The Leyland Princess, sometimes called the Austin Princess, was a larger-sized (by British standards) car produced by British Leyland in the United Kingdom from 1975 through to 1981.
The car was originally called the Austin / Morris / Wolseley 18–22 series. Later, it was given the name first used on the Austin Princess limousine of the 1940s and 1950s. It appeared in revamped form as the Austin Ambassador between 1982 and 1984.
The car was widely reviled at the time, but many enthusiasts feel able to differentiate between British Leyland's problems, and the car itself.
The Princess, unlike the Allegro, made it to production metal relatively unscathed and unaltered from Harris's original plan. The bonnet (hood) was a little higher, to allow for taller engines, but the biggest change from Harris's design involved the rear. Harris had intended the design to be a five-door hatchback, but management decided that the Austin Maxi should be the only hatchback in the range, making that its unique selling point, and besides, they thought the Princess's prospective buyers would not like a hatchback - even though, in the Rover division, the new Rover SD1 was being given a hatchback design. Consequently, the Princess received fixed rear glass and a separate boot (trunk), belying its appearance, which was to prove a sales-loser the Princess's entire life.
An estate version was also proposed, although unfortunately never made production.
The base engine fitted was the 1800 cc B-Series pushrod straight-4. This design dated to 1947 and was notably lacking in power, though torque was reasonable. The larger engine, fitted to upper models in the range, was a 2200 cc E-series SOHC straight-6. This was very smooth and a much more modern engine, but was still not hugely powerful. The Princess was a big car, and the engine choice gave lacklustre performance. This wasn't helped by the provision of only a 4-speed manual gearbox (a Borg-Warner automatic transmission was an option, but performance with this was by all accounts positively lethargic). Bigger engines and a 5-speed would have made the Princess a much more exciting car and helped sales.
Suspension used BL's Hydragas system, and was very soft and smooth; the intention was to offer as smooth a ride as the Citroën CX and this was almost achieved. The Princess's ride was excellent, and comfort in general was a selling point; the car was roomy, reasonably well-appointed for the time, the seating was comfortable, and overall the driving experience - provided you didn't care that much about performance - was excellent.
Launched in March 1975, it was not originally named the Princess; the original designation was the unwieldy and uninspired '18–22', referring to the engine sizes available. For the first six months of its production life, it was produced in three badge-engineered variants, for Austin (the 1800 and 2200 models), Morris (similar designations to Austin) and Wolseley (badged only 'Wolseley', but officially the 2200 model). Dealer networks of the three brands had not been consolidated, and all three needed a new car of this size. The differences between the versions were minor.
The Austin variant was really the 'standard' one, with no styling changes from the original. It had square headlights and a simple, horizontally-barred grille. The Morris and Wolseley cars had a raised 'hump' permitting a larger, styled grille for each model; the Morris one was a simple chrome rectangle with 'Morris' in the lower right-hand corner, while Wolseley's had a centre-chromed vertical bar with a Wolseley logo on it, with narrower vertical bars, set slightly back, filling in the chromed surround. Both of these versions had four round headlights, and the Wolseley model was only available with the six-cylinder engine and luxury trim.
By September of the same year (1975), the process of unifying Austin and Morris dealerships was advanced sufficiently, while the Wolseley marque was to be abandoned. The three badge-engineered cars were dropped in favor of a single version, the Leyland Princess. A crown badge was affixed to the point of the bonnet and the script word Princess was affixed to the grille, the thick vinyl-clad C-pillars and the boot. The 1800cc model bore the rectangular headlights of the Harris Mann design, while the 2200cc model had four round lights.
The Princess' build quality was severedly affected by poor quality control and constant industrial disputes; it gained a reputation for unreliability it could never shake off, even though quality improved in later years. The styling, praised upon introduction, was soon labelled 'ugly'.
A special one-off customized estate version of the Princess was built in late 1978 to promote Triplex glass; it may still exist.
In October 1980 some more minor appearance changes were made, but this would be the last year of the Princess. This was badged as the 'Austin Princess' in New Zealand. Production had ceased in November 1981, though completely knocked-down kits of the car were still being assembled in New Zealand Motor Corporation's plant in Nelson until June 1982. The Austin Princess R, the last model sold there, was still on new-car price lists in 1983, and was available only in black to commemorate the end of local assembly of Austin cars.
The basic Princess design lived on for a few more years in revised form as the Austin Ambassador.
The now 25-31 year old Princesses are now old enough to have antique car status, and they have a small but enthusiastic following. The unique 1970s styling appeals to these people as attractively retro, and the cars are still easy to maintain with readily available parts. Prices are still very low.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Leyland Princess".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world