Home » I Just Impulse Bought My Dream Convertible And It’s A $2,300 ‘British Miata’ From Japan

I Just Impulse Bought My Dream Convertible And It’s A $2,300 ‘British Miata’ From Japan

Rover Mgb Ts
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This year, I gave myself a mission to buy as many of my dream cars as I can. Just this morning, I managed to tick another box on my bucket list, and I blew a bunch of cash on buying a car I’ve wanted since I was a teenager. This is a 1998 MGF. It’s pretty much what happens when the British tried to make a Miata in the 1990s. I spent just $2,300 on it, but it’s not coming from Britain, but Japan. It sounds crazy, but it actually makes total sense.

My 1997 Honda Life has only barely been home for a week, and I’m already committing myself to another import. Truth be told, importing cars is actually sort of addictive. There’s the thrill of the search, finding the score, watching the ship slowly cross the world, and then bringing home the goods myself. The trip to pick up the Honda might have been a total disaster, but I still had a ton of fun. I found myself thinking, “I can’t wait to do it all over again.”

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

As it turns out, that’s going to happen much sooner than I expected. Last night, I was flipping through the pages of Japanese auctions and used car platforms when I found something that I’ve wanted to import for years. I’ve been wanting to import an MGF since I got into importing cars back in 2021. However, the few times I’ve found one for sale, either the examples were too broken, too expensive, or a mix of both. I finally found an example that fits my perfect mix of functional and cheap.

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Be Forward

A Teenage Dream

I imported my first car back in spring 2021. That car was a 1991 Honda Beat, and I love that car, but there was another car I was searching for at the same time. When I was a kid, I watched a lot of British car television, and through it, I fell in love with the MGF.

This was sort of funny because, as Fifth Gear‘s Tiff Needell explained during the launch of the MG TF, the British motoring press sort of hated on the MGF. They shot down the car’s build quality, seating ergonomics, and steering feel. It seemed as though the MGF was a worse Miata. But I didn’t care. I loved its cute bug eyes, its rounded body, and mid-rear engine layout. It was like an adorable Toyota MR2 with a silly Hydragas suspension. At least, that’s what it looked like in my eyes. Check out some classic Richard Hammond here:

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I was always sad that I couldn’t have the MGF in the United States. I drove the MGF in Gran Turismo 4, and I have an MGF Matchbox car, but this was never enough. The MGF continued to be just out of reach as an adult. I looked into what it takes to import a car from Europe to the United States and didn’t really like the costs.

As I wrote earlier this year, exchange rates work against you when you’re trying to import a car from Europe to America. Sure, the car that you find might be only $2,500, but by the time you’re done, you will likely spend close to $10,000. How much are you willing to spend on a cheap car? I’m a serial cheapskate, so the answer for me is definitely not that much.

Thankfully, there is a sort of cheat code here. Lots of European cars were also sold in Japan, which is great because the exchange rate between the Japanese yen and the U.S. dollar highly favors American buyers.

Mercaclass
ARAI Bayside

The catch is that certain European cars are harder to find in Japan. For example, the first-generation Mercedes-Benz A-Class sold in Japan sells for pennies on the dollar in the Japanese auction system, but they only rarely go through the auction system, so you don’t have a ton of choice. The Rover MGF (stylized as just MGF) is another car that was sold in Japan. However, these also rarely show up in auctions, and when they do, the reserve price is arguably more than what the car is actually worth.

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You can also find European cars in Japan on sites like the Goonet Exchange and Car From Japan, but their prices are similarly high for what you’re getting. Sure, you can get a Kei truck from one of these platforms for less than the price of a beat-up Volkswagen from Craigslist, but the Euro options can end up being surprisingly pricy.

My 1998 MGF

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Be Forward

I’ve lost count of how many MGF auctions I didn’t meet reserve on because of this. Then, last night, I saw it. I cruised through Japanese car export website Be Forward and saw something that seemed too good to be true. There it was, a 1998 Rover MGF for just $2,300, or $4,000 shipped to Baltimore. This was the cheapest MGF I’ve found in years. What’s the catch?

I flipped through the listing and found it to be satisfyingly detailed. The vehicle is said to be in good mechanical shape. The air-conditioner works, the transmission shifts fine, and the inspector found no obvious issues with the engine. The only note was that the engine has a tiny oil seepage. Not a full-on leak, but just seepage. Not bad!

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Be Forward

I then checked the underbody photos and was pleased at the lack of any serious rust. Sure enough, the inspector gave the car a grade of 4, or the second-highest grade an old car like this could get in the Japanese auction system. As you can guess, the lack of a 4.5 means that there are some things wrong with the car.

There are three noted issues with the car. One issue is that the 16,000-kilometer mileage is unconfirmed, so the odometer was probably replaced. I don’t really care about that. Another issue was that the driver door card insert fabric has come off. Apparently, this is just one of those quality issues that these MGFs had even many years ago, so that’s whatever. Apparently, the original fabric that fell off the door will come with the car. Some adhesive will have that fixed in a jiffy!

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Be Forward
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Be Forward

The last problem is a broken convertible top window. This window was intact at its last inspection in June 2024, but it seems that either the plastic finally gave way or someone vandalized the car while it sat in the yard. Either way, it’s currently taped up well enough to get the car onto a ship and off to a buyer. There are replacement windows available for around $300, and it looks like the process to fix it takes all of 10 or 20 minutes. In other words, two extremely minor issues!

So, I said screw it, let’s do it. Admittedly, I put maybe an hour of total thought into it before hitting the “Buy Now” button. Due to my new rule of “1 Car In, 1 Car Out,” the 2007 BMW E61 that I bought from the Bishop will be sold to make room for this one.

Like A Miata, But Weird

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Be Forward

What I’ll be getting should be sweet. I wrote a few paragraphs about the development of the MGF a couple of years ago:

The MGF was initially developed starting in 1991 by Rover Group under its final years of ownership by British Aerospace. When introduced in 1995 it was touted as the first all-new MG since 1962. The fresh MGF had some tricks up its sleeve. The 1.8-liter four making 120 HP was moved back to a mid-rear arrangement, the car rode on a Hydragas suspension and it even featured electric power steering.

What is a Hydragas suspension? Instead of separate springs and dampers, you get space-saving displacers filled with an inert gas. It’s a successor to the Hydrolastic suspension designed by British engineer Alex Moulton. In this system, conventional springs and shock absorbers are replaced with a liquid-based suspension system meant to reduce pitch and keep a vehicle level on bumps.

Hydragas Nitrogen Suspension Chambers Fluid Piston Compress
Bluebird Marine Systems Limited

Each unit consists of a damper unit and a Hydragas displacer, an integral spring that uses compressed nitrogen as the springing medium. As a reader once explained, the main difference between the Hydrolastic system and Hydragas is that the Hydrolastic system used displacers featuring a rubber spring.

Rover Group was owned by BMW when the car went on sale in 1995. In 2000, BMW broke up Rover Group and the MGF would fall under the then newly formed MG Rover umbrella. That’s why you’ll sometimes find some people calling early examples like mine a Rover and a later model an MG. Update: However, as a reader has helpfully pointed out and I confirmed by looking at a brochure, the marketing just called them “MGF,” so there’s that.

Who knows, maybe I’ll dislike the MGF, or maybe I’ll love it. You have no idea if you’ll like your hero until you actually meet them. In a worst-case scenario, it wouldn’t be hard to make my money back.

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Trying Something Different

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Be Forward

I’ve never purchased from Be Forward before, but my importer contacts haven’t raised many red flags about the platform. They warned that I should try to stick to cars listed as being in Be Forward’s stock. This is because sometimes, a third-party seller might have a car listed, take your money, and then find out that they’ve already sold the car. Now, you have to get a refund, which could take a while. Apparently, you can be more confident that a car in Be Forward’s stock is actually there. Thankfully, the MGF was listed as Be Forward stock.

The purchasing process is also shockingly painless. In the past, I had to pay a deposit to my importer or exporter, shop for the car, choose the car, receive a proforma invoice, and then wire more money across the world. I’ve now done this three times, and while there has been no issue, it’s always sort of stressful. Make an error in sending a wire, and you might not see that money again.

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Be Forward

Be Forward packages up everything in one price. You pay for the car, shipping, and insurance all at the same time. Even cooler is the fact that Be Forward takes PayPal, so no getting gouged by wire fees and no crossing your fingers, hoping the wire reaches its destination.

Of course, I’m still at the very beginning of this process, so don’t take that as a review of Be Forward. The car still has to be shipped, and I still have to receive it. Thus far, Be Forward has only made it easier to buy a car, that’s all. Based on reviews of the site, it seems like you may have to wait a while before your car gets on a boat, but we’ll see!

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Be Forward

At any rate, in theory, I now just wait for the car to arrive in Baltimore. Then, I get to play Customs Roulette again and hope I don’t have to pay tariffs.

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Either way, I’m stoked. If you’ve been reading our site for long enough, then you know that I’ve been talking about buying one of these for years. Hopefully, it reaches the end of its ocean journey in as good shape as I’m being told. I do expect a few things to be wrong; it is a 27-year-old car, after all, but hopefully, the basics are all there.

So, if you want that hot European import, but don’t like paying more for it, maybe consider getting that Euro car from Japan. You’ll pay less, and as you might see, maybe you can still get a decent car.

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Bill Cox
Bill Cox
1 day ago

I currently own five MGFs. here in North Carolina.. all are RHD, 5 speed with No AC.. I bought all mine from the UK.. as I have partner there. in Aylesbury England.. that I have bought 550 classics from UK in the last 28 years.. I do NOT recommend buying any car sight unseen.. as the MGFs have bad headgasket problems.. I had all the headgaskets replaced before I shipped them to the USA . I also currently also own eight proper petrol Mokes..here in. NC.. fyi. I just imported Rover 75 diesel Saloon with the 6 cyl BMW engine. oh man is it Sweet.. with only 82k. bought for 1250 quid.. pay service 1000 quid to inspect and take to port. I have about $5k in it.. as for MGFs you can buy in the UK all day for about $1000 quid.. later bill cox Monte Carlo Limited Inc. Earl NC Lic NC dealer NC manufacture CBP bonded importer with TWIC ACE SCAC and WMI for MOKE.. 704.487.64066 also Aylesbury England and now Jiangsu China..

InfectedHarpy
InfectedHarpy
1 day ago

First thing you need to check is the headgasket. If it’s good, then never ever give it the beans before the engine has reached operating temperature. They are known for eating headgaskets. There is a better, stronger aftermarket headgasket available though.
These 1.8 engines go up to 160hp. No idea what the difference is. I thought they were called the 1.8 vvc but seeing here 120hp mentioned and the vvc on top op the engine i’m a bit confused. Might already be the 160hp version in there. Might be the reason for the low mileage on the odo. Engine swapped.
These were also called the MG TF for a time for some reason.

This brings back memories from my Lotus Elise with the k series engine in it. Most fun i ever had in a car on the daily.

Carlos Ferreira
Carlos Ferreira
2 days ago

Congrats on a acquiring a unique cool roadster! I recall reading in British car mags of time that they were tidy handlers and generally fun to drive.

Aitchbee
Aitchbee
2 days ago

I had no idea these weren’t sold new in America until now. Over here in the UK, I have a 67 B GT, and I love seeing these at MG events. Much cooler than any MX-5 (or Miata for you lot!) in my opinion. Although they certainly weren’t regarded as highly when new, they’ve got something about them the Mazdas don’t – they just feel a bit generic compared to the MGs. Have fun with your new purchase Mercedes – can’t wait to hear more about it!

Joe L
Joe L
2 days ago
Reply to  Aitchbee

Yeah, I think they (along with the Rover 75) were built to meet US crash regulations, but the Rover K-series motor couldn’t meet emissions without causing other issues. I think. It was 30 years ago now!

Aitchbee
Aitchbee
2 days ago
Reply to  Joe L

That’s interesting, Joe – thanks for pointing that out. Shame about the K Series – Fs (and TFs) would probably have sold quite well in the US. There just wasn’t anything else quite like them! I don’t think I could quite afford a decent one at the moment, unfortunately – pity, as the B is awaiting a new engine…

Joe L
Joe L
1 day ago
Reply to  Aitchbee

Yeah I think it was a real missed opportunity. The MG name still had a ton of equity in the US.

I’m also bummed that BMW never did anything with the other British names it still owns. An Austin-Healey built on the Z4 platform but with nice retro styling probably would have sold me a car in the late 2000s.

Jatkat
Jatkat
2 days ago

Mercedes… didn’t you pretty recently write an article about getting rid of cars?

Dave Edgar
Dave Edgar
1 day ago
Reply to  Jatkat

She said in the article she now has a “1 car in, 1 car out” rule, and will be getting rid of the BMW she bought from The Bishop to make room for this one.

Deekster_caddy
Deekster_caddy
2 days ago

Well I’ve been reading The Autopian on and off for a while now, this is the post that finally convinced me to register and join the comment section – congratulations! I had a very similar idea about importing an MGF I’d been mulling over and just wanted to say thanks for actually going through with it! Looks like a great find!

Richard Truett
Richard Truett
2 days ago

I have two 1990s Rovers here in Detroit, a 1993 Rover 220 Tomcat and a 1999 Rover 75 sedan.
These 1990s Rovers are pretty decent cars — way better than the crap British Leyland sent us in the 1970s and ’80s.
Mercedes: Go on Facebook and join the Modern MGs page. They are people there who can help you service the hydragas system in your car.
And it will need service. You car looks like it is sitting too low, meaning the spheres need pumping up or replacing.

Joe L
Joe L
2 days ago
Reply to  Richard Truett

How’s the Rover 75? I always liked those as a more traditional luxury choice in that segment.

Richard Truett
Richard Truett
1 day ago
Reply to  Joe L

The 75 truly is a baby Bentley. You can tell BMW paid the bills on this one. It doesn’t feel like any Rover I have ever owned, and I have had 2 SD1s, and four Sterling 827s.
These things are tanks. My car is a LHD model originally sold in the Netherlands. Parts are plentiful. The V6 in my car was used in the Land Rover Freelander, so some components are here.
You can see my car here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/569482359757667
It is the cover shot.

Aitchbee
Aitchbee
2 days ago
Reply to  Richard Truett

Good grief – those must be pretty rare across the pond! Did you import them both yourself?

Richard Truett
Richard Truett
1 day ago
Reply to  Aitchbee

The 75 came from Canada. It had been in Canada since 2016 when it was imported along with two others from the Netherlands.
I did import the Rover 220 in December 2021.
If you go here and scroll a bit you can find photos of my car parked in front of Ford World Headquarters
https://www.facebook.com/groups/252375491553403
I get a lot of interesting comments.
Many people look at it and know it is Honda-derived. My car has the beefy 2.0-liter Rover 16-valve DOHC engine, though.
Super fun car to drive and the color really makes it pop.

No Kids, Just Bikes
No Kids, Just Bikes
2 days ago

Whoa, a more-complex less-compelling version of a miata? Mid engine is super cool…but most words written about it make it seem pretty mid. At least it is something interesting on the road provided Illinois doesn’t crush it for you.

If you keep writing these I am going to end up following your lead and getting something weird to add to my fleet.

No Kids, Just Bikes
No Kids, Just Bikes
2 days ago

Uh oh. This is too spendy to play tariff roulette, but a bagged W124 in LHD is yummy.

Last edited 2 days ago by No Kids, Just Bikes
Pedro
Pedro
2 days ago

If it’s anything like an MR2, you’re going to have nothing but fun – and a few strange noises.

Fatallightning
Fatallightning
2 days ago

Looking forward to your thoughts once it lands. I have a stateside S1 Elise with a Rover K Series, and a former NA Miata owner. They seem like a good deal for the moneys, assuming a healthy HG. Many have had the PRT remote t-stat, which allegedly helps with the temp spikes on t-stat opening, you may want to look it up. Let’s compare notes!

Staffma
Staffma
2 days ago

I saw one of these for sale stateside for 5.5k the other day. I was very tempted, but the complexity scared me away. The one thing my old British cars have going for them is simplicity. I’m not brave enough to try a more modern version.

Classic and Clunker
Classic and Clunker
2 days ago

I’ve owned one – cheap fun! But maybe buy a coolant alarm for the K-series engine (mine had one already installed). Also, mine had the same tyre (tire) size all around, so didn’t much like the wet.

InvivnI
InvivnI
2 days ago

A high school friend of mine often quotes our Year 9 IT teacher whenever the MG marque comes up in conversation: “Boys, don’t buy an MG. I bought it for the badge.”

I always found this statement curious as I didn’t realise the MG badge had that much cachet in Australia – though this particular teacher was from South Africa.

Anyway, he drove a red MGF and it apparently gave him an enormous amount of trouble. Though as a third (or fourth.. or fifth… etc) car reliability isn’t such an issue I’d expect. I look forward to reading about how it goes Mercedes.

Dominic Isherwood
Dominic Isherwood
2 days ago

I love these, I keep dancing around buying one as a summer toy. It’s easier in the UK, naturally, there are a fair few of these around and they tend to sell cheaply. The headgasket issues are pretty robustly sorted now, it would be worth purchasing a set of the upgraded long bolts and a new gasket ahead of time, before it starts drinking coolant.

Another common (ish) modification is to put the thermostat from a Lotus Elise in. The first gen Elise used a 1.8 litre variant of the same K-series engine as the MGF/TF, and the thermostat opens a little earlier (70deg or so, rather than 75 or 80). Helps mitigate the overheating issues, especially on the mid-rear applications.

You can also find these engines in early Land Rover Freelanders! Honestly an undervalued lump.

Happy to help with part sourcing in the UK if it’d help Mercedes, I live something like 30 mins drive from the site of the plant where your car was built. Plenty of spares around here.

Wxid
Wxid
2 days ago

I owned a 1997 MGF back in 2001, in proper British Racing Green. I’m in New Zealand, and the car was imported used from Singapore at the time, which everyone told me meant it was going to be a lemon. Something about British electrics vs Singaporean humidity being a fight no car was going to win at the time.

It was a great car – it looked cool (much better than the contemporary MX-5; yes, don’t @ me!), it drove pretty well (better than the Honda CR-X I had before it), and I had a lot of fun hooning around with it.

For about 4 years at which point I guess old age caught up with it and it became incontinent, dumping fluids randomly and at inopportune times. After the engine got cooked I had to offload it. I’ve seen a couple of later model MGTFs around lately in really good condition and have so far managed to avoid buying one but the nostalgia is strong with this one.

Marc Fuhrman
Marc Fuhrman
3 days ago

Very cool! A MGF is certainly on the list of cars I would consider importing. They’re cute little mid engined, funny suspensioned beans.

Rob Bannister
Rob Bannister
3 days ago

I know 4 people who’ve had one. 3 got rid when they got bored of the constant overheating due to Rover not bothering to figure out how to keep a mid engine cool. The other scrapped his when it spun out at motorway speeds, later discovering it was actually two cars badly cut together.
For a while another friend of mine was breaking them. He runs the Spitfire graveyard in Sheffield and usually only breaks Triumphs but thought he’d diversify. He stopped breaking them after 6 months as he was getting to many parts back as defective.
I applaud following the dream but they are really badly made, even by Triumph standards.

Staffma
Staffma
2 days ago
Reply to  Rob Bannister

The quality must be grim indeed if a spitfire purveyor stopped parting them out.

Goblin
Goblin
3 days ago

First, congrats.

Second – Why, oh WHY has Top Gear tainted so many souls ?!? It looks like everybody in the US who ever loved something on Top Gear has decided it only exists in right hand drive. The MGF was widely available in Continental Europe in LHD. Why look for RHD for the US ?
Anyhow – maybe getting a LHD dash from Europe wouldn’t be that difficult.

Third: Time to get on Hedy’s channel, Smells Like Gasoline, and get through his digging into the MGF. The guy is amasing of calm, not flashy, he’s entertaining, and best of all – uses Lidl powertools (European Parklands, which in the US can be found under Einhell. The least, LEAST expensive powertools there is.

https://www.youtube.com/@SmellsLikeGASOLINE/search?query=mg

He’s the living proof it can be done without a lift and without a personal butler at Hazet (actually, he has a lift, which deserves its own episode, but that’s another story).

Goblin
Goblin
3 days ago

Must be my habit of parking booths talking.

Also I havent seen a two-way road allowing passing for decades, but somehow I feel that the second I get an RHD The Universe will confine me to pass buses with zero visibility al the time and forcing me to buy a Krugozor periscopic mirror. The horror.

Phuzz
Phuzz
1 day ago
Reply to  Goblin

I’ve driven RHD cars in France a few times, and it’s not too bad. I think being a convertible will help as it makes easier to see over your left shoulder.

Goblin
Goblin
5 hours ago
Reply to  Phuzz

It’s overtaking on a two-way road, toll booths and anything with a booth or automatic ticket dispenser that are a problem. One is an inconvenience, the other is a safety issue.

In the US, however, you can end up in a place where overtaking on a two-way road is not a thing. I’m on the East Coast and I have genuinely had to overtake on a two-way road maybe three times in twenty years.

pizzaman09
pizzaman09
3 days ago

The VVC engine is super fascinating. It has variable duration control on the cam shafts, which is something that more recently Hyundai did claiming to be the first. Rover did it in the 90s and with a pretty slick and simple coupling on the camshaft to control it all.

Goblin
Goblin
3 days ago
Reply to  pizzaman09
Last edited 3 days ago by Goblin
Dave W
Dave W
3 days ago

Nicely bought Mercedes – it looks from the photos that you have found one of the sportier VVC (variable valve control) variants with a useful 140-odd bhp instead of the standard 118. Does make a difference. Good luck and enjoy, they’re fun little things to punt along a favourite country backroad. 🙂

Last edited 3 days ago by Dave W
Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
2 days ago
Reply to  Dave W

A friend of mine designed the OEM muffler for the MGF VVC. It’s got a vacuum operated valve that opens up a bypass pipe for more noise at big throttle openings. Gently driven cars (and in the UK that was most of them because this was a car for the elderly) will have just one sooty tailpipe.

The same muffler was used on the Elise, but I expect every single Lotus will have an aftermarket exhaust by now.

You can get more noise all the time if you disconnect the hose and plug the end.

I was accused of cheating at an sprint by a man in an MGF who refused to believe that my standard and also shit mk3 MR2 was that much faster than his MG. Useless old twat.

Dave W
Dave W
2 days ago
Reply to  Captain Muppet

Nice! I suspect you’re right on the Lotus aftermarket exhaust front. There cannot be many Elises of 1st and 2nd gen vintage that are running around on bone stock anything nowadays. I did catch a Mk1 out near us in SE England the other evening and it certainly sounded rather ‘athletic’ at full chat – very pleasant. Nice to see a Mk1 actually – they’re a lot rarer than I remember them being – have they all been wrapped around trees or worse, bubble-wrapped as investments now I wonder..

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
1 day ago
Reply to  Dave W

A lot of the UK S1 Elises have gone to Europe. My old one is in Italy now.

You can buy a kit if parts to convert from RHD to LHD.

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