On the 1975–1980 MGB “rubber bumper” cars, the big black bumpers were made from a BASF polyurethane system—specifically a reaction‑injection‑molded (RIM) polyurethane elastomer (often described in period sources as “BASF polyurethane” or “BASF Elastomer” bumpers). They were mounted on steel structures/energy absorbers, but the visible bumper skin itself was polyurethane.
Most enthusiasts—especially in the U.S. and among “classic chrome-bumper” traditionalists—viewed the 1975 MGB’s rubber bumpers as a necessary regulatory compromise that hurt the car’s looks and character, even if they understood why MG did it.
The dominant enthusiast reaction: “uglier and less sporty”
- Aesthetics: The thick black polyurethane bumpers were widely seen as visually heavy compared with the slim chrome blades. Many felt they made the MGB look taller and more “blocky,” diluting the 1960s roadster elegance.
- Proportions/ride height: To meet U.S. 5‑mph impact rules and bumper-height requirements, MG raised the car’s ride height. Enthusiasts often complained this made the car look “jacked up” and reduced the planted, sporty stance.
Driving/handling perceptions
- Higher center of gravity + softer setup: The raised ride height and suspension changes were commonly blamed for a small but noticeable loss of crispness in turn-in and overall feel compared with earlier cars.
- Weight and balance: The bumper system added weight at the ends, and enthusiasts often described the later cars as feeling a bit less lively (even if the difference in normal driving could be subtle).
The “it’s not just the bumpers” argument
Many owners also point out that the mid-1970s MGB changes came as a package:
- emissions-era tuning that reduced power (especially in U.S. spec),
- additional safety/comfort equipment,
- and the bumper/ride-height changes. So in enthusiast memory, “rubber bumper” became shorthand for the whole late-’70s compromise era, not only the bumper material itself.
A more nuanced, current, minority view
- Practicality: Some enthusiasts appreciate the rubber bumpers for real-world use—parking protection, less worry about minor knocks, and cheaper replacement compared with chrome.
- Value entry point: Rubber-bumper cars have often been cheaper, making them a common gateway into MGB ownership.
- Easy to improve: Many owners lower the ride height and upgrade suspension, which can recover much of the handling feel while keeping the later car’s usability.
Overall, the enthusiast consensus has long been: chrome-bumper MGBs are the “pure” look, while the 1975-on rubber-bumper cars are the regulations-and-emissions compromise—sometimes loved, often modified, and still very much part of the MGB story.
Materials involved (what BASF supplied / what the bumper was made from)
1) Polyurethane elastomer (RIM) This is the main “rubber” you see.
- Chemistry (typical for 1970s RIM PU):
- Isocyanate component: commonly MDI-based (methylene diphenyl diisocyanate) prepolymers in many automotive RIM systems of the era.
- Polyol component: polyether polyols were common for elastomeric RIM, combined with chain extenders to tune hardness.
- Catalysts: amine and/or organotin catalysts (used in PU processing generally).
- Additives: carbon black (for color and UV), stabilizers/antioxidants, internal mold release agents.
- Why PU RIM: it could be molded into large shapes, had good impact resilience, and could meet 5‑mph bumper requirements without a heavy chrome-plated steel assembly.
2) Pigment/filler package Most MGB bumpers were black-through or black-finished.
- Carbon black was the key pigment and also helped UV resistance.
- Fillers could be used to tune stiffness/cost, depending on the exact BASF formulation.
3) Substructure (not BASF, but part of the bumper system) Behind the PU skin, the MGB used:
- Steel reinforcement/beam and mounting brackets
- Energy absorbers (often hydraulic or crush elements depending on year/market) These are crucial to how the bumper worked, but BASF’s role was the polyurethane elastomer system.





















