Yummiland™, CarTuned™, Wonder Factory ™, BABY born®, and Zapf Creation®. For more information, please visit or check out at LinkedIn, TikTok, I nstagram and Facebook. Attachments Amanda Magalski Finn Partners for MGA Entertainment [email protected] MGA Newsroom MGA Entertainment 818.221.4431 [email protected]

Associated Press
27-05-2025
- Business
- Associated Press
United Risk Names Richard Christofer President and CCO, and Names 29 Professionals to Underwriting and Claims Staff as Group's Dramatic Expansion Continues
Experienced insurance leaders and new staff members join United Risk's growing international MGA operations, now including 37 divisions in over 50 offices NEW YORK, May 27, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Mr. Jamie Sahara, President, Applied Underwriters, today announced key staff promotions, executive appointments, and the hiring of newly recruited staff at United Risk to bolster its dramatic growth. United Risk, founded in 2023, is currently among the top five MGA groups worldwide operating 37 underwriting programs from over 50 offices across the globe. Mr. Richard Christofer has been named President and Chief Commercial Officer with responsibility for the recruitment and acquisition of new underwriting programs and the oversight of the Company's existing programs. Mr. Christofer works from the Company's corporate headquarters at Rockefeller Center in New York. According to Mr. Sahara, the promotion of Mr. Christofer to a top post at United Risk follows his successful leadership in critical areas of responsibility: 'Rick has been with United Risk since its launch and has been instrumental in building the Company's impressive roster of underwriting programs, attracting the top talent required to execute successfully.' Mr. Christofer, who held positions at AIG, Guy Carpenter, and Gen Re before joining United Risk, stated how the changing insurance industry has created opportunities for the Company: 'This is a great time to be in the MGA business. Our concept has been growth through bolt-ons and recruitment of the very best talent. When we bring on a new operation, we're already looking at proven underwriting and claims results. The outcome has been solid financial performance for our carriers and reinsurers and solid growth within all of the programs.' Mr. Christofer concluded, 'Our unique culture based on free enterprise has become an attractive force for the brightest minds in the business. I enjoy the camaraderie among so many great people in our organization as we work towards our common goals.' In addition to Mr. Christofer's appointment, Mr. Dónal Corcoran has been promoted to Head of International Business Development for United Risk. Other promotions at the Company's various divisions included: Applied Financial Lines – Garrett Huff, Senior Underwriter; Applied Surety Underwriters – Emily Woodrome, Executive Underwriter; Applied Underwriters Aviation – Kristina Orcutt, Vice President of Underwriting, Josh Wilcoxon, Vice President of Claims, and Deanna Pease, Senior Underwriter; and Rivington Environmental – Patrick Moakley, Senior Underwriter. New recruit highlights include: Applied Crisis Underwriters – Mason Anderson, Senior Underwriter; Applied Financial Lines – Vincent Regina, Vice President and Co-Leader of Cyber, Lauren Markowski, Vice President and Co-Leader of Cyber, Chris Jones, Assistant Vice President, Josephine Chiarelli, Assistant Vice President, Erik Rogucki, Assistant Vice President, Ann McCarthy, Assistant Vice President, Sylvia Teng, Underwriting Manager of Cyber, Morgan Gentry, Senior Healthcare Underwriter, and Andrew Reswow, Senior Healthcare Underwriter; Applied Entertainment & Sports – Ken Hashberger, Vice President of Film and Television, Martin Holness, Director of Accident and Contingency, and Stefanie Hester, Senior Underwriter and Team Lead; Applied Surety Underwriters – Dan Orna, Vice President and Regional Underwriting Officer, Alexandra Mealer, Vice President of Strategic Planning and Organizational Development, Paul Harmon, Director of Surety Claims, Ramona Seidman, Executive Underwriter, Matthew Machacek, Senior Underwriter, and Bailey Cunningham, Senior Underwriter; and Applied Underwriters Aviation – Rob Marsh, Vice President and Underwriting Manager and Matthew Gray, Assistant Vice President of Aviation Claims. About United Risk Global ( ) United Risk Global is an international property and casualty insurance underwriting and distribution platform independently owned and operated by its practice partners and affiliated with Applied Underwriters operationally and through its common and powerful brand identity. United Risk's home office is located at 50 Rockefeller Plaza in New York. About Applied Underwriters ( ) Applied Underwriters® is a global risk services firm that helps businesses and people manage uncertainty through its business services, insurance and reinsurance solutions. As a company, Applied Underwriters has been distinguished by its innovative approaches to client care and by its strong financial strength. Applied Underwriters operates widely throughout the US, UK, EU and Middle East. Its operational headquarters is located in Omaha, Nebraska. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Applied Underwriters


Motor Trend
23-05-2025
- Automotive
- Motor Trend
The Frontline MGA is the World's Coolest, Fastest, Most Fun—and Expensive—Miata
The original MG (not today's Chinese-backed version) may have been a British brand, but America made it. Thousands of service members returning from Europe after the end of World War II in 1945 brought with them an abiding affection for the light and fun-to-drive MG sports cars they'd seen on British roads. And when broken, bankrupted Britain switched back to making cars and trucks instead of fighter planes and tanks, MG, encouraged by a government desperate for export revenues, found a ready market stateside for its perky little TC roadster. 0:00 / 0:00 The TC and its successors, the TD and TF, were vintage 1930s-style cars, body-on-frame with a leaf-spring live rear axle and, until the TD was launched in 1950, a live front axle. They sold well, but by 1955 the MG TF was looking decidedly old-fashioned alongside rival sports cars such as the Austin-Healey 100 and Triumph TR2. Enter the MGA. The low-slung MGA was still a body-on-frame car with a leaf-spring live rear axle—and a wooden floor!—but it looked modern, with streamlined, faired-in bodywork styled by MG's chief designer Syd Enever that was inspired by the rebodied TD roadster he had developed in 1951 for the Le Mans 24 Hour race. America fell in love with the MGA. Of the 101,000 cars that rolled off the MG assembly line in Abingdon, England, between late 1955 and July 1962, more than 81,000 were shipped to the U.S. (The Brits bought fewer than 5,900 MGAs over the same period.) Affordable and easily tuned, the MGA proved popular on the track, too, becoming a mainstay in SCCA racing during the '50s and early '60s. The MGA was replaced in 1962 by the MGB, the company's first unibody sports car. And the love affair continued. More than half a million were built, with more than 300,000 sold in the U.S. through 1980, when British Leyland execs stupidly ordered the MGB be discontinued in a bid to boost slow sales of the newer Triumph TR7. Without a car to sell in the market that had so long sustained it, the MG marque abruptly vanished from the U.S., never to return. But the love affair still lingers. For some years now British MG restomod and restoration specialist Frontline Cars has been doing good business in the U.S. with reworked MGBs such the four-cylinder MGB LE50 and the recently launched LE60, which is powered by a Frontline-tweaked V-8 that punches out 375 hp and will take it to 160 mph. Now it's adding a delectable MGA to its restomod lineup. 'The MGA was the natural next step for us,' said Tim Fenna, founder and chief engineer of Frontline Cars. 'It's an icon of British motoring, but one that was always crying out for more performance and refinement.' Established, High-End British Restomod Formula The Frontline MGA follows the formula established with the company's long line of MGB restomods, combining a modern powertrain, plus suspension and chassis mods designed by Fenna, with subtly reworked sheetmetal and upscale interior hardware to create a sports car that combines classic style with everyday drivability. Frontline will find a suitable MGA donor car for you, or you can supply one yourself, be it left- or right-hand drive, roadster or coupe. The donor car is stripped back to bare metal and boxes of parts. The chassis is strengthened and fitted with a redesigned front suspension that features Nitron telescopic shocks and fabricated upper links in place of the vintage lever-arm shocks that were standard on the original MGA. The original MGA leaf-sprung banjo rear axle is junked in favor of a late-model MGB unit that's been modified to accommodate coil springs and Nitron shocks and is located by upper and lower trailing links each side, and a Panhard rod. Other chassis upgrades, using hardware and know-how from Frontline's long experience with MGB restomods, include the fitment of disc brakes all round, the front rotors vented and clamped by four-piston calipers, and electronic rack-and-pinion steering. Customers can choose between traditional-style 15-inch wire wheels or ultra-cool 15-inch Dunlop alloys that look like the wheels fitted to Jaguar's D-Type and Lightweight E-Type racers during the 1950s and '60s. Standard tires are 185/65 Bridgestone Turanzas. The MG powertrain is replaced by a naturally aspirated Mazda four-cylinder engine and five-speed manual transmission. Two specifications are available: a 2.0-liter that develops 225 hp at 7,200 rpm and 178 lb-ft of torque at 4,500 rpm, and a 2.5-liter unit that develops 290 hp at 7,100 rpm and 243 lb-ft at 4,200 rpm. Each engine features a bespoke individual throttle body induction system, revised camshaft profiles, a new ECU, and a tuned stainless steel exhaust system. The 2.5-liter engine's balance shaft has been removed to reduce frictional losses and improve throttle response. For context, the original MGA was powered by a 68-hp 1.5-liter engine, and even the temperamental and short-lived 1.6-liter twin-cam engine introduced in 1958 still made only 108 hp. All the mechanical hardware is topped with a body that retains its stock dimensions but has been carefully reworked to improve its structural rigidity, primarily by way of the addition of a steel floor that now tightly ties together the bodysides. Detail changes include the removal of the front turn signals—they are now located within the modern LED headlight units—and the deletion of the octagonal MG badge from the trunk. Look closely, and you'll also see discreet Frontline badging near the vents either side of the narrow hood, but otherwise the Frontline MGA looks just like a beautifully restored original car. A quick look in the sumptuously trimmed cockpit—customers can choose between leather or Alcantara, the trim work all done in-house at Frontline—hints at the truth. The dash features Frontline-branded Smiths dials, and there's an audio system with two speakers, two tweeters, an amplifier, and a Bluetooth module all controlled by a discreetly hidden head unit. Options include heated versions of Frontline's own-design bucket seats, as well as air conditioning. One-touch electric windows are available on the coupé. Meshing Old- and New-School Driving Our tester, the first Frontline MGA built, was fitted with the 2.0-liter engine and a relatively tall 3.07 diff rather than the 3.4 or 3.7 gears typically used in the Frontline MGBs because the owner wanted the car to feel relaxed while cruising. And relaxed it is: At 50 mph in fifth gear, the little Mazda four-banger, which will rev enthusiastically to 7,750 rpm, is turning just 2,000 rpm. It sounds crisp and gurgly when you take it through the gears, a digitally remastered version of an old-school British performance four-cylinder engine. And though the Mazda four has much more top-end bite than any of those old British motors, it has a similarly solid swathe of midrange torque you can exploit with the transmission's tightly packed ratios. The modern powertrain weighs 132 pounds less than the vintage MG hardware, which not only takes weight off the front axle, but also means the Frontline MGA tips the scales at under 2,000 pounds. So, despite its tall diff ratio, our tester felt marvelously alive on British B-roads, easily scooting to 80 or 90 mph between the corners. The ride is tightly controlled, but it's not harsh, thanks to the deft manner with which the Nitron shocks deal with sharp inputs and the absorptive quality of those generously sidewalled tires. The EPS assists up to about 30 mph, then drops away. Feel and feedback through the steering wheel rim is terrific. You can have manual steering if you want. But don't bother. It'll only make you work harder at low speeds. Like all old-school rear-drive sports cars, the Frontline MGA likes to be braked in a straight line, then turned into a late apex as you get on the throttle. Get too ambitious with your right foot, though, and the abundant traction from the standard Quaife limited-slip differential will push the nose wide. Brake feel is very good, and the well-placed pedals, combined with the beautifully crisp throttle response and the short throws of the transmission, make heel-toe downshifts a breeze. Throwback Look, Modern, Miata-Like Feel What stands out, however, is how taut and tight the Frontline MGA feels. There's no scuttle shake—none—and no vibration back through the steering. Suspension noise and impact harshness are extremely well suppressed. Although it's very light and has a live rear axle, the car feels astonishingly planted and composed, even on indifferent roads. Make no mistake, the Frontline MGA is a truly stunning piece of work; there are modern sports cars that don't feel as coherent to drive as this MG. Ironically, given its powertrain, the nearest modern car we can compare it with for sheer fun and driver involvement is the Mazda MX-5 Miata roadster, a car that's 1.9 inches shorter than the Frontline MGA, with a 3.1-inch-shorter wheelbase, but fully 10 inches wider and almost 400 pounds heavier. The Miata comparison provides extra useful context, too: The little Mazda delivers its thrills with just 181 hp under the hood, and after our drive of the 225-hp 2.0-liter Frontline MGA, we're not sure the 290-hp 2.5-liter engine is worth the extra money. The math is compelling. Frontline says the 2.0-liter car takes just 4.8 seconds to sprint to 60 mph (the MX-5 Miata takes 5.6 seconds). According to Frontline's own numbers, that makes it just seven-tenths of a second slower than the 2.5-liter version, and both models have a top speed of 155 mph. So there's not much of a performance advantage, and we suspect the bigger engine's extra power and torque could make the Frontline MGA, which has neither traction control nor ABS, a bit of a handful, especially on a wet road. The 2.0-liter model feels the sweet-spot car. Frontline MGA prices start at the equivalent of about $170,000 (on current exchange rates) plus taxes and shipping and the cost of a donor car. No, it's nowhere near as affordable as the original. But the Frontline MGA, sharper and quicker, tauter and tighter, better built and more highly equipped than any MGA that ever left the factory in Abingdon, England, is a bespoke sports car, and not just in terms of color and trim. Frontline will work with customers on mechanical hardware like diff ratios and suspension tune and steering to create exactly the MGA they want. The Frontline MGA is a truly outstanding restomod, easily one of the best we've ever driven. It has modern manners that allow it to be used every day, but it remains joyously analog, a pure driver's car that's thoroughly engaging at real-world speeds on real-world roads. Think of it this way: What Singer is to Porsche, Frontline is to MG. It's expensive, but it's worth the money.


Motor 1
23-05-2025
- Automotive
- Motor 1
This MGA Restomod Has a Miata's Soul. And It's Brilliant
Somewhere in the UK, a lady had a great idea. She wanted a classic MG to tool around in, but didn't want the one-on-every-corner MGB that most go for. Nor did she want any possibility of breaking down. So she went to Abingdon's Frontline Cars, who make MGBs bulletproof (and electric… and V8-powered) and asked them to work their magic. Perhaps it was the right combination of sunny afternoon, British countryside, and classic British sports car. Perhaps it wasn't. But this was one of the best experiences I've had in a car in 2025. Photo by: Frontline Cars Let's back up a bit—what is Frontline? It's a business that restomods MGBs. It started off as a company that modified MG Midgets for racing, but as time went on, Frontline realized it could take the world's plentiful supply of B's and make them quicker, more reliable, and more luxurious. The lady with a good idea didn't want an MGB, though; she wanted an MGA. Older and sleeker than the B, the A's shape appealed to her, and lo, the Frontline MGA Factory Edition was born. You can have an MGA with a 2.0 or 2.5-liter Mazda -derived four cylinder that's been delightfully reworked (with ITBs..!) to produce 225 or 290 horsepower. Whichever motor you choose is hooked up to the famously brilliant Mazda MX-5 gearbox to ensure slick shifting and big grins. Photo by: Frontline Cars Photo by: Frontline Cars The brakes and springs have been swapped out too, the chassis has been reinforced, and the wooden floors have been replaced with steel for better ride and handling. Pleasingly, there's a Quaife limited slip differential fitted too. Frontline's treatment doesn't stop at making an MG go better, either. This A's interior is covered in sumptuous leather, with alloy bucket seats to keep you in place during spirited driving. There's even a USB slot, Bluetooth audio, and it's all hidden away so you can keep your phone charged for on-the-fly Google Maps. While the dials are all as they were in period, the electrics powering them are modern, so they shouldn't go all 1950s on you and conk out at an inconvenient moment. Frontline's demonstrator was built to look like the standard car, but the firm says you can happily ask for a de-bumpered car fitted with a perspex racing screen if you want to look like you're going endurance racing, too. They'll make you a convertible or a coupe, depending on preference as well. There's a lot to love about the whole deal, though it comes at a cost: £145,000 ($195,000) plus local taxes, so it's one for the more committed enthusiasts out there. That said, Frontline's prowess is proven, which means you can rest assured the work going into the car isn't half-assed. Photo by: Frontline Cars Whichever motor you choose is hooked up to the famously brilliant Mazda MX-5 gearbox to ensure slick shifting and big grins. On a sunny day in the UK, folding yourself into the cockpit is a joy—though one that requires some work if you're tall. The MGA is not a capacious car. The controls are all pleasingly classic. Smiths dials are neatly laid out over the stunning dash. Everything works as you'd expect, bar the indicators, which are on a toggle switch to the right of the wheel. Pull the lever to the left to indicate right, and vice versa. It takes a while to get used to, and the mechanism is a bit soft, but once you know what you're doing, you'll be fine. Classics, restored or otherwise, can be a bit of a crapshoot to set off in. The risk of stalling a shiny car that draws the eye is ever present, and in the MGA, you really don't want to be 'that guy.' The Mazda 'box puts those fears to bed. Photo by: Frontline Cars Photo by: Frontline Cars It's easy to slot into gear, and the light clutch is a joy to roll away slinkily from a stop. In town, it's easy to thread the MGA through any gap you'd care to mention. It's a car from the 50s, when everything was smaller and actually fit on the UK's roads (the less said about safety regulations the better… ahem), so you needn't worry about peeling bits off the side. Even if that was a concern, the MG's body is low and easy to see over, which allows for last-moment bum proppage to make sure you're in a good place on the road. The visibility is a genuine highlight. The windshield is large enough to keep bees out of your retinas, and there's no roll hoop to speak of. Being narrow and roofless, the rear view mirror does the job of the (absent because old car) wing mirrors, and if you do need to do a lifesaver check, you don't need to turn your head too far to see over the back of the low trunkline. You'll get eyes on you in town, and you'll have a lovely time gently parping around as though the '50s never ended. But to go full 'post-war fun', you need to head to the country. Usually, when you're driving an older car, it feels somewhat cruel to push the motor. The MGA sounds tremendous on a trundle, and you'll pick up a decent clip without bother. However, when I looked at the rev counter, I saw that rolling up to 4,500 rpm was barely touching the sides of its range. Photo by: Frontline Cars Usually, when you're driving an older car, it feels somewhat cruel to push the motor. The MGA sounds tremendous on a trundle, and you'll pick up a decent clip without bother. A suitably straight bit of road found, I gave it some welly and the thing soared far, far higher, letting out a beautiful noise as it went. Loud, glorious parps flew from the rear, plastering a big grin on my face as they did so. In 225 hp spec, with 178 pound-feet on tap, it feels plenty quick. The gas pedal has decent feel. A gentle push to get you going leads to smooth progression, allowing for parps-ahoy. Frontline says it'll get from 0-60mph in 4.8 seconds and will apparently hit 155mph. With a suitably clear road and a heavy right foot, that's more than believable. There's only 815 kg to shift, so modest power is more than enough. Scrubbing the speed off is down to a set of chunky brakes, front and rear. There's no ABS to save you in a pinch, which means you need to learn them, and the pedal's on the heavy side. Once you've figured it all out, they're great, but don't go in thinking you can brake like a Golf. Parps are one element of the fun, the handling is a cherry on top. Double wishbones with Frontline's own dampers live up front, with five-links and Frontline telescopic dampers at the rear. The MGA simply glides around the tight 'n twisties. The ride can get jarring on some of the UK's more… lumpy roads, but that's par for the course with old British metal no matter how much you do to it. It's all part of the fun. Photo by: Frontline Cars Frontline's steering is a joy, too. A neatly-sized Motolita 'wheel is your connection to the road. It's assisted at low speeds (in this car - it can be adjusted to driver preference) because old cars are heavy buggers, but once you're at speed it's all you. It's well weighted and gives you confidence that you know where the car's going to go. Wind in your hair (or beard), sun shining, and engine on song, Frontline's take on the MGA is nothing short of unfiltered happiness. The sounds it makes, the smell of its leather interior, the feel of its wood-rimmed wheel, the look of the thing… it all adds up to a uniquely British experience. You may even end up tasting an errant bee if one slips over the windshield. Yes, it's expensive and still comes with 1950s sports car compromises, so it's not for everyone, but that's part of its charm. More Restomod News This Jaguar E-Type Restomod Does the Original Proud This Isuzu Truck Is the Coolest Restomod We've Ever Seen Get the best news, reviews, columns, and more delivered straight to your inbox, daily. back Sign up For more information, read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use . Share this Story Facebook X LinkedIn Flipboard Reddit WhatsApp E-Mail Got a tip for us? Email: tips@ Join the conversation ( )