Henson80MGB said:
Well, the hopeful good news is that the radio was actually found on Moss Motors site, and it seems to have fully adjustable dial units.... They claim it will specifically fit an 80 B, w/ no cutting, which was a must!
FWIW there's nothing particularly special about the late MGB radio holes. Many (most?) single-DIN radios will fit or will be darned close. There are two holes: the one in the plastic front panel and the steel support structure behind the panel. When I did mine I found many radios that seemed just a little too big, but tons that were perfect. I ended up with a Kenwood with a hidden face. Just so happens that a friend of mine put the same one in his Eclipse.
Face-open
Face-closed
The bigger problem was finding decent speakers that fit without adding obnoxious looking boxes or chopping up the rear bulkhead.
But, you already have a radio that will fit so that shouldn't be an issue

Once you get the existing installation out you should have a big empty space without much back there except a support structure, some wires, and the heater control cables:
I wasn't <span style="font-style: italic">thrilled</span> with using the existing radio wiring with my new radio. It seemed ok for a basic low-power AM/FM radio that would have been standard in the late '70s. Using it as it was, with the power switching on/off at the ignition switch didn't instill a lot of confidence.
On my installation I chose to run power directly from the battery to the radio with an inline fuse at the battery hookup. At the radio I built a relay circuit so the power to the radio could be switched on/off with either the ignition-switch setup or an external toggle switch. The circuit uses the existing wiring to control the relay and memory back-up in the radio, while the other side of the 30-amp relay uses heavier and better wiring to actually power the radio. The previous owner installed a rocker switch to control an auxiliary fan so the matching rocker now is a master-switch for the radio.
That may seem overkill and it might be. Part of my plan though, was to also use a small amp. The speakers I used are actually pretty good but the poor radio gets overtaxed and starts flat-topping pretty badly at higher volume levels (your radio may be different). The wiring/relay setup was intended to also make adding the small amp pretty simple. Plus, making my own wiring harness made the actual radio installation simple. The wiring took some time, actual installation of the radio rack took 15 minutes. The radio itself is a slide-in and only takes a minute to do.
My radio is ok for around town or with the top-up. With the top-down on the highway though, forget it. I never did install the amp though
