Austin Maestro | |
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1983 Austin Maestro
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Overview | |
Manufacturer |
British Leyland (Austin Rover Group) (1983–1987) Rover Group (1988–1995) |
Also called | MG Maestro Rover Maestro |
Production | 1983–1995 (Austin/Rover Maestro) 1983–1991 (MG Maestro) 1995–2001 (remaining CKD kits) |
Assembly |
Cowley, Oxford, United Kingdom Varna, Bulgaria |
Designer | Ian Beech David Bache |
Body and chassis | |
Class | Small family car (C) |
Body style | 2-door van 5-door hatchback |
Layout | FF layout |
Related |
Austin Montego Yema Mustang |
Powertrain | |
Engine | 1.3 L A-Series I4 1.6 L R-series I4 1.6 L S-series I4 2.0 L O-Series I4 (MG Maestro only) 2.0 L Austin Rover MDi, aka Perkins Prima I4 |
Dimensions | |
Wheelbase | 2,510 mm (98.8 in) |
Length | 4,050 mm (159.4 in) |
Width | 1,690 mm (66.5 in) (ex mirrors) |
Height | 1,430 mm (56.3 in) |
Chronology | |
Predecessor |
Austin Maxi Austin Allegro MG 1300 |
Successor | Rover 200 Mark II |
The Austin Maestro is a five-door hatchback small family car (and two-door van derivative) that was produced from 1983 to 1987 by British Leyland, and from 1988 until 1995 by Rover Group. The car was produced at the former Morris plant in Cowley, Oxford. Today, the redeveloped factory produces the BMW Mini. A performance version of the Maestro was branded MG, and sold as the MG Maestro from 1983 until 1991. Later models have sometimes been referred to as the Rover Maestro, but the model never wore the Rover badge. The larger Montego was a redesigned Maestro. Descendants of the Maestro are still being produced in China.
British Leyland was created in 1975 when the bankrupt British Leyland Motor Corporation was nationalised. In 1977 the South African-born corporate troubleshooter, Sir Michael Edwardes, was recruited as chairman to sort out the troubled firm. Part of Edwardes' plan was to introduce a completely new range of mass-market models to replace the current offerings, designed and built using state-of-the-art technology. The new range eventually decided upon consisted of a new vehicle for each of the small, lower-medium and upper-medium market segments.
The new cars for the lower and upper medium segments were to share a platform, with various trim and styling differences to distinguish the two different models. The two models would in effect replace four existing vehicles that had been in production since the early 1970s – the Maestro would simultaneously replace both the Austin Allegro and Maxi, whilst the Montego replaced the Austin Ambassador and Morris Ital, these latter two having been recent facelifts of the Princess and Morris Marina. Since all but the Allegro were made at the Cowley plant, this rationalization would give the cost benefits of production automation and flexibility. This common platform was given the project name LC10, using the Leyland Cars project sequence (LC8 became the Austin Mini Metro, LC9 became the Triumph Acclaim). Preliminary design work for LC10 began in 1977, with production scheduled to begin in about 1980 - which would have seen it go on sale around the same time as the Ford Escort MK3 and the original Vauxhall Astra.