Well, I can't fault Neil for closing a thread after mention of the Austin Allegro. After that, we all need a lift, don't we?
Let's start a new thread celebrating (what's left of) British manufacturing. It's easy to fall into a geriatric mindset where nothing is as good as it used to be – and it probably isn't, a lot of the time – but we need to protect ourselves from establishing purely curmudgeonly attitudes, don't we?
Try living on the opposite side of the world NZ), where a quality precision manufacturing industry never got established. There's a generalized sad indifference to quality, and purchases are decided by price. Orientally-produced manufactured goods, of wildly-variable quality, have a virtual monopoly, with little available from countries with long-established engineering heritage. What is available costs, in real terms, at least twice the price in Europe or USA. Try NZ$600 (that's about 300 quid) for a Henry vacuum cleaner! Nothing Swiss in the engineering supply houses, but plenty of low-quality rubbish I don't want. Materials are a problem too – 6061 and (IIRC) 7075 alloys are all that are readily available – at a price.
So, cheer up! You've still got quality innovators and manufacturers, if only you are prepared to recognise them. You can still buy quality goods and materials.
I'll start the ball rolling by mentioning a tiny few, picked at random:
Brooks saddles, Morgan motorcars, Cowells machine tools, Purdey guns, Raspberry Pi, most of the Formula 1 motor racing circus and its suppliers …
Let's hear of more, and of firms who provide quality service, before they're forgotten.