This article describes the contribution that the research team at Aberdeen made to the development of clinically diagnostic MRI. First is the well-known T1 mouse image of March 1974. Then there was the first 2-D Fourier transform for the image processing, generally nicknamed “spin warp” of March 1980. This led to the very first successful clinical explorations of August 1980-1982 at 0.04 T, leading to the first diagnostic clinical service from 1981 onward, first at 0.04 T and then at 0.08 T from 1983, both with the Aberdeen configuration. Finally, there was the establishment of clinically diagnostic MRI in the Far East with the cheaper, Aberdeen configuration, imagers at 0.1 T by the Asahi Chemical Co. of Tokyo, who built and sold some hundreds of imagers from 1983 onward. © 2010 by John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.