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Leyland Princess

Austin 18–22
Morris 18–22
Austin 1800 (ADO71).jpg
1975 Austin 1800 (ADO71)
Overview
Manufacturer British Leyland
Also called Austin & Morris, 1800 & 2200
Production March to September 1975
Designer Harris Mann
Body and chassis
Class Large family car (D)
Body style 4-door saloon
Powertrain
Engine 1.8 L B-Series pushrod straight-4
2.2 L E-series SOHC straight-6
Transmission 4-speed manual all-synchromesh
3-speed automatic
Dimensions
Wheelbase 105 in (2,667 mm)
Length 175.4 in (4,455 mm)
Width 68.1 in (1,730 mm)
Height 55.5 in (1,410 mm)
Chronology
Predecessor Austin 1800 and 2200
Successor Princess
Wolseley Saloon
Wolseley saloon 1975.jpg
Overview
Manufacturer British Leyland
Production March to September 1975
Designer Harris Mann
Body and chassis
Class Large family car (D)
Body style 4-door saloon
Powertrain
Engine 2.2 L E-series SOHC straight-6
Dimensions
Wheelbase 105 in (2,667 mm)
Length 175.4 in (4,455 mm)
Width 68.1 in (1,730 mm)
Height 55.5 in (1,410 mm)
Chronology
Predecessor Wolseley 18/85 and Six
Successor Princess
Princess
Princess Zwart.JPG
1975-1978 Princess
Overview
Manufacturer British Leyland
Also called Austin Princess (New Zealand)
Production September 1975 - July 1978
Body and chassis
Class Large family car (D)
Body style 4-door saloon
Powertrain
Engine 1.8 L B-Series pushrod straight-4
2.2 L E-series SOHC straight-6
Chronology
Predecessor Austin 18-22
Morris 18-22
Wolseley Saloon
Successor Princess 2
Princess 2
British Leyland Princess HL 1979.jpg
Overview
Manufacturer British Leyland
Production July 1978 – November 1981
Body and chassis
Class Large family car (D)
Body style 4-door saloon
Powertrain
Engine 1.7 L O-Series SOHC straight-4
2.0  L O-Series SOHC straight-4
2.2 L E-series SOHC straight-6
Chronology
Predecessor Princess
Successor Austin Ambassador

The Princess is a family car which was produced in the United Kingdom by British Leyland from 1975 until 1981 (1982 in New Zealand.) The car inherited a front-wheel drive / transverse engine configuration from its predecessor, the BMC ADO17 range. This was still unusual in Europe for full-sized family cars and gave the Princess a cabin space advantage when compared with similarly sized cars from competing manufacturers.

The car, which was given the design code ADO71, was originally marketed as the Austin / Morris / Wolseley 18–22 series. In 1975 the range was renamed "Princess". This was a new marque created by British Leyland although it had previously been used as a model name on the Austin Princess limousine from 1947 to 1956. The Princess is often referred to, incorrectly, as the Austin Princess. Although this name was not used in the UK market, it was used in New Zealand. The car later appeared in revamped form as the Austin Ambassador, which was produced from 1981 until 1984 and only ever sold in Britain.

Princess sales, although initially strong, were tailing off by the end of the 1970s, primarily because of quality and reliability issues. Also, some of its competitors had gained a versatile fifth door which the Princess lacked, and the medium large-car sector fell victim to a poor economic climate further compounded by the OPEC oil crisis of the day. It was somewhere between the Ford Cortina and Ford Granada in terms of size, being designed to compete with more expensive versions of the Cortina as well as entry-level versions of the Granada.

Total production amounted to 224,942 units.

The car was launched to critical acclaim on 26 March 1975 as the 18–22 Series, "the car that has got it all together". The number designation 18–22 referred to the engine sizes available carried forward from the 1800 cc and 2200 cc BMC B-series-engined BMC ADO 17 "Landcrab". For the first six months of production three badge-engineered versions were produced: Austin, Morris and Wolseley. The Austin model bore the original "design intent", featuring trapezoidal headlights and a simple horizontally-vaned 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 Wolseleys had a chrome grille with the traditional illuminated company logo, with narrower vertical bars either side set back within 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 velour trim. Apart from their bonnet and headlamp designs, and of course their badging, the Austin and Morris models were virtually identical.


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