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  2. MINI USA has officially opened registration for MINI Takes the States 2026, marking not just another run of the brand’s most iconic owner rally, but a significant milestone. This year celebrates 20 years since the very first MTTS, a grassroots-inspired road trip that has since evolved into one of the most enduring and distinctive owner events in the automotive world. For 2026, MINI is rewriting the format. Instead of a single cross-country trek, MTTS becomes a series of three long-weekend rallies, each designed to capture the spirit of the original while making it more accessible to a broader audience. It’s a shift that feels both pragmatic and true to the event’s core ethos: community, driving and a shared sense of adventure. A New Format for a New Era The biggest change for 2026 is the move to a three-part structure spanning the west coast, northeast and southeast. Each rally will take place over a long weekend, connecting three cities through some of the most scenic driving routes in the country. California | October 2–4 Monterey > Sonoma > Lake Tahoe New York | October 23–25 Buffalo > Syracuse > Lake Placid Florida | November 13–15 Fort Myers > Miami > Key West From the Pacific Coast Highway to the Adirondacks and down to the Florida Keys, MINI has curated routes that lean heavily into the joy of driving rather than simply the destination. It’s a more modular take on MTTS, but one that arguably makes it easier than ever to join. Registration is now open via the official site, with pricing set at $150 per person for each weekend rally. For those looking to sample the experience, single-day passes are available for $50. All participants receive an official event goody bag, while supplies last. Preserving the Spirit of MTTS Despite the new format, the fundamentals remain unchanged. Each day follows MINI’s familiar Rise & Rally structure, with morning meetups featuring breakfast, music and send-offs before participants head out on curated drives. Evenings shift into community mode, with gatherings designed for storytelling, socializing and celebrating the day’s journey. That communal aspect has always been the heart of MTTS. In 2024, nearly 2,000 owners took part in at least a portion of the rally, with hundreds of MINIs setting off together each morning. It’s part road trip, part festival and part rolling car show, all anchored by a shared enthusiasm for the brand. From the GP to a Movement The origins of MTTS go back to 2006, when MINI launched the first event to celebrate the debut of the original MINI GP. What started as a one-off cross-country rally quickly gained traction, evolving into a biennial tradition that has become something of a rite of passage for MINI owners in the U.S. Over the past two decades, it’s grown into one of the most successful owner engagement programs run by any OEM. But more importantly, it has remained authentic to its roots. This isn’t about polished presentations or corporate staging. It’s about driving, meeting people and discovering the unexpected along the way. Three Weekends, One Community What the 2026 format does particularly well is expand access without diluting the experience. Not everyone can commit to a nine-day cross-country drive. But a long weekend? That’s achievable. And by spreading the event across three distinct regions, MINI is effectively bringing MTTS to more owners than ever before. If anything, it feels like a natural evolution. The scale may be different, but the intent is exactly the same as it was 20 years ago. Get people together. Put them on great roads. And let everything else happen naturally. The post MINI USA Opens Registration for MINI Takes the State 2026 appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  3. Before MINI became a premium small car success story under BMW, it was something far rarer: a genuine revolution on four wheels. How did it unfold? We have a full timeline of those key moments and not only made Mini what it is today, but changed the automotive world. What follows is a compressed history of how a brilliantly simple idea from Alec Issigonis evolved into a global cultural and automotive force. From Monte Carlo dominance to electrification, from British Motor Corporation ingenuity to Oxford-built precision, each milestone tells part of the story. And like any good MINI, the details matter. 67 Years of MINI Year / DateMilestoneExpanded Detail26 Aug 1959First Mini unveiledThe British Motor Corporation launches the original Mini, engineered by Alec Issigonis. Its transverse engine and front-wheel drive layout maximize interior space in a way that rewrites small car design forever.1961Mini Cooper unveiledCollaboration with racing legend John Cooper transforms the Mini into a performance icon, adding more power, sharper handling, and motorsport credibility.1962200,000 units annuallyDemand surges globally. The Mini proves that clever engineering can scale, becoming a staple of British roads and export markets alike.1963-64Mini Cooper S introducedA more powerful evolution of the Cooper, featuring larger engines and race-ready tuning. It becomes the definitive performance Mini of the era.1964Monte Carlo Rally winPaddy Hopkirk wins the Monte Carlo Rally in a Mini Cooper S, cementing MINI’s reputation as a giant killer on the world stage.1965Second Monte Carlo winTimo Mäkinen secures another victory, reinforcing MINI’s dominance and proving the first win was no fluke.19651 million unitsProduction surpasses one million cars, an extraordinary achievement for a car initially conceived as an economy solution.1965Automatic transmissionMINI introduces an automatic option, broadening appeal and usability beyond enthusiast drivers.1967Third Monte Carlo winMINI takes its third Monte Carlo victory, completing one of the most improbable motorsport success stories in history.19723 million unitsThe Mini’s global footprint expands further, becoming a cultural icon as much as a car.1990New Mini Cooper (revival)Rover revives the Cooper name as a limited edition, tapping into nostalgia and signaling enduring demand for performance Minis.1992First Mini ConvertibleAn open-top Mini arrives, adding lifestyle appeal and foreshadowing future body style diversification.1994BMW acquires MiniBMW Group acquires Rover Group, gaining control of Mini and setting the stage for its modern reinvention.2000Modern MINI revealedBMW unveils the first modern MINI concept, blending retro design cues with contemporary engineering. Skepticism is high, expectations higher.2001Production begins (Oxford)Modern MINI production starts at Plant Oxford, anchoring the brand’s rebirth in the UK. A new era officially begins.2001New Cooper SSupercharged performance returns, reestablishing MINI as a driver-focused brand with genuine enthusiast appeal.2002100,000 units at OxfordEarly success confirms demand. Waitlists are long and it’s clear that the new MINI is no longer a gamble, it’s a hit.2004Convertible (modern)The modern MINI Convertible debuts, combining open-air driving with the brand’s signature dynamics.2004BMW buys John Cooper WorksBMW buys the JCW brand and integrates the model into Oxford production.2006JCW GP KitJohn Cooper Works performance reaches new heights with a track-focused GP kit, hinting at MINI’s hardcore potential.2006Third generation (R56)A new generation introduces improved refinement, updated tech, and broader appeal while maintaining core dynamics.2008Clubman introducedThe modern Clubman reinterprets MINI practicality with split rear doors and extended wheelbase, divisive but distinctive.2008Convertible (gen update)Convertible evolves with improved rigidity and comfort, showing MINI’s growing maturity.2009MINI E trialsEarly electric testing begins with the MINI E, a limited fleet that previews the brand’s electric ambitions well ahead of rivals.2010Countryman unveiledMINI goes bigger with its first crossover, controversial among purists but crucial for global growth.2014F56 MINI Cooper debutsThe 3rd generation F56 MINI Cooper debuts for the first time on a full BMW platform with BMW engines. 2014F55 5-door MINI debutsThe hatch gains practicality with a longer wheelbase and extra doors, broadening its everyday usability.2015F54 Clubman debutsA more conventional, premium Clubman arrives, moving upmarket and improving refinement significantly.2016F57 Convertible (gen 3)The third-generation Convertible refines open-top MINI motoring with better tech and structural improvements.2017F60 Countryman (gen 2)Larger, more premium, and available with ALL4 AWD, the Countryman becomes a cornerstone of MINI’s lineup.201960th AnniversaryMINI celebrates six decades, reflecting on its cultural and automotive legacy.2019F56 MINI Electric announcedThe brand formally commits to electrification with the announcement of the MINI Electric.2020Electric production beginsThe MINI Cooper SE enters production at Oxford, marking the start of series EV manufacturing.2023New generation lineup debutsFifth-gen Cooper and third-gen Countryman debut with both ICE and EV options, signaling a dual-powertrain future.2024MINI Aceman introducedA new compact crossover slots between Cooper and Countryman, designed with an EV-first mindset.2024Nürburgring class winMINI JCW and Bulldog Racing win SP3T class at the 24-hour Nürburgring, proving performance credentials remain intact.2024New Convertible unveiledLatest Convertible continues MINI’s tradition of open-air driving with updated design and tech.2025JCW x Deus show carsCollaboration with Deus Ex Machina blends MINI performance with custom culture and design experimentation.2025Paul Smith EditionA design-led special edition celebrates British creativity, reinforcing MINI’s cultural positioning beyond automotive. The post MINI at 67: The Key Moments in the History of MINI appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
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  5. There are anniversaries, and then there are inflection points. For MINI, 2026 is both. It marks 25 years since the rebirth of the brand under BMW Group, a moment that could have easily gone sideways but instead became perhaps the most successful reinterpretations of a legacy marque in modern automotive history. On April 26, 2001, the first modern MINI rolled off the line at Oxford, and with it came a question that lingered in enthusiast circles: could a German-engineered reinterpretation of a British icon retain its soul? A quarter century later, the answer is clear. Not only did it retain it, it amplified it. From Issigonis to BMW: Reinvention Without Erasure The original Mini, launched in 1959 under the vision of Alec Issigonis, was less a car and more a packaging revolution. Front wheel drive, wheels pushed to the corners, and a footprint that rewrote the rules of urban mobility. It was clever in a way that modern cars rarely are. BMW’s task was not to replicate that formula literally. That would have been nostalgia at best, parody at worst. Instead, the company distilled the essence. Compact proportions, cheeky design, and a chassis tuned for what marketing would eventually call the “go-kart feeling.” Yes, the phrase has been overused to the point of cliché, but in the early R50 and R53 cars, it was more manifesto than tagline. And crucially, BMW added something the classic Mini never truly had: consistency. Build quality, safety, global scalability. The things that turn a cult object into a sustainable brand. The Oxford Engine Room At the heart of MINI’s modern success sits Plant Oxford, still doing what it has done for over a century, just faster and with more precision. Today, a new MINI rolls off the line every 78 seconds. That is not just efficiency, it is industrial choreography. Together with Plant Swindon, which supplies body panels, and Hams Hall, which has produced over 4.6 million engines, MINI’s UK manufacturing footprint has become one of the most important automotive ecosystems in Britain. Around 800 cars a day, more than 3,000 workers, and a cumulative total of over 4.6 million MINIs built since 2001. If you want a deeper dive into how Oxford evolved into a modern production powerhouse, this piece is worth revisiting. Design That Continues to Evolve MINI’s design story over the past 25 years has been one of careful evolution punctuated by occasional leaps. The R56 refined, the F56 modernized, and the latest generation has leaned hard into digital interfaces and simplified surfaces. Not every change has landed cleanly. Some enthusiasts still grumble about size creep, others about the loss of certain analog touches. And they are not entirely wrong. The modern MINI is no longer as mini as it once was. But it remains MINI in the experiential sense, and that has been the tightrope walk all along. Customization has played a central role in that identity. From bonnet stripes to the multi-tone roof, MINI has consistently understood that its buyers are not just purchasing transportation, they are curating an extension of themselves. The recent experiments with gradient roofs and special editions like the Paul Smith collaboration underline that point. MotoringFile explored MINI’s design evolution in detail here Sales, Electrification and the Road Ahead In 2025, MINI sold 288,290 vehicles globally. More telling than the number itself is the composition. Over one third were fully electric, with markets like the Netherlands and Sweden pushing beyond 50 percent EV adoption. That is not a side experiment anymore. But petrol powered MINI’s still have a long life ahead. The John Cooper Works sub-brand, often seen as the purist’s refuge, also hit a record with 25,630 units, proving that performance still matters even as the brand pivots toward electrification. And yes, there is tension there. Electric MINIs are quick, refined, and urban-friendly, but they lack some of the tactile mischief that defined earlier generations. The challenge for the next 25 years will be figuring out how to inject character into silence. Culture, Character and Controlled Chaos What MINI has managed to preserve, perhaps more impressively than any spec sheet metric, is its cultural relevance. Few cars move so easily between city streets, fashion shoots, and film sets. It remains a design object as much as a machine. That “statement of individuality” line from the press release might sound like marketing boilerplate, but in MINI’s case it is grounded in truth. Owners name their cars, argue about spec choices online, and treat limited editions like collectible art. This is not accidental. It is the result of 25 years of carefully balancing heritage with reinvention. The Subtle Brilliance of Not Standing Still If there is a single takeaway from MINI’s past quarter century, it is this: survival required change, but success required restraint. Too much nostalgia and MINI becomes a retro curiosity. Too much innovation and it loses its identity. BMW has, more often than not, threaded that needle with surprising finesse. Not perfectly, of course. There have been missteps, awkward proportions, and the occasional overreach into lifestyle branding. But the throughline remains intact. At 25 years in, the modern MINI is no longer the “new MINI.” It is simply MINI. A brand that has outgrown its own reboot and settled into something far more difficult to achieve: relevance. And if the next 25 years are anything like the last, expect it to keep evolving, occasionally frustrating, often delighting, and always, in its own peculiar way, refusing to be ordinary. The post The Modern MINI Turns 25: How BMW Reinvented an Icon for the Modern Era appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  6. At Auto China 2026 in Beijing, MINI arrives with one of its most expansive and unconventional showings in recent memory. That matters because this isn’t a typical product showcase. It’s a statement about where the brand is heading. Fourteen vehicles, spanning one-offs, collaborations, special editions and core production models, are arranged less like a lineup and more like a spectrum of ideas. The throughline is clear. MINI is once again leaning into customization and expression as the center of the brand. A Stand Built Around Expression What stands out immediately is how deliberately MINI is leaning into personality over specification. Instead of leading with performance figures or new tech, the brand is using color, material and collaboration to tell its story. There are market-specific editions tailored for China. There are design-led partnerships that push beyond traditional OEM boundaries. And there’s a clear effort to show how even standard production models can be stretched into something more individual through finishes and detail work. It’s less about what the cars are, and more about what they can become. MINI x Vagabund: A Countryman Reimagined The centerpiece of that thinking is the MINI x Vagabund collaboration. Built on the MINI Countryman, the two one-off concepts take the idea of versatility and push it into something far more expressive. The most obvious change comes from the reworked wheel arches, which visually widen the car and give it a more assertive stance. It’s a subtle nod to capability, even if the execution remains firmly road-focused. But the defining move is further back. The rear side windows have been replaced entirely with a bespoke, high-performance sound system. It turns the car into a mobile sound installation, designed less for isolation and more for shared experience. This is where MINI’s recent collaborations start to make more sense. It’s not just about aesthetics. It’s about using the car as a cultural object, something that can plug into music, events and community in a way that traditional vehicles rarely attempt. Only one of the two Vagabund cars is on display in Beijing, but the point lands regardless. The Skeg Lands in China Alongside Vagabund is the China debut of the electric JCW x Deus “The Skeg.” Where Vagabund adds, The Skeg strips back. Its semi-transparent fiberglass body exposes form and structure in a way that feels closer to industrial design than traditional automotive surfacing. Add in the surf-inspired accessories and the entire concept leans into a lifestyle built around movement and freedom. Like the Vagabund cars, it’s not trying to be practical. It’s trying to explore what a MINI can represent. Beyond Concepts: A Broader Customization Play Beyond the headline concepts, the rest of the stand reinforces the same idea at a more accessible level. There are China-specific editions aimed at local buyers. The MINI Paul Smith Edition makes its first appearance in the market, continuing a collaboration that has always been about color, detail and a slightly offbeat perspective. And across the stand, production cars are used to show just how far MINI is willing to go with personalization through paint, trim and material choices. Even John Cooper Works is positioned differently here. Performance is still present, but it’s framed as just another layer of expression rather than the defining trait. What This Really Means What MINI is doing in Beijing doesn’t feel isolated. It feels like the continuation of a shift we’ve been seeing build over the past year. From Deus to Vagabund, the brand is moving away from the tighter, more restrained minimalism that defined its recent past. In its place is something more open, more experimental and more willing to take risks. And crucially, MINI isn’t keeping that energy locked in concept cars. By placing these ideas alongside production models and special editions, it’s signaling that elements of this thinking will make their way into the cars customers can actually buy. MINI has always talked about individuality. In Beijing, it’s starting to show what that actually looks like. The post MINI Goes All-In on Customization at Auto China 2026 with Vagabund Debut and 14-Car Showcase appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  7. With the Vagabund concepts, it’s now clear MINI is entering into a new era of its design langauge. After years of disciplined minimalism, sometimes bordering on austerity, the brand is stepping into something more expressive, more layered, and frankly more fun. The MINI x Vagabund concepts combined with the recent Dues concepts prove that this approach is not just a one-off curiosity. It’s part of a broader shift that signals a new approach inside MINI design. A New Expressive Era MINI’s recent production designs have been clean to the point of austerity. To a degree, a change was needed. But now that MINI has paired things back aesthetically, it feels like the right time to begin a new phase. The Vagabund concept does that by embracing visual complexity without losing coherence. It’s a difficult trick and one MINI hasn’t attempted seriously in years. Where the standard Countryman leans into geometric clarity, the Vagabund version introduces texture, contrast, and visual depth. It feels less like a product and more like an object with intent, something designed to be looked at twice. And that alone marks a meaningful shift. Layered Arches and a Hint of Rebellion The most compelling detail sits around the wheel arches. The layered surfacing here does something MINI has struggled with in the past: it adds ruggedness without resorting to cliché. Instead of the usual black plastic cladding or cartoonishly inflated flares, the Vagabund concept builds its arches in strata. There’s a sense of structure, almost architectural, as if each layer serves a purpose beyond decoration. Look closely and you’ll catch an echo of the MINI John Cooper Works GP. Not in a literal sense, but in the attitude. That car used exaggerated arch extensions to telegraph performance. The Vagabund borrows that visual aggression and repurposes it for something more exploratory, more off-road adjacent. It’s a clever bit of design storytelling. The message is capability, but filtered through MINI’s design DNA rather than borrowed from the SUV playbook. Those Wheels Then there are the wheels, which deserve more than a passing glance. They channel the spirit of classic Mercedes-Benz AMG Monoblock wheels designs, those iconic slabs of machined confidence, but reinterpret them with a modern, almost industrial finesse. Where AMG’s originals were about brute presence, these feel more nuanced. There’s ruggedness in the proportions and surface treatment, but also a surprising elegance in how the forms are resolved. The interplay between solid surfaces and cutouts gives them a sense of motion even at rest. Most importantly, they look designed for this car, not pulled from a parts bin or rendered as an afterthought. That alone puts them ahead of most concept wheels, which often veer into fantasy. Going Higher Raise a car slightly, widen its track, and give it the right visual anchors, and something interesting happens. Presence. The Vagabund concept leans into this classic proportion trick with confidence. The increased ride height does more than suggest off-road capability, it recalibrates the entire visual balance of the car. The standard Countryman can feel a bit upright, almost polite. This version plants itself more deliberately. The added height, combined with those assertive arches and wheels, gives it a stance that feels purposeful rather than merely practical. It’s the difference between a crossover and something that looks like it might actually go somewhere unexpected. A Brand Finding Its Voice Again If you read our earlier critique of the Deus concepts, you’ll remember the tension we pointed out in MINI’s recent work. A split personality between heritage cues and modern minimalism, neither fully winning. The Vagabund concept suggests a third path. Instead of choosing between restraint and expression, MINI is starting to layer them. Clean base forms paired with more adventurous detailing. Familiar proportions infused with new ideas about texture and depth. It’s not perfect. Some elements still feel exploratory, as if the designers are testing how far they can push before someone pulls them back. But that’s exactly what makes it interesting. Because for the first time in a while, MINI design feels like it’s asking questions again. And in design, that’s usually where the good stuff begins. The post MINI x Vagabund Concept Review: When Restraint Finally Takes a Holiday appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  8. After a podium finish in its first rally, the JCW Race Team’s rookie season is becoming a bit grueling. Both the JCW Cooper and JCW Countryman finished off the podium in what is known to be one of the toughest rally’s in North America. In Open 2WD, the MINI John Cooper Works 2-Door (car #567, Quillen/Myers) finished 4th in the National class, with a total time of 4:09:50.5. That places it behind a mix of more developed builds, but crucially, it finished. In Limited 4WD, the MINI John Cooper Works Countryman ALL4 (car #265, Perocarpi/Schrunder) finished outside the front runners in the National class, posting a 4:00:08.1 total time after factoring in penalties. Again, not a headline result, but a complete one. Breaking Down The Classes One of the more confusing aspects of the American Rally Association is how classes and categories overlap. For MINI’s effort, there are really two that matter. Open 2 Wheel Drive (O2WD) This is where the MINI JCW 2-Door competes, and it’s arguably the most varied class in the field. O2WD is open to front- or rear-wheel drive cars with a wide range of modifications. You’ll see everything from modern Rally4 machines like the Peugeot 208 to older builds like BMWs, Volvos, and even the occasional oddball. That mix makes it one of the most competitive and unpredictable categories. Within O2WD, there are two layers: National: The top-tier championship competitors Regional: Local entries running a parallel classification MINI’s JCW 2-Door is competing in National O2WD, where it finished 4th at Olympus. That puts it behind more purpose-built Rally4 cars, but ahead of a large portion of the broader field. For a relatively lightly modified car, that’s a credible result. Limited 4 Wheel Drive (L4WD) The JCW Countryman ALL4 runs in Limited 4WD, a class designed to keep costs and modifications in check. Unlike the open classes, L4WD restricts how far teams can go with upgrades. The result is a field dominated by production-based AWD cars, most commonly Subaru WRXs, with performance that’s closer to showroom spec than full rally builds. Again, the field is split into: National: Championship contenders Regional: Local competitors The Countryman competed in National L4WD, going up against deeply experienced Subaru-based teams. While it finished further down the order at Olympus, the result reflects both the competitiveness of the class and how early MINI still is in developing the platform for rally conditions. Why This Matters On paper, a 4th place and a mid-pack finish don’t jump off the page. But within the context of these classes, they tell a more nuanced story. O2WD rewards agility, driver skill, and momentum. That’s where MINI’s traditional strengths naturally shine. L4WD, on the other hand, is about traction, durability, and setup. It’s a tougher category to break into quickly, especially against platforms that have been developed for years. Taken together, MINI’s results at Olympus show a program that’s competitive in the right places and still learning where it needs to be. And three rallies in, that’s exactly where you’d expect it to be. The post The JCW Race Team Finishes The Olympus Rally Outside of the Top Three appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
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  10. This weekend, the brand heads west to tackle one of the most iconic events on the American stage, the Olympus Rally. Held April 17–19 in Shelton, Washington, the event is equal parts speed, precision, and survival, threading competitors through over 200 miles of punishing forest stages across the Olympic Peninsula. Elevation swings, tight technical sections, and high-speed straights make it a proving ground that tends to expose weaknesses quickly and reward bravery even faster. For MINI USA and the John Cooper Works Race Team, it is the next chapter in what is shaping up to be a quietly compelling return to top-level rallying in North America. A Start That Turned Heads MINI did not enter the American Rally Association with much noise, but the results have already begun to speak for themselves. At the season-opening Sno*Drift Rally in Michigan, the team secured a class podium. Not bad for a debut. Not bad at all. It was the kind of result that suggested MINI wasn’t here for a ceremonial return to dirt, but something more serious. That momentum carried into the notoriously fast and flowing Rally in the 100 Acre Wood, where the two-car effort continued to gather data, pace, and perhaps most importantly, confidence. There is a certain pragmatism to how MINI and LAP Motorsports are approaching this season. No grand proclamations, just steady progress. It feels familiar to anyone who followed the MINI John Cooper Works Race Team’s earlier exploits in IMSA and TC America, where consistency and clever engineering often punched above outright horsepower. Two Cars, Two Classes The MINI John Cooper Works Countryman ALL4, competing in the Limited 4WD class, leans into modern versatility. Bigger, more planted, and with all-wheel drive traction, it is arguably the rational choice for rallying’s unpredictable surfaces. Yet, because ARA regulations limit modifications, what stands out is how much of the production car’s DNA remains intact. Then there is the MINI John Cooper Works 2-Door in Open 2WD. This is the spiritual core of MINI laid bare. Short wheelbase, sharp responses, and that signature “go-kart” handling. On loose surfaces, it demands commitment and rewards precision, often in equal measure. Together, they form a kind of rolling thesis on what MINI performance means in 2026. One part evolution, one part stubborn adherence to the original recipe. Olympus: Where Things Get Serious Olympus is not the place to fake it. The stages are fast but unforgiving, lined with trees that have little interest in forgiving overconfidence. The 1,250 feet of elevation change adds another layer of complexity, testing braking, cooling, and driver focus in equal measure. Luis Perocarpi of LAP Motorsports put it plainly: the cars have already proven their toughness. Now comes the harder part, sustaining that performance under some of the most demanding conditions of the season. If Sno*Drift was about survival and 100 Acre Wood about rhythm, Olympus is about commitment. MINI’s Unique Advantage One of the more interesting wrinkles in MINI’s rally program is not under the hood, but in the service park. MINI dealer technicians are being rotated into the pit crew, a move that feels both clever and deeply on-brand. It connects the showroom floor to the rally stage in a way that most manufacturers only talk about. It also means the cars are being serviced by people who know them intimately, not just as race machines, but as products customers live with daily. It is a subtle but meaningful advantage, and one that reinforces MINI’s broader approach: keep things authentic, keep them connected. The Road Ahead There is, of course, a deeper narrative running through all of this. MINI’s rally pedigree is not something that needs embellishment. The move into ARA competition marks a expansion of MINI’s motorsport footprint in North America. It builds on regional rally appearances in 2025, but more importantly, it reconnects the brand with a discipline that arguably defines its character more than circuit racing ever could. After Olympus, the ARA calendar stretches across the country, from Ohio to Colorado, Minnesota to Tennessee, before closing in Michigan. It is a demanding schedule, one that rewards endurance as much as outright speed. For MINI USA and LAP Motorsports, the goal seems less about immediate domination and more about establishing credibility, stage by stage, event by event. And yet, there is a sense that something is building. 2026 ARA Remaining Schedule Southern Ohio Forest Rally June 11-13, 2026, Chillicothe, Ohio Rally Colorado July 18-19, 2026, Rangely, Colorado Ojibwe Forests Rally August 27-29, 2026, Detroit Lakes, Minnesota Overmountain Rally Tennessee September 18-19, 2026, Newport, Tennessee Lake Superior Performance Rally October 9-10, 2026, Marquette, Michigan The post MINI Heads Into ARA Olympus Rally With Momentum and Optimism appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  11. There are countries that like cars, and then there’s Japan, a place that doesn’t just appreciate the automobile but elevates it into something closer to cultural currency. But spend a few days in Tokyo and you start to realize the obsession isn’t about horsepower or status. It’s about taste, history, and the quiet satisfaction of driving something that has a back story. And somehow, improbably but perfectly, MINI fits right in. Japan was the best-selling market for the last generation MINI Clubman, which tells you almost everything you need to know. This is a country that values clever design over brute force, craftsmanship over excess. The MINI, both classic and modern, feels less like a foreign import and more like a native idea that just happened to originate elsewhere. You see it everywhere. Perfectly restored classic Minis tucked into impossibly small parking spaces. New MINIs gliding through Shibuya traffic like they were designed specifically for it. Nothing feels out of place. In fact, the MINI often feels more “correct” here than it does in many Western markets. It blends. And in Japan, blending in while standing out is an art form. To call Japan a “car culture” undersells it. This is a culture obsessed with excellence, whether that’s food, music, architecture, or retail. We arrived in Japan a just in time for the early sakura season, which, like so much here, feels less like a season and more like a perfectly executed moment. The bloom is fleeting, often lasting just one to two weeks at its best, and yet the entire country seems calibrated around it. Parks, streets, even the negative space between buildings, all briefly transformed by soft pink canopies that make everything look slightly unreal. The rhythm and precision of the culture is something you notice quickly. You see it in the Shinkansen, arriving with metronomic precision every few minutes. You see it in the way a coffee shop is curated like a gallery. You taste it in meals that feel engineered as much as cooked. Cars are simply another canvas. And that’s why the MINI works here. Its design-led ethos aligns with a country that reveres thoughtful engineering and aesthetic restraint. It’s not about being loud, it’s about having a perspective. Retail as Theater, Automotive Edition Tsutaya Books Daikanyama If you want to understand Japan’s relationship with cars, don’t start in a garage. Start in a bookstore. Tsutaya Books Daikanyama is easily the best bookstore I’ve ever experienced, and not just because it dedicates serious square footage to automotive culture. The magazine and book selection goes deeper than anything you’ll find elsewhere, and yes, there’s a surprisingly robust MINI section. It’s not retail, it’s curation. And it tells you that cars here are something to be studied, not just driven. Peaches and Liberty Walk Then there are the boutiques. Peaches is the kind of place that makes you question why automotive retail elsewhere feels so… transactional. There’s always a show car on display, rotating like an art installation. Liberty Walk, on the other hand, is louder, more irreverent, but no less intentional. It’s a reminder that Japan’s car culture spans from restrained minimalism to full-blown widebody theatrics, and somehow both feel equally authentic. The Tamiya Playmodel Factory was perhaps the most hallowed ground for me. Tamiya is where much of my obsession with cars started building Porsche 935 and BMW CSL models on a floor. Seeing rows of perfectly boxed kits, feels less like shopping and more like revisiting an origin story. Japan doesn’t just celebrate cars, it nurtures the fascination from the very beginning. And if you want to go deep into JDM, Tokyo delivers: A PIT Autobacs Shinonome feels like the Apple Store of car culture, massive, premium, and obsessively detailed Spoon Sports offers a more focused, almost spiritual experience for Honda enthusiasts Garage R is a shrine to Skylines and RX-7s Chains like Autobacs and Up Garage round things out with endless aisles of parts, gadgets, and things you didn’t know you needed This is where the depth of Japanese car culture really reveals itself. It’s not just about finished cars, it’s also about the ecosystem around them. Then there’s Daikoku Futo Parking Area. On weekends, it transforms into something mythical. A living, breathing cross-section of global car culture. Supercars idle next to drift builds. Rare vintage metal shares space with things you can’t quite identify but instantly respect. And you never know who will show up. Sadly we missed Lewis Hamilton in a Ferrari F40 by an hour Wednesday night while we were there. The Best Car Watching in the World Japan might offer the best car spotting on the planet, not just because of value, but because of variety. Yes, you’ll see supercars. But the beauty of car-spotting in Japan is the deep cuts and the JDM flavor of it all. What I loved was the almost ridiculous mix of high-end cars, obscure models and perfectly preserved oddities that speak to a level of enthusiast knowledge that runs incredibly deep. And threaded through all of it, consistently, are MINIs. Ongaku kissa Japan’s obsession with cars with equaled if not surpassed by music. And at the center of that are Japan’s ongaku kissa. Less about nightlife and more about ritual, these are spaces where music isn’t background noise but the entire point. You don’t go to talk over a playlist. The bartender mixes your drink as we cues up the next record. And if there’s a house DJ make sure to pay him respect as you leave for the intense and obscure history lesson he likely just delivered. You go to listen, intentionally, the way the artist and engineer likely intended. In a country obsessed with doing things well, that focus feels entirely natural. Step inside Bar Martha and you’re met with towering shelves of vinyl and a near-silence that feels deliberate. Conversations fade into the background as a meticulously tuned analog system takes over. Every track is curated, every note given room to breathe. It’s intimate, almost sacred. Bar Davy offers a slightly looser interpretation, a bit more eclectic in tone, but no less serious about sound. The philosophy holds. The music comes first, the system matters, and the experience touches every sense. There is no better place to unwind, talk to strangers via translation apps and soak it in. Why MINI Works Here Japan reveals something fundamental about MINI. At its best, MINI isn’t about retro design or cheeky marketing. It’s about intelligent packaging, thoughtful engineering, and design that rewards attention. Those are values Japan understands instinctively. And that’s why, walking through Tokyo, seeing a classic Mini parked with surgical precision or a new Clubman gliding through the city, it all feels… inevitable. Like it was always meant to be this way. The post Japan, MINI and the Art of Automotive Obsession appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  12. Sometimes the best way to take in a concept like this is simply to slow it down and really look at it. We’ve put together a short video that lets you explore the MINI Countryman Vagabund concept in more detail. From the widened arches and lifted stance to the layered fabrication and unexpected details, there’s a lot here that’s easy to miss at first glance. If you want a closer look at what MINI and Vagabund have created, hit play below and take it in. The post First Look Video: MINI x Vagabund Countryman Concept appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  13. If the MINI x Dues concepts where the most acclaimed in years from MINI, what you see here must be a close second. This is the MINI Countryman Vagabund concept, a pair of one-off vehicles created with Austrian design studio Vagabund. Together they transform the latest MINI Countryman into something that sits somewhere between product design, installation art and off-road vehicle. Based on the production U25 MINI Countryman, these concepts brings a new louder, wilder vibe to the rather safe crossover. Wider, taller and more sculptural than anything MINI currently sells, the Vagabund concepts look like a Countryman that went to art school, became a DJ and moved to a ski town all simultaneously. The arches are wide, the stance is lifted, the roof rack looks engineered rather than accessorized and the wheels resemble an AMG Monoblock with MINI DNA. And that’s all before you get to the sound system. Less Minimalism, More Expression The MINI Countryman Vagabund concept moves away from the reductive minimalism that has defined recent MINIs and toward something more layered and expressive. These concepts feel much closer in spirit to the MINI x Deus Ex Machina Concept, which hinted that MINI was ready to bring visual drama back into the brand. Here, that translates into wider arches, more dimensional surfacing and a willingness to highlight individual elements rather than hide them. The front bumper has been reworked to integrate cleanly with the new fender shapes, while the grille and front and rear fascias are color-coordinated to match the added bodywork. Along the side sills, Vagabund branding is integrated as a three-dimensional element rather than a graphic. It is a small detail, but one that reinforces the idea that everything here is designed, not applied. Two Concepts, One Direction The MINI Countryman Vagabund concept is presented as a pair, and that duality is intentional. One car is finished in Melting Silver with sand and white accents. It feels lighter, more graphic and more playful in how it uses contrast. The other is rendered in Midnight Black, monochromatic and far more technical in appearance. Together they create a visual tension that only fully resolves when both are seen side by side. MINI and Vagabund clearly designed these vehicles as a composition rather than two separate ideas. Both share the same underlying modifications, which makes their differences in tone even more effective. Fabrication as Design A large part of what makes the MINI Countryman Vagabund concept compelling is how it is built. The wheels are fitted with 20-inch rims featuring fully closed, 3D-printed covers. These covers are not just aesthetic. Their form deliberately references loudspeaker design, tying into the broader theme of sound and performance. Up top, the roof rack is constructed from three laser-cut and folded aluminum plates. These are paired with an integrated stainless steel mesh that creates an open surface while visually echoing the perforated patterns found in speaker grilles. The result is a roof structure that feels like part of the vehicle’s architecture rather than an accessory. Throughout the car, materials and manufacturing techniques are used to reinforce the concept. This is not about adding parts. It is about rethinking how those parts are made and how they relate to the overall idea. The Countryman as a Sound System The defining feature of the MINI Countryman Vagabund concept is what replaces the rear side windows. Instead of glass, both vehicles integrate a custom-developed external sound system designed specifically for outdoor projection. At the core of this system is a loudspeaker housing made from cast polymer granite, a material chosen for its acoustic properties and ability to deliver precise, uncolored sound. Tweeters and mid-range speakers are integrated directly into the bodywork, while additional subwoofers are positioned in the rear. When the tailgate is opened, the system projects outward, effectively turning the vehicle into a mobile stage. Each car operates as a standalone system, but together they are designed to function as a coordinated audio experience. It is a literal interpretation of the idea of community, using the vehicle as a platform for shared moments. Analog Meets Digital In contrast to the high-output external system, MINI and Vagabund included a deliberately understated detail on the opposite side of the vehicle. A classic Walkman is integrated into a custom 3D-printed housing, offering a personal, analog listening experience. It is a quiet counterpoint to the outward-facing sound system and adds a layer of humor and nostalgia that feels distinctly MINI. This juxtaposition of analog and digital, personal and communal, reinforces the broader concept behind the vehicles. Hinting at a More Capable Countryman? Beyond the visual and material experimentation, there are clear signals about capability. Regular readers will know that we’ve exclusively reported for over a year that MINI has been preparing a more off-road capable version of the Countryman. Until now, that idea has largely lived in the realm of rumor and strategy. The MINI Countryman Vagabund concept is the first time we are seeing something that visually aligns with that direction. Yes, the tires here are clearly road-focused. This is not a functional off-road build. But look at the fundamentals and the story changes. The ride height is increased. The arches are wider and more protective. The stance is more planted and deliberate. Even the overall proportion feels less crossover and more purpose-driven. In other words, the aesthetic has shifted. This is exactly what we would expect from a more rugged Countryman. Not necessarily a rock crawler, but a vehicle that leans more convincingly into adventure and outdoor use. The question then becomes whether these concepts are simply creative exercises or an early, exaggerated preview of what is to come. Given MINI’s recent pattern of using concepts to signal future direction, it is hard not to see a connection. What the MINI Countryman Vagabund Concept Really Tells Us Strip away the sound system and fabrication details and the MINI Countryman Vagabund concept leaves two clear signals. First, MINI is moving toward a more expressive design language. The influence of the Deus concepts is evident, but here it is grounded in a vehicle that sits closer to production reality. The brand is rediscovering its ability to create objects with personality, not just clean surfaces. Second, the Countryman is evolving. The changes in stance, proportion and detailing suggest a future where MINI’s largest model leans further into adventure and capability, both visually and potentially functionally. These are one-off concepts, but they are not throwaways. They are explorations of what happens when MINI combines craftsmanship, new manufacturing techniques and cultural thinking into a single idea. And if even part of that thinking carries forward, the next chapter for the Countryman could look very different from the one we know today. The post MINI Countryman Vagabund – A Wild Concept That Points to The Future of MINI appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  14. Milan Design Week is not short on ambition. Every brand arrives convinced it has built the installation to outshine the rest. Most rely on scale or spectacle. MINI and Sir Paul Smith have taken a different route this year at the Salone del Mobile in Milan. Their “Garden of Curiosity” is smaller in footprint, quieter in tone, and far more interested in drawing you in than shouting for your attention. Opening 21 – 26 April 2026 as part of the Salone del Mobile in Milan, this calm, almost meditative installation is designed to attract designers, artists and enthusiasts alike. MINI has quietly assembled one of the most compelling displays of Paul Smith collaborations to date, placing historic one-offs and a new production-adjacent model in public view, together, and in context. A Rare Gathering of MINI x Paul Smith Cars Set within the historic Palazzo Borromeo d’Adda, the installation begins not with abstraction, but with metal and paint. Before visitors even reach the garden, they encounter a curated display of three MINI x Paul Smith cars spanning nearly three decades. For many, this will be the first opportunity to see these cars side by side in a public setting, a reminder that this partnership has always been about experimentation as much as aesthetics. The 1999 Paul Smith 40th Anniversary Mini remains the most exuberant of the trio. Its 86 stripes across 26 colors turn the classic Mini into something closer to kinetic art. Even now, it feels like a provocation, a question about how much color is too much, answered with a shrug. Next to it sits the MINI STRIP from 2021. Where the 1999 car added, the STRIP subtracted. Interior trim was stripped back, materials left exposed, and the focus shifted to construction and sustainability. It’s arguably the more influential car, even if it’s less immediately charming. Together, they frame the newest arrival. The New MINI Cooper Paul Smith Edition Rather than dominating the space, the new MINI Cooper Paul Smith Edition is woven into the installation itself. You don’t arrive at it, you discover it. It forces the car to exist as part of a broader design narrative rather than as a standalone product. Visually, it strikes a middle ground between its predecessors. Nottingham Green accents appear on the mirror caps, grille, and wheel hubs, while subtle detailing reflects Smith’s signature approach. There’s restraint here, a sense that MINI is less interested in making a loud statement and more focused on crafting a cohesive one. It’s also one of the first times the public can experience this new edition in person, not on a stage or in a press image, but embedded within an environment that explains its thinking. The Installation as Context, Not Distraction “A Garden of Curiosity” works because it doesn’t compete with the cars, it contextualizes them. Visitors cross a wooden bridge and pass through a red door into a landscaped courtyard of pathways, grasses, and sculptural forms. The Paul Smith Signature Stripe appears subtly throughout, never overwhelming the space. Inside, rooms like the Colour Theory Room and Listening Room expand on the ideas seen in the cars. Color becomes interactive. Design becomes something you engage with rather than observe. Crucially, the installation slows you down. And in doing so, it changes how you experience the cars themselves. Our Take MINI has always walked a fine line between product and personality. Too much of the former and it risks becoming just another premium small car. Too much of the latter and it drifts into novelty. By placing these cars within a broader design conversation, MINI reinforces what has made its best collaborations resonate. They’re not just special editions, they’re ideas on wheels. And by showing them together, in public, and with intention, MINI is doing something surprisingly rare. It’s treating its own history not as nostalgia, but as an active part of its present. “A Garden of Curiosity” is not the largest installation at the Salone del Mobile, nor the loudest. But it may be one of the most meaningful, particularly for those who understand what these cars represent. Because at its core, this isn’t just about an installation. It’s about seeing MINI at its most creative, past, present, and quietly evolving, all in one place. The post MINI x Paul Smith Show Off Limited Edition Models at the Milan Salone del Mobile 2026 appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  15. A 10% drop isn’t catastrophic. But it’s meaningful, especially now that the full lineup is in market. MINI is asking fewer products to do more work. The Clubman is gone. The range is tighter. And that puts pressure squarely on the remaining models to carry the brand. Right now, they’re not fully making up the difference. Countryman: Still Carrying the Brand The Countryman remains MINI’s best-seller by a wide margin, with 2,875 units in Q1. That’s nearly half of all MINI sales in the U.S. But it’s down 9.9% year over year. The Countryman has long been the brand’s volume anchor, especially in the U.S. where size and practicality win. A decline here isn’t just a data point, it’s a signal that even MINI’s most mainstream offering is feeling pressure. Whether that’s pricing, positioning, or increased competition, the Countryman isn’t growing into its role as much as MINI likely hoped. Hardtop Models: The Core Is Shrinking The Cooper / Cooper S Hardtop 2 Door dropped 31.0% to 1,153 units, while the 4 Door fell 16.8% to 1,073 units. This is the most concerning part of the story. These cars are MINI. The 2 Door in particular has always been the emotional center of the brand. A 31% drop suggests that either demand is softening or the new formula isn’t connecting in quite the same way. The 4 Door’s smaller decline points to its broader appeal, but even there, the trajectory is downward. Could the lack of a manual be part of that? According to anecdotal conversations with dealers it seems to at least be part of the issue. The other thing we’ve heard is that dealers are seeing buying patterns shift due to the economy in the US. There appears to be less desire to buy a car that’s seen as more of an emotional purchase and more focus on more sensible choices. While we’d argue that the Cooper is quite sensible, for those with more than two in the family it can be less than ideal as an only car. Convertible: The Unexpected Bright Spot Then there’s the Cooper Convertible, up 41.8% to 1,160 units. It’s the outlier, and arguably the most interesting part of the data. Convertibles shouldn’t be carrying this much weight in 2026. And yet here we are. It speaks to something MINI still does incredibly well. Emotional, lifestyle-driven cars that stand apart. While the rest of the lineup is fighting for relevance in crowded segments, the Convertible quietly thrives by being exactly what it is. Not because it was a volume seller, but because it gave MINI something different. A slightly more mature, more practical alternative that still had character. Without it, the lineup feels narrower, and the sales numbers reflect that. Our Take Right now: The Countryman is holding the line, but not growing The core hatchbacks are under real pressure The Convertible is outperforming expectations The lineup overall is smaller and more exposed The Bottom Line Q1 2026 isn’t about transition. It’s about reality. This is what the new MINI looks like in the market. And while there are bright spots, especially the Convertible, the broader trend suggests MINI still has work to do to rebuild momentum, particularly around its core hatchbacks. Because if those don’t rebound, the brand risks becoming less about small cars with big personality, and more about a single crossover doing most of the heavy lifting. The post Are New MINIs Actually Selling? A Deep Dive Into MINI USA’s Q1 2026 Sales appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  16. When MINI USA first pulled the wraps off the Red Line Edition, it felt familiar. A Cooper S with some JCW-inspired attitude layered on top. Now with full details confirmed, we can better understand exactly what this car is. And more importantly, how MINI wants you to think about it. It’s a Four-Door Only Play The Red Line Edition is exclusive to the four-door F65 Cooper S. That alone tells you a lot. This isn’t about building the most focused driver’s car. It’s about taking the more practical MINI and pushing its visual and perceived performance envelope as far as possible. More Equipment, But Not More Identity On paper, there’s a decent amount here. The Red Line comes standard with the JCW Style Package, bringing: JCW aero body kit JCW steering wheel with shift paddles JCW sport transmission JCW Sport Brakes 17-inch JCW Sprint Spoke Black wheels Legend Grey Metallic paint (typically reserved for JCW models) Chili Red accents, stripes, and badging The Redline then adds the following: JCW Front and Rear Winglets JCW Roof Spoiler JCW Rear Diffuser JCW Front and Rear Decals JCW Tow Strap, Exclusive Red Line Badge JCW Floating Center Caps Inside, you get JCW sport seats in Vescin with red accents and an anthracite-heavy cabin. It’s a cohesive spec. But it’s also a very familiar one. Let’s Call It What It Is At its core, this is very much a sticker and badge limited edition. There’s little here that truly separates it from a four-door Cooper S optioned with the JCW Style Package and a handful of accessories. No unique performance tuning. No meaningful mechanical distinction. No real sense of rarity beyond the packaging itself. And that’s okay. But it’s worth being clear about. The Cheat Code Because here’s where it actually makes sense. The Red Line Edition is essentially a cheat code. If you walk onto a lot and want the most aggressive-looking four-door Cooper S you can buy without thinking too hard about options, this is it. MINI has already done the work. The spec is cohesive, the look is dialed in, and it leans heavily into the JCW aesthetic without crossing into JCW pricing or positioning. For a lot of buyers, that’s exactly the point. A Very Deliberate Middle Ground So while the Red Line doesn’t break new ground, it does clarify MINI USA’s strategy. This isn’t about creating wildly differentiated special editions. It’s about packaging what already exists in a way that feels intentional, accessible, and just exclusive enough. Pre-orders are open now, with deliveries expected in May. 026 MINI Cooper S 4 DoorBase MSRP $33,800 + D&H*Red Line Edition (Included equipment and features)Exclusive Legend Grey MetallicVescin/Cord Combination JCW BlackIconic Trim with Comfort Package PlusJohn Cooper Works StyleBlack Roof and Mirror Caps17” John Cooper Works Sprint Spoke Black with All-Season TiresPower Front Seats with Active Driver Seat incl. Lumbar SupportRed Line Edition Accessories: JCW Front and Rear Winglets, JCW Roof Spoiler, JCW Rear Diffuser, JCW Front and Rear Decals, JCW Tow Strap, Exclusive Red Line Badge, and JCW Floating Center CapsNet Total$43,365 + D&H* The post The MINI Red Line Edition: New Details, Pricing and Our Take appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  17. This isn’t a coachbuilder fantasy or a dealer special. It’s a factory-backed custom build, created by the team at Oxford Plant in collaboration with MINI’s own designers. And it might just be a glimpse at MINI’s future. At first glance, this MINI John Cooper Works Convertible looks like a one-off exercise, the kind of thing brands do to showcase craftsmanship or keep their social feeds interesting. And yes, it does that. But it also does something more important. It quietly tests how far MINI can push personalization within the realities of modern production. Because this isn’t just a custom MINI. It’s a MINI asking a bigger question: how custom can Oxford realistically get? The car itself is a celebration of contrasts. The inherent playfulness of the MINI formula remains intact, compact proportions, cheeky stance, an eagerness that borders on mischief. Yet layered over that is a level of finish and personalization that nudges the car closer to something you might expect from a far more expensive badge. Inside, the details matter. Materials feel chosen, not merely specified. Colors do not just complement, they converse. Even the smallest elements suggest a human hand somewhere in the process, a rarity in modern automotive production. It is the kind of cabin that invites you to linger, to notice, to appreciate. And then there is the performance. The MINI John Cooper Works lineage ensures that this is no static showpiece. It retains the sharp reflexes and eager acceleration that define the JCW badge, delivering the kind of driving experience that reminds you why MINI built its reputation on more than just style. It moves with intent, and more importantly, with personality. Yet the real story may not be what this car is, but what it suggests. While this appears to be a one-off, we hear that it is in fact a precursor. A signal, perhaps subtle but unmistakable, that MINI is exploring an increased level of customer customization for cars built at the Oxford Plant. If true, it would mark a fascinating shift in how MINI approaches its future. This is not entirely without precedent. MINI has long flirted with personalization, from roof graphics to interior trims. But those efforts have largely lived within predefined boundaries. What this bespoke JCW Convertible hints at is something more ambitious, a move toward genuine customer-driven specification, where the line between factory build and coachbuilt individuality begins to blur. Such a shift would be both logical and risky. Logical, because MINI’s appeal has always been rooted in self-expression. Risky, because true customization introduces complexity into a production system designed for efficiency. Yet if any brand in the BMW Group portfolio can make that leap feel authentic, it is MINI. There is also a cultural resonance here. In an age where digital experiences are endlessly customizable, physical products are beginning to follow suit. Cars, once rigidly defined by trim levels and option packages, are slowly becoming canvases again. MINI, with its heritage of individuality and design-led thinking, is uniquely positioned to capitalize on that shift. Of course, questions remain. How far will MINI go? Will this level of customization be reserved for halo models like the JCW, or will it trickle down into the broader lineup? And perhaps most importantly, can MINI maintain its balance of accessibility and exclusivity as it moves in this direction? For now, this one-off Convertible stands as both artifact and teaser. A beautifully executed example of what is possible, and a tantalizing glimpse of what might be next. If you have followed MINI closely over the years, as we have at MotoringFile, you will recognize the pattern. The brand often experiments in small, deliberate steps before committing to larger changes. This feels like one of those moments. A quiet test, dressed up as a singular creation. And if the whispers prove true, this MINI may not remain unique for long. The post This 1 of 1 Custom Oxford Made MINI May be a Glimpse Of The Brand’s Future appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  18. MINI USA is back with its second of eight planned special edition drops for 2025. This one is called the Red Line, and if that name sounds familiar, it should. This is less about reinventing the Cooper S and more about dialing up what’s already there. At its core, the Red Line is a visual package. Think of it as a curated mix of JCW-inspired parts, layered with bespoke graphics and just enough attitude to stand out without trying too hard. It is available now on the Cooper S and can be ordered through U.S. dealers. The formula is straightforward. Start with a Legend Grey Cooper S, add a selection of JCW exterior touches, then finish it with unique badging and striping that give the car a sharper, more aggressive edge. This kind of release says a lot about where MINI is right now. Rather than chasing entirely new special editions with unique mechanical upgrades, the brand is leaning into modular personalization. It is using its existing parts bin more creatively, packaging familiar elements in a way that feels fresh to buyers who want something just a bit more distinctive than the standard car. The Red Line won’t change how the Cooper S drives. It won’t suddenly make it faster or more hardcore. What it does do is tap into the visual language that MINI fans already associate with performance and motorsport, and make it more accessible as a packaged edition. Screenshot Screenshot Screenshot Screenshot Screenshot With six more editions still to come this year, the bigger question is where MINI takes this idea next. If the Red Line is any indication, expect more of these thoughtful, design-led packages that blur the line between factory option and aftermarket inspiration. For now, the Red Line is available, order books are open, and MINI is clearly just getting started. The post MINI USA Introduces the Cooper S Red line Edition appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  19. There are few roads in America that carry mythology quite like Deals Gap. Straddling the border of North Carolina and Tennessee, this remote stretch of US 129, better known as the Tail of the Dragon, compresses 318 corners into just 11 miles. It is relentless, technical, and utterly indifferent to driver ego. As detailed in our guide to the road, it has become a pilgrimage site for MINI owners precisely because it rewards agility over brute force. It is also a place that exposes a car’s true character within minutes. Enter the 2025 MINI JCW F66, a car that represents a clear and deliberate evolution of the F56 formula. At its core, it remains fundamentally the same machine, but with a series of targeted updates that subtly reshape the driving experience. The Test of the Dragon The Tail of the Dragon is not fast in the conventional sense. There are no long straights, no sweeping corners to hide flaws. Instead, it is a dense, technical ribbon of asphalt filled with decreasing-radius turns, blind crests, constant elevation changes and perfectly banked corners. Set in the Great Smoky Mountains near Deals Gap, this stretch of road has become a proving ground for small, agile performance cars. Photographers line the corners, drivers measure runs in stories rather than lap times, and the margin for error is slim. It rewards a flowing style of driving with a heavy dose of dynamic discipline. It’s also a road that feels tailored for a Cooper. There are those that would argue a GT3 or M3 are better weapons. But the thing about a MINI is its unique ability to be both agile and dynamic while being forgiving. Key to this is a low curb weight, excellent handling and handling dynamics that are designed for performance but rooted in safety. First Corners: Effortless Pace, Familiar Feel Within the first few corners, the F66 feels immediately recognizable to anyone who has driven an F56 JCW. The proportions, the eagerness of the front end, and the way the car seems to pivot around its nose are all intact. What has changed is the layer of refinement over that foundation. As noted in our previous review, the F66 delivers its performance with more polish. The engine responds more cleanly, the dual-clutch transmission shifts with greater speed and smoothness, and the front end finds grip with less hesitation. On the Dragon, that translates into confidence. You carry speed more easily, not because the car feels more aggressive, but because it feels more resolved. Chassis Tuning: Sharpened, Not Transformed The differences between the F56 and F66 reveal themselves in the rhythm sections, where quick transitions and imperfect pavement test a chassis’ composure. The F66 settles more quickly after direction changes and requires fewer mid-corner corrections. In our experience, this is an evolution, not a reinvention. The underlying dynamics remain, but the steering rack is quicker, suspension a touch more compliant and overall a smoother experience. Crucially, the character is still present. The F66 retains that aggressive, front-driven attitude that defines JCW. It simply delivers it with a bit more discipline and a bit less chaos. However there is one big addition here, torque. F66 JCW offers a meaningful jump – 280 lb-ft (380 Nm) compared to the 235 lb-ft (320 Nm) in the F56 JCW. Additionally boost now peaks at 1,500 rpm for improved immediacy off the line. But it’s in the mid-range where you really feel the change. On the Dragon, that more power out of corners, less shifts into second and a cleaner line through corners. The Manual Question: A Missing Layer One of the most meaningful changes is the absence of a manual transmission. As we found in our first video review, the dual-clutch is faster, smarter, and more efficient. On this road, it is also highly effective. The gearbox is rarely caught out and keeps the engine in the right part of the powerband with impressive consistency. However, the Dragon is not about efficiency. It is about interaction. Previous JCWs asked the driver to participate more actively through gear selection and timing. The F66 handles much of that work on its own. The result is a drive that is smoother and faster, but also slightly less engaging. Braking: A Clear Step Back from the F56 If there is one area where the F66 feels less convincing than the F56, it is braking. MINI has moved from the previous car’s four-piston front setup to a single-piston floating caliper design. Why? In speaking with sources at MINI, the rationale centers on performance and cost. How? The change to a floating caliper design lowers cost and weight while keeping the swept area of the pad to the disc is actually the same. MINI made the decision believing that the trade-offs wouldn’t be noticeable. On the Tail of the Dragon, they are. This road demands repeated hard braking into tight, often decreasing-radius corners. In that environment, the F66 exhibits less initial bite and a slightly softer pedal feel compared to the F56. Push harder, and the difference becomes clearer. There is a bit more fade, a bit less confidence when braking deep into a corner, and a general sense that the system is working closer to its limits. It is not a fatal flaw, but it is a noticeable step back, especially for drivers familiar with the previous JCW. Character: The Same Car, Slightly Rewritten What stands out most after a full run of the Dragon is how familiar the F66 feels. This is not a departure from the JCW identity, but a careful refinement of it. As MotoringFile notes in its generational analysis, the shift is subtle. The car is still compact, still eager, still defined by its front-driven dynamics. It still encourages you to attack corners and rewards commitment. What has changed is the presentation. The responses are cleaner, the chassis more composed, and the overall experience more polished. For many drivers, this will feel like progress. For others, particularly those who appreciated the F56’s rougher edges, it may feel like something has been slightly muted. Verdict: The Same Recipe, With Different Emphasis The MINI JCW F66 is deeply capable on the Tail of the Dragon. Its added composure, sharper responses, and more refined drivetrain allow it to carry speed with an ease that would have felt foreign in earlier JCWs. As a bonus, the long highway slog to get there is noticeably more comfortable, a reminder that this car has broadened its brief. What MINI has done with the F66 is evolve the formula without disturbing its foundation. The core remains intact, but the details have been carefully refined. In most areas, that translates into a more usable, more complete performance car. But is a car for the Dragon? For us, the conclusion did not arrive somewhere between the first corner and the last. It came later, somewhere out on the highway, the Dragon fading in the mirrors as the miles stretched out and the car settled into an easy rhythm. The F66 JCW is a worthy evolution of an already well-honed package, and in many ways, an almost ideal companion for a trip like this. It has the pace, the composure, and now the comfort to do it all without effort. What it lacks is not capability, but connection. Give it back that final layer of engagement, a manual gearbox, and this would not just be a better JCW. It would be a complete one. The post MINI JCW F66 vs. the Tail of the Dragon: An Old Test for the New JCW appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  20. There is something quietly subversive about the Oxford Edition. In a lineup increasingly defined by tech-laden trims and creeping price tags, it has always been MINI USA’s way of reminding us that good design and driving charm do not need to come wrapped in a luxury tax. For 2027, MINI USA appears ready to extend that philosophy to its largest model yet, the Countryman. And if that sounds like a contradiction, a value-focused flagship, it is exactly the kind of contradiction MINI has built its modern identity on. To understand why this matters, it is worth revisiting MINI USA’s recent resurrection of the Oxford Edition badge. This was never a global initiative. It is a distinctly American strategy, one designed to create an attainable entry point through simplified ordering and scale. That distinction is critical. Unlike traditional trims, the Oxford Edition is not about stripping features out of a global spec. It is about bundling the right features together from the start, importing them in volume, and passing those efficiencies directly to buyers. MINI USA effectively pre-builds the car on paper, limiting complexity while maximizing perceived value. The result, as we previously detailed, this is a package that feels anything but basic. Heated seats, upgraded infotainment, and signature MINI design elements come standard not as incentives, but as part of a carefully engineered value proposition. The current MINI Countryman is a far cry from the charmingly minimal hatchbacks that defined the brand’s rebirth. It is larger, more mature, and in some trims, priced squarely against entry-level luxury crossovers. Which makes the idea of an Oxford Edition Countryman feel perhaps the closest to the Cooper This is exactly where MINI USA’s approach works best. By limiting configurations and importing a fixed set of well-equipped vehicles at scale, MINI USA can position the Countryman in a way that would be nearly impossible under a traditional, globally configurable model structure. Fewer combinations mean lower logistical complexity, tighter production planning, and ultimately, sharper pricing. In other words, this is not a cheaper Countryman. It is a smarter one. We have seen how effective this formula can be in previous Oxford Edition. But our favorite has to be the original. Back in 2020, MINI USA delivered one of the most compelling value plays in recent memory. The original $19,750 Oxford Edition Cooper succeeded not just because of its price, but because of how it was packaged. Instead of forcing buyers into a maze of options, MINI USA offered a thoughtfully curated spec that included the features people actually wanted. And by importing those cars in volume with minimal variation, it achieved pricing that felt almost out of step with the rest of the market. That same logic, applied to the Countryman, could be even more impactful. Oxford Edition Countryman: What You Get for the Money The 2027 Oxford Edition Countryman is not about hypothetical value, it is a precisely defined package. Every element is chosen, bundled, and delivered with intent. No fluff, no endless configurator rabbit holes, just a sharply defined spec that feels richer than it should at this price point. Here is exactly what that looks like for 2027: Exterior highlights Chili Red, Nanuq White Metallic, or Blazing Blue Metallic, with Blazing Blue typically a $650 upgrade, included at no extra cost Black roof and mirror caps for signature MINI contrast 18-inch Asteroid Spoke wheels in gloss black with all-season tires Interior and comfort Sport seats in Vescin/Cloth Grey/Blue Anthracite headliner Privacy glass, a $500 value, included Technology and safety Active Driving Assistant as standard equipment Underneath it all, the Oxford Edition is based on the Countryman S ALL4, meaning it includes most of that model’s standard content along with select premium features and design elements at no additional cost. This is the core of the Oxford formula, take a well-equipped car, simplify the ordering, and leverage scale to deliver more for less. Pricing MSRP: $34,900 Destination and handling: $1,350 Pricing remains unchanged for 2027 There is also a curated personalization option available through MINI USA’s port-installed accessory program: Optional accessory package (VIA ZEW) – $720 MINI Heritage bonnet graphic Union Jack mirror caps MINI Wing Black Jack license plate frame and valve stem caps What’s New and What Isn’t for 2027 Beyond the Oxford Edition, the broader MINI Countryman lineup reflects a strategy of restraint paired with targeted improvements. What remains unchanged Base pricing across 2027 MINI Countryman models remains steady What’s new or updated Favoured Style package (Countryman S ALL4): Now includes trailer hitch and space-saver spare, a $1,000 value Package price increases by $100 Trailer hitch can be removed at no cost (Option ZNH) Universal Garage Door Opener: Available as a $250 standalone option Offered on models with Signature Plus or Iconic trims Integrated into the rearview mirror Not available on Oxford Edition Taken together, these updates feel measured rather than transformative. Which, in the context of the Oxford Edition, is exactly the point. Because the real story here is not what MINI changed. It is what MINI chose not to complicate. Oxford Edition Countryman: What You Get for the Money The 2027 Oxford Edition Countryman is not about hypothetical value, it is a precisely defined package. Every element is chosen, bundled, and delivered with intent. No fluff, no endless configurator rabbit holes, just a sharply defined spec that feels richer than it should at this price point. Here is exactly what that looks like for 2027: Exterior highlights Chili Red, Nanuq White Metallic, or Blazing Blue Metallic, with Blazing Blue typically a $650 upgrade, included at no extra cost Black roof and mirror caps for signature MINI contrast 18-inch Asteroid Spoke wheels in gloss black with all-season tires Interior and comfort Sport seats in Vescin/Cloth Grey/Blue Anthracite headliner Privacy glass, a $500 value, included Technology and safety Active Driving Assistant as standard equipment Underneath it all, the Oxford Edition is based on the Countryman S ALL4, meaning it includes most of that model’s standard content along with select premium features and design elements at no additional cost. This is the core of the Oxford formula, take a well-equipped car, simplify the ordering, and leverage scale to deliver more for less. Pricing MSRP: $34,900 Destination and handling: $1,350 Pricing remains unchanged for 2027 There is also a curated personalization option available through MINI USA’s port-installed accessory program: Optional accessory package (VIA ZEW) – $720 MINI Heritage bonnet graphic Union Jack mirror caps MINI Wing Black Jack license plate frame and valve stem caps What’s New and What Isn’t for 2027 Beyond the Oxford Edition, the broader MINI Countryman lineup reflects a strategy of restraint paired with targeted improvements. What remains unchanged Base pricing across 2027 MINI Countryman models remains steady What’s new or updated Favoured Style package (Countryman S ALL4): Now includes trailer hitch and space-saver spare, a $1,000 value Package price increases by $100 Trailer hitch can be removed at no cost (Option ZNH) Universal Garage Door Opener: Available as a $250 standalone option Offered on models with Signature Plus or Iconic trims Integrated into the rearview mirror Not available on Oxford Edition Taken together, these updates feel measured rather than transformative. Which, in the context of the Oxford Edition, is exactly the point. Because the real story here is not what MINI changed. It is what MINI chose not to complicate. The post The Return of the Sensible MINI: MINI USA Revives the Oxford Edition Countryman for 2027 appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  21. There are two types of automotive April Fools’ jokes. The lazy ones, dashed off by brands that should know better, and the rare good ones, the kind that feel just plausible enough to make you pause before realizing you’ve been had. MINI, to its credit, has historically fallen into the latter camp. Hilariously in 2026, some of the pranks from the reborn brand’s early wheels almost feel eerily plausible. Others feel like relics from a more carefree era. In either case, they’re hilarious. Let’s revisit a few standouts, with fresh context and just enough skepticism. Here’s the list, with just enough context to remind you why each one worked. 2002 | MINI Introduces Revolutionary Third Headlight: ‘Centerlite’ MINI USA’s first April Fools prank featured a third, center-mounted headlamp designed to “burn off” fog ahead of the car. It replaced the Cooper S intake, rerouted airflow via “hairdryer technology,” and required a battery so large it eliminated the rear seats. Peak early MINI humor, equal parts engineering parody and British sarcasm. 2003 | Remote Control Steering A full-size MINI you could drive via remote control from up to 150 feet away. Park from your restaurant table, summon your car from a garage, or theoretically street race without being in the car. MINI framed it as convenience. Everyone else saw the chaos. 2004 | 8-Speed Gearbox (With Two Reverse Gears) An eight-speed transmission that added a second reverse gear to boost “Fun Going Backward” to match forward driving. Top reverse speed: 40 mph. Downsides included a gearbox large enough to eat into passenger space. Worth it, apparently. 2005 | The MINI Pullman A rail-ready MINI that could commute on train tracks to bypass traffic. Complete with rail wheels, onboard scheduling, and optional caboose. MINI leaned fully into the idea, right down to uniforms and accessories. Completely impractical, completely committed. 2006 | Build Your Own MINI Program Order your MINI in parts, assemble it at home over six weeks, book-club style. Spray paint included. The acronym, I.D.I.O.T (Individualized Direct Ideal Order Trial), told you everything you needed to know. Fast forward to 2026 and the electric truck brand is planning on offering something not that far removed from this gag. 2009 | Perpetual Motion Magnetic Propulsion A near-perpetual motion system using magnets to propel the car hundreds, possibly thousands of miles. Top speed was theoretically extreme, limited mostly by physics, or more accurately, the lack of it. One of MINI’s more delightfully nerdy entries. 2010 | MINIMagic Paint A paint system that lets owners change exterior color in minutes with a simple wipe. Temporary or permanent finishes available. Essentially mood rings, but for your entire car. 2012 | MINI Cooper Yachtsman An amphibious MINI capable of both “landphibious” and marine performance, complete with sail, fishing gear, and shark-resistant coating. Absurdly detailed, which is exactly why it worked. One of MINI’s all-time best. 2013 | MINI “Connect Us” Dating App A dating app that matched MINI drivers based on how they drive, throttle, braking, and cornering included. Because nothing says compatibility like synchronized apexes. 2014 | MINI Paceman GoalCooper A football-themed Paceman that doubled as a goal, complete with turf, netting, and built-in game tracking. Equal parts World Cup fever dream and product placement exercise. 2015 | Chrome Line Exterior Deluxe Take MINI’s chrome accents and apply them to the entire car. Blindingly reflective, to the point where MINI warned photographers not to use flash. Subtlety was not invited. 2016 | MINI Hipster Hatch Instagram-filtered windows, fixed-gear drivetrain, cassette player, and denim upholstery. A perfectly judged jab at MINI’s own audience, self-aware without tipping into parody. 2017 | John Cooker Works Package A MINI Convertible transformed into a fully functional street food kitchen, complete with induction cooktop and prep space. Somewhere between startup culture and street vendor realism, and just plausible enough to work. The post Our Favorite MINI April Fools’ Pranks appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  22. Reinventing a car is one thing. Reinventing a car while simultaneously inventing a brand is something else entirely. It’s a story that often gets lost in the narrative but sets the MINI’s rebirth apart of any other modern brand. What MINI launched 25 years ago wasn’t simply a successor to a beloved British icon. It was a clean-sheet interpretation of what that icon could mean in a completely different era, for a completely different audience, under entirely different expectations. And somehow, it worked. Not a Revival, a Reset The original Mini, penned by Alec Issigonis, was born out of necessity. It was a packaging solution, a response to fuel shortages, a triumph of efficiency. The modern MINI Cooper had no such constraints. Instead, it had a far more ambiguous brief, capture the spirit of the original without copying it, and make people want it in a market that had largely moved on from small cars. That meant letting go of what the Mini was, at least literally, in order to preserve what it represented. The result was the MINI Cooper (R50), a car that was bigger, heavier, and significantly more expensive than its predecessor, but also more expressive, more premium, and far more intentional. It wasn’t a continuation. It was a reinterpretation based on how the original made you feel. The Birth of the New MINI Brand The real achievement wasn’t just the car itself. It was also everything around it. From the beginning, the MINI Cooper wasn’t positioned as just another small car. It was framed as a design object, a driver’s car, and most importantly, a personal statement. Customization wasn’t an afterthought, it was foundational. Color combinations, interior trims, roof graphics, MINI invited owners to participate in its creation. One of MINI’s first advertising campaigns in the US before the car was launched. Many say that the ingenuity of that time period’s marketing helped propel the brand. That decision changed everything. In doing so, MINI wasn’t just selling cars. It was building a brand rooted in individuality. One that felt less like a manufacturer and more like a cultural artifact. The tone reinforced it. The advertising was self-aware. The dealerships felt different. The language around the car avoided the usual industry clichés. It was cohesive in a way that most automotive launches simply aren’t. Design and Engineering, Aligned With Intent Crucially, the product delivered on the promise. The design was unmistakable. Not retro in the superficial sense, but deeply referential. The proportions, the stance, the details, all of it echoed the past without being constrained by it. Inside, it leaned into playfulness without sacrificing coherence. The oversized central speedometer, the toggles, the layered surfaces, it all felt deliberate. And then there was the way it drove. The early MINI Cooper had a sharpness that stood in contrast to almost everything else in the segment. Quick steering, a responsive chassis, a sense that the car was constantly urging you to engage. It didn’t just look different. It behaved differently. That alignment between design, engineering, and brand is what gave the MINI Cooper credibility. Without it, the entire exercise would have felt hollow. The first MINI Countryman was a huge departure for the brand, but 15 years later, it looks tiny. Expansion, and the Challenge of Staying MINI Success brought scale. And scale brought tension. As the MINI Cooper evolved into a full lineup, including cars like the MINI Countryman and MINI Clubman, the brand faced an unavoidable question, how far can you stretch an idea before it loses its meaning? The answer has been uneven. The cars became more practical, more refined, more aligned with mainstream expectations. But in doing so, some of the original clarity softened. The edges blurred. And yet, the foundation has held. Because the brand itself, the emphasis on design, on personality, on driving feel, remains intact even as the execution evolves. 25 Years On, the MINI Cooper Is Still Both What makes this anniversary significant isn’t just longevity. It’s the fact that the modern MINI Cooper still exists as both a car and a brand in equal measure. It is a product you can evaluate on specs, performance, and practicality. But it is also something less tangible, a statement about taste, about priorities, about what you value in a car. That duality was not guaranteed. It had to be engineered, curated, and protected. 25 years ago, the MINI Cooper didn’t just return. It redefined itself, and in doing so, created something entirely new. The post The 25th Anniversary of the New MINI Cooper – Building a Brand While Reinventing an Icon appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  23. The F54 Clubman spent years trapped in one of the auto industry’s least forgiving categories: the car people admired but never bought. It was too big to fit the tidy little-hatchback mythology that MINI had spent decades selling, too low and too stylish to ride the crossover gravy train, and too sensible to win over buyers who confuse “fun” with “needlessly compromised.” That was always the Clubman’s problem. It made too much sense in a market that increasingly preferred fashion to logic. Now comes the punchline. The market has started applauding the very formula it more or less ignored when MINI offered it in compact form. BMW is leaning into the long-roof fantasy with the M3 Touring and M5 Touring, both explicitly sold as combinations of high performance and everyday practicality, while Audi continues the same thesis with the RS 6 Avant performance. Suddenly, the performance wagon is no longer the choice of the slightly eccentric enthusiast who also owns a nice coffee grinder (this is coming from someone who has owned many of both). It is aspirational. It is tasteful. It is, dare we say, it is cool. That is what makes the F54 Clubman so interesting in hindsight. In JCW form, especially at the end, it was already doing the premium fast-wagon thing. It had all-wheel drive, serious power, real cargo space, a chassis with actual intentions, and enough character to keep it from becoming another interchangeable Germanic blunt instrument. After owning one now for two years it’s more clear to me than ever that the Clubman wasn’t weird. It was early. Going all in on the Wagon Formula The real breakthrough of the F54 was that MINI finally stopped treating the Clubman like a novelty act. The earlier R55 had charm and eccentricity in abundance, but the F54 arrived as something much more mature. It was larger, wider, more substantial, and more confidently positioned as a genuinely useful car rather than a design exercise with barn doors. That mattered, because the extra length and width gave the car a broader dynamic range. The F54 could still behave like a MINI, eager, tossable, just mischievous enough, but it also gained something previous MINIs often lacked: composure. In a brand built on caffeinated reflexes and cheerful chaos, the Clubman brought a welcome sense of polish both on the road and track. The Clubman was not trying to mimic a hyperactive hatchback with too much espresso in its bloodstream. It was trying to be something more substantial, more complete. There was actual breadth to its character. It could hustle, settle, carry, cruise, and entertain without feeling like it had been optimized for one trick and one trick only. This is where the F54 separated itself from the standard MINI script. Most MINIs sell a kind of cheerful chaos, which is part of the brand’s charm. The Clubman sold something rarer: composure with personality. It was the MINI for people who had grown up a bit but had not yet given up and bought an SUV the color of wet pavement. The JCW Clubman – the Fastest MINI Ever Once MINI dropped the 301 hp and 331 ft lbs version of the B48 into the facelifted JCW Clubman and paired it with ALL4, the whole thing clicked into focus. Suddenly this wagon-like curiosity was putting up serious numbers, with MotoringFile noting that MINI’s own figures place it at 4.6 seconds and we saw 4.4 from several publications. Either way it was the fastest production MINI the company ever officially sold. That is not just “quick for a MINI.” That is quick, full stop. The more interesting part, though, was how it delivered that performance. On track and on the road, we found the updated 2020 JCW Clubman sharper, more direct, and more driver-focused than before, with quicker shifts and a more predictive ALL4 system. And with a couple small tweaks, it came even more engaging. After 20,000 miles in my own car, the verdict remained essentially the same: this was one of the most compelling daily drivers MINI had ever built because it combined speed, confidence, and long-haul usability in a way few others in the lineup could match. The Market Finally Came Around to the Fast Wagon Idea This is where the Clubman’s story gets a little cruel. For years, buyers behaved as though wagons were a strange European artifact, like bidets or diesel hatchbacks with manual transmissions. Then, almost overnight, the enthusiast market remembered that wagons are brilliant. You get much of the practicality of an SUV, a lower center of gravity, better driving dynamics, and a silhouette that suggests the owner has taste rather than a youth soccer schedule. BMW’s current M3 and M5 Touring is the clearest sign that the performance wagon has re-entered the mainstream premium conversation. Both cars were brought to market with little expectation of sales yet BMW has been blown away by the response. Audi’s RS 6 Avant has become an icon in its own right, and the broader category now carries a kind of swagger it simply did not have when the F54 Clubman was trying to make its case. Even the language manufacturers use has changed. They are no longer apologizing for wagons. They are selling them as the connoisseur’s choice, which, not to put too fine a point on it, is exactly what Clubman owners had been muttering under their breath for years. The irony is hard to miss. MINI spent years offering a compact version of that same proposition: a practical, premium, all-wheel-drive performance wagon with attitude. The market response was tepid enough that MINI eventually killed it, just as everyone else started rediscovering that wagons are what sensible people buy when they still care how a car feels in a corner. Clubman vs Countryman Part of the Clubman’s problem was that it existed next to the Countryman, which was always going to be the easier sell in the age of crossovers. Buyers liked the seating position, the taller body, and the vaguely outdoorsy promise that every crossover seems to make, even if most of them never leave a Trader Joe’s parking lot. MINI, like everyone else, followed the money. But from a driver’s standpoint, we repeatedly came down on the side of the Clubman. It was more than just the practical MINI. It was the enthusiast’s practical MINI. It was the anti-crossover choice before that became fashionable again, and it offered exactly the kind of lower-slung, more engaging experience that is now helping wagons reclaim their place in the enthusiast imagination. MINI Killed the Clubman Just as It Started Making Sense We first reported in February 2023 that MINI was ending production, citing weak sales and a market increasingly obsessed with small crossovers. A year later, the final Clubman rolled off the Oxford assembly line, ending production 55 years after the original Clubman nameplate first appeared. That timing is what makes the Clubman’s story feel so oddly unfinished. Had the F54 arrived into today’s wagon-friendlier climate, with buyers newly allergic to anonymous crossovers and more interested in enthusiast-minded practicality, it might have landed very differently. Instead, the Clubman spent much of its career explaining itself to a market that preferred simple labels. Hatchback? Not quite. SUV? No. Wagon? Sort of, but compact, premium, and wearing a MINI badge. For many buyers, that was simply too much nuance to process. The tragedy, if we are willing to be a little dramatic about a discontinued small wagon, is that MINI had finally perfected the thing just as it chose to walk away from it. And when we say perfected, we meant honed an already good car, making it great. That refresh in 2018 of the JCW Clubman was as massive of an LCI as MINI will ever offer. And from accounts from the folks involved, it was done out of love for the car and a hope that sales would follow. So, Was the F54 Clubman Ahead of Its Time? Yes, and perhaps in the most frustrating way possible. The F54 Clubman anticipated a shift in enthusiast taste before the wider market was ready to reward it. It offered speed, usefulness, all-weather traction, premium appointments, and genuine character in a package that looked more intelligent than performative. At a time when the industry was rushing upward into crossovers, the Clubman quietly argued that lower and longer was still better. Today, as performance wagons enjoy a fresh wave of admiration, the Clubman looks less like an odd detour and more like an early draft of a winning idea. Not a perfect one, certainly. It was never cheap, never mainstream, and never quite able to escape the gravitational pull of MINI’s own hatchback mythology. But it understood something that the market is only now remembering: practicality is more appealing when it comes with a pulse. That may end up being the Clubman’s real legacy. It was not the weird MINI. It was the smart MINI, the grown-up MINI, and in JCW form, arguably the most complete MINI of its era. The market did not ignore it because the idea was wrong. It ignored it because the market had not caught up yet, which is a fancy way of saying the Clubman showed up to the party before everyone else figured out wagons were cool again. The post Was the Wagon-Like F54 MINI Clubman Ahead of Its Time? appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  24. For years MINI owners have had their own version of a familiar automotive joke. Open the door to a brand new MINI, slide into the driver’s seat, and there it is. That subtle mix of fresh materials, plastics, and upholstery that instantly signals the car has just left the factory. It is distinctive. Clean. A little playful, like the car itself. What most owners never realize is that this scent is not accidental. Behind it sits a surprisingly serious engineering program run across the entire BMW Group. Which means the same scientific work shaping the cabin air in a BMW also quietly influences the environment inside your MINI. The Invisible Side of Interior Engineering The air inside a car cabin is more complex than most people imagine. Every surface inside the vehicle releases tiny emissions over time. Plastics, adhesives, foams, fabrics, leather treatments, and coatings all interact with temperature, sunlight, and humidity. Leave a car sitting in the summer sun and those emissions increase. Park it overnight in winter and they drop dramatically. Engineers refer to this process as outgassing, and it is something manufacturers have to carefully manage. For more than twenty five years, BMW Group engineers have been studying exactly how interior materials behave in that environment. The goal is not simply to create a pleasant smell. It is about health, sustainability, and ensuring the cabin environment feels clean and comfortable. It is the sort of invisible engineering that rarely makes marketing headlines but shapes how a car feels from the moment you step inside. MINI and the Bigger BMW Group Sustainability Strategy Sustainability conversations in the auto industry often focus on batteries, tailpipe emissions, or recycled metals. BMW Group tends to take a wider view, examining the entire life cycle of a vehicle from raw material sourcing to manufacturing, driving, and eventual recycling. That philosophy extends into places most drivers never consider, including the air inside the cabin. As MINI moves toward a more sustainable future , interior materials are evolving quickly. Recycled textiles, alternative upholstery, and new production processes are becoming standard. Each new material brings different chemical properties. And each one changes how a cabin smells, especially when new. Which is where BMW Group’s odor laboratories come in. Yes, BMW Group Has an Odor Laboratory It sounds slightly fictional but it is very real. BMW Group operates specialized odor labs where engineers test individual interior components and complete vehicle cabins. Part of the process relies on precise scientific equipment that measures emissions released by materials under different conditions. Another part is far more human. Trained evaluators literally smell interior components and assembled cabins, rating scent intensity and quality. It is part chemistry lab and part sensory panel. The goal is not to create a perfume-like scent. In fact BMW Group avoids adding artificial fragrances to its vehicles entirely. Instead engineers work to remove problematic emissions and create what they describe as a neutral and natural scent profile. That subtle “new car” smell you notice in a MINI is not fragrance. It is simply the result of carefully selected materials behaving exactly as engineers intended. The new MINI Cooper S – Interieur (06/2010) Why Smell Matters More Than You Think There is also a neurological reason this work matters. The human sense of smell connects directly to the limbic system, the part of the brain responsible for emotion and memory. Smell influences how we perceive spaces long before we consciously analyze them. A cabin that smells clean and neutral feels calmer, healthier, and often more premium even if drivers cannot quite explain why. For MINI, a brand built on emotional connection and personality, that subtle sensory layer plays a surprisingly important role. The first impression of the cabin helps set the tone for everything that follows, from the tactile switches to the go-kart feel. The Engineers Who Shape the Experience You Never See As BMW Group pushes further into electrification and sustainable materials, the work inside those odor labs becomes even more critical. Future MINI interiors will likely rely more heavily on recycled fabrics, innovative textiles, and lower impact manufacturing processes. Each step forward environmentally also introduces new challenges in how materials behave inside the cabin. Which means the engineers quietly studying cabin air chemistry are going to stay very busy. It is exactly the sort of hidden engineering MINI rarely advertises but enthusiasts end up appreciating anyway. We tend to talk about steering feel, chassis balance, and that playful character that defines the brand. The post The Science Behind That New MINI Smell appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  25. When MINI releases a batch of “after sales accessories,” it is usually worth a polite nod and a quick scroll. This time, it deserves a second look. Because what MINI has just shown with the latest Countryman accessory lineup is not the destination, it is the opening chapter. And if our sources are correct, that chapter leads somewhere far more ambitious. MINIUSA’s Adventure Packages This is not a superficial accessory drop. Crucially, MINI is also addressing the most obvious limitation we encountered in our recent Montana dirt road test: tires. The availability of a MINI JCW Y-Spoke wheelset paired with all-terrain General Grabber AT3 rubber is a meaningful upgrade, one that finally aligns the Countryman ALL4’s underlying capability with the surfaces it’s now being encouraged to tackle. All of this is being formalized through MINI USA’s port-installed “Adventure” and “Adventure Plus” packages, which bundle the most relevant cargo, protection, and wheel-and-tire options into cohesive setups. In other words, what we experienced as untapped potential is now being packaged, quite literally, as a product. Here’s the full list of accessories offered: JCW Y-Spoke Wheel and Tire Set A genuinely meaningful upgrade. 18-inch JCW Y-Spoke wheels in Frozen Midnight Grey paired with all-terrain General Grabber AT3 rubber. This is the fix we’ve been asking for. The Countryman’s chassis and ALL4 system have always had the capability, this simply gives it the grip and durability to match. Available as a port-installed option on Countryman S ALL4 and SE ALL4. Roof Rack Base System Mounts to the factory rails and serves as the backbone for everything else. It’s the starting point for turning the Countryman into something actually useful beyond a weekend grocery run. Rack Attachments A surprisingly complete set. Ski and snowboard carrier (up to five pairs of skis or four boards) with an extendable design that makes loading easier than expected. There’s also a lockable rooftop bike rack that handles modern frame sizes without fuss. Both are straightforward, functional, and overdue. Roof Box Aerodynamic, lockable, and very MINI in its execution. Not ????? in capacity, but cleanly integrated and clearly designed with aesthetics in mind as much as utility. All-Weather Interior Protection Rubberized, waterproof floor mats with raised edges that actually contain dirt instead of just suggesting they might. The matching cargo liner does the same in the rear, with a non-slip surface that feels built for gear, not groceries. This Is the Tease Before the Real Thing The newly announced accessory range for the MINI Countryman is clearly aimed at outdoor use: roof platforms, utility-focused storage, protection elements, and visual cues that suggest a willingness to get dirty. A rendering of a factory off-road Countryman But let’s be clear. This is MINI testing the waters. As we reported earlier, there is strong indication that a fully realized, more rugged Countryman variant is on the way. Not just accessorized, but engineered with greater off-road intent baked in from the start. Accessories Today, Engineering Tomorrow What MINI is doing here mirrors a familiar playbook within the BMW Group ecosystem. Start with accessories to gauge interest and build a narrative. Then, if the response is strong, follow with a more purpose-built variant. These accessories, especially when paired with more aggressive tires and functional add-ons, begin to unlock what we experienced firsthand. They hint at a Countryman that can genuinely expand its use case beyond pavement. But they also stop short of fully realizing it. No increased ride height. No recalibrated suspension. No dedicated off-road drive modes, at least not yet. This is still a road car wearing hiking boots. Why This Direction Actually Makes Sense MINI does not need to compete directly with Jeep or Land Rover. That would be missing the point entirely. Instead, it is carving out a niche that feels far more authentic to the brand. Stylish, compact, premium vehicles that can handle more than expected. Cars for those who might spend Friday in the city and Saturday somewhere with no cell signal. The Countryman is uniquely positioned to do this. It already has the size, the stance, and increasingly, the audience. The Road Ahead So yes, this accessory launch matters. But not because of what it is. Because of what it represents. It is MINI quietly building a case, both internally and externally, for a more rugged future for its crossovers. One that we believe will culminate in a dedicated model or variant that takes the lessons from both the design studio and the dirt roads of Montana and turns them into something cohesive. Until then, this looks like a great start. The post MINI Countryman Goes Full Adventure Mode With New Off-Road Accessories appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  26. There’s a predictable cycle to every new MINI. The first drive is all adrenaline and first impressions. The specs dominate the conversation, the design gets endlessly dissected, and enthusiasts immediately begin comparing the new car to whichever MINI they loved most five years ago. But the truth is that MINIs, perhaps more than most cars, reveal themselves slowly. That’s why we recently spent more time with the U25 MINI Countryman JCW. After our initial drive, documented in our full review of the 313 hp MINI Countryman JCW, we wanted to revisit the car with a bit more perspective and a lot more road time. What we discovered is that the U25 JCW becomes more interesting the longer you live with it. Some of our first impressions were reinforced. Others evolved. Most importantly, the car starts to make more sense once you stop expecting it to behave like an old MINI. The Biggest JCW Ever That Rarely Feels It Yes, the numbers are still impossible to ignore. The U25 Countryman is larger than the F60 in every meaningful dimension. It’s taller, wider, longer and more spacious inside. On paper, that sounds like the exact opposite of what MINI enthusiasts have traditionally wanted. Yet the surprising thing about the U25 JCW is how rarely it feels like a large crossover when you’re actually driving it. MINI’s engineers quietly made several changes that fundamentally alter how the car behaves. The steering ratio has been sharpened, the suspension tuning feels more deliberate, and thankfully the brand has largely moved away from the harsh run-flat tires that plagued earlier generations. The result is a chassis that feels more eager and more communicative than the previous Countryman JCW. In fact, revisiting the car made something clear that wasn’t entirely obvious during the first drive. The U25 JCW feels more like a true JCW than the outgoing F60 ever did. It turns in more decisively, settles into corners more naturally, and generally feels more alive when the road starts to get interesting. That might seem like a small victory, but it’s an important one. The previous Countryman JCW always felt fast but slightly detached. The new one finally feels engaged. Power That Works in the Real World The headline figure remains the same: 313 horsepower. That makes the U25 Countryman JCW the most powerful production MINI ever built. Numbers like that tend to dominate the conversation, but spending more time with the car reveals a more nuanced story about how that power actually shows up on the road. Compared to the Countryman S, the JCW’s extra horsepower becomes most noticeable once the car is already moving. From about 30 or 40 mph onward, the JCW pulls harder and builds speed with noticeably more urgency. It feels less like a burst of power and more like a sustained shove that keeps the car accelerating with confidence. That character suits the Countryman surprisingly well. The U25 JCW isn’t a stoplight hero designed for short sprints. It feels more like a long-distance performance machine that excels at covering ground quickly and effortlessly. That personality became even clearer during extended driving sessions, something we also explored recently in our backroad and dirt-road evaluation of the car in Montana. Even if your driving never includes gravel switchbacks, the takeaway remains the same. The U25 JCW feels engineered for varied real-world driving rather than a single headline performance number. A Different Kind of JCW All of this leads to an unavoidable question. Has JCW changed? Historically, JCW MINIs leaned heavily into rawness. They were loud, stiff, occasionally over-the-top machines that prioritized sensation over subtlety. Some were brilliant, others were exhausting, but none could be accused of being restrained. The U25 JCW approaches the formula differently. It’s faster and far more composed than previous Countryman JCWs, yet it’s also more refined and easier to live with day to day. The ride quality is better controlled, the cabin is quieter, and the overall experience feels more mature. For some enthusiasts that shift will feel like a compromise. For others it will feel like progress. What’s undeniable is that the new JCW feels more cohesive as a package. It balances performance, comfort and capability in a way previous Countryman JCWs never quite managed. The Right Way to Think About the U25 JCW Revisiting the car reinforced one central idea. The U25 Countryman JCW works best when you stop comparing it to smaller MINIs. It’s not trying to replace a hot hatch like the F56 JCW. It’s not meant to replicate the chaotic charm of something like the R53 or the intensity of the GP models. Instead, it occupies an entirely different space in the MINI lineup. It’s a fast, confident, surprisingly engaging performance crossover that still carries a distinct MINI personality. That combination may not satisfy purists who want every MINI to feel like a two-door hatch attacking a mountain pass. But it does create something that might be even more relevant to how people actually drive today. After revisiting the U25 JCW with more miles and more perspective, the conclusion is simple. This isn’t the most hardcore JCW MINI ever built. But it may quietly be one of the most complete. The post Revisiting the U25 Countryman JCW: MINI’s Most Powerful Car Ever appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  27. This week MINI USA celebrates its 1 millionth car sold and its 24th birthday. So we wanted to look back at the start of this improbable journey for a brand that most said, would never survive five years in North America. The MINI Cooper was never supposed to work in America. At least not by conventional logic. The early 2000s were defined by size, power, and a growing appetite for SUVs. Small cars, especially premium ones, were often dismissed as transitional, something you bought before moving on to something larger, faster, or more practical. And yet, 24 years after MINI USA began operations, the MINI Cooper has done more than survive. It has built a durable presence in the market, one that now includes more than one million vehicles sold in the United States alone. That number matters. Not just as a milestone, but as proof that what started as a niche idea has become something far more substantial. Most of the original MINI USA team A Launch That Rewrote the Rules Long before the first MINI Cooper was sold here, the brand already had a pulse in the U.S. In 1999, a group of enthusiasts in New York crammed 25 people into a classic Mini and set a Guinness World Record. It was absurd, joyful, and entirely on-brand, a signal of what was to come. By the time MINI made its official American debut at the Detroit Auto Show in 2001, there was already curiosity. Not mass-market anticipation, but something more valuable, intrigue. MINI leaned into that. From the beginning, MINI USA approached the market with a clarity that felt almost out of step with the industry. The MINI Cooper wasn’t positioned as basic transportation or even as a value proposition. It was presented as something far more intentional, a premium small car built around design and driving experience. MINI USA launched with a deliberately limited dealer network, a focused product lineup, and a marketing strategy that felt almost out of sync with the rest of the industry. There were no traditional incentives, no attempt to compete on value. Instead, the brand leaned into scarcity, personality, and a kind of quiet confidence that suggested this wasn’t for everyone. Early demand validated the approach almost immediately. Orders outpaced supply, waitlists formed, and the first cars were often spoken for before they even reached showrooms. For a small, premium hatchback in an SUV-obsessed market, that shouldn’t have happened. Part of that success came down to how MINI framed the car. The MINI Cooper wasn’t presented as basic transportation. It was positioned as something intentional, something you chose because of what it said about you as much as what it did on the road. The buying experience reinforced it. Customers didn’t walk onto a lot and pick from inventory. They configured their cars, often waiting weeks or months for delivery. That delay didn’t hurt demand, it enhanced it. By the time the first wave of owners took delivery, MINI USA hadn’t just launched a car. They created brand advocates. Selling an Idea, Not Just a Car One of MINI’s first advertising campaigns in the US before the car was launched. Many say that the ingenuity of that time period’s marketing helped propel the brand. What MINI USA understood early on is that the MINI Cooper needed to stand for something beyond its size. The advertising leaned into that idea with a tone that was self-aware and often deliberately unconventional. It avoided the usual tropes of performance or luxury and instead focused on individuality, humor, and design. The message was clear without ever needing to say it directly, this was not a car for everyone. That sense of selectivity became part of the appeal. Owners didn’t just buy a MINI Cooper, they identified with it. The car became a reflection of taste as much as a mode of transportation. What followed wasn’t explosive growth, but something more sustainable. Over the years, the MINI Cooper carved out a steady place in the American market, navigating shifting trends while holding onto a clear identity. It built a customer base that returned, not out of necessity, but out of preference. Crossing one million U.S. sales didn’t happen through scale alone. It came from consistency, from a brand that remained distinct enough to matter. That kind of longevity is rare, especially for a car that initially seemed so outside the mainstream. a community formed, and it formed quickly. Out of that identity, a community formed, and it formed quickly. MINI Takes the States turned into something closer to a traveling festival than a corporate event. Owner meetups felt organic, not orchestrated. Even the now familiar wave between drivers carried a sense of authenticity that is difficult to manufacture. This wasn’t accidental. MINI USA created the conditions for it, but the owners made it real. That distinction is important because it gave the brand a kind of resilience that traditional marketing can’t replicate. People weren’t just loyal to the product. They were connected to each other. Adapting Without Losing the Thread As the years went on, the realities of the American market began to assert themselves. Space, utility, and versatility matter here in ways they don’t elsewhere. The expansion of the lineup, particularly with models like the MINI Countryman, reflected that. It allowed MINI USA to retain customers who might otherwise have outgrown the original MINI Cooper concept. But growth came with trade-offs. The cars became larger, more refined, and in some cases, less distinct. The challenge shifted from establishing an identity to preserving it. MINI USA has managed that balance with varying degrees of success. Not every decision has landed, but the core idea, that a MINI Cooper should feel different, has remained intact. Why the MINI Cooper Still Works in America In a market defined by sameness, it continues to prioritize design, personality, and driving feel over pure utility. That alone keeps it relevant. But the edges have softened as most buyers’ expectations have changed. The cars are bigger, more refined, and at times easier to explain. Does that make them less distinctive? For some longtime fans, the answer is yes. But sales suggest a brand that’s stable and even growing again. The MINI Cooper doesn’t need to be practical to succeed. It needs to be clear in what it is. As long as both MINI globally and MINI USA can continue to find that line, 25 years will be just the start. The post MINI USA Celebrates 24 Years & 1 Million Sold: How the MINI Cooper Found America and Built Something Bigger appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
  28. The F56 MINI JCW GP3 has always felt like a contradiction. It’s one of the fastest, most aggressive MINIs ever built, producing over 300 horsepower and 331 lb-ft of torque, with styling and engineering clearly aimed at the track. It looks extreme, it feels serious, and it delivers performance that pushes well beyond what most expect from a front-wheel-drive hatchback. But commenting has always been missing. For all of that intent, it arrived without the one thing many enthusiasts demanded – a manual transmission. At the time, the explanation seemed simple. The torque was too much. The assumption was that MINI didn’t have a manual gearbox capable of reliably handling the GP3’s output. That narrative stuck, largely because it made sense on the surface. But looking deeper, it begins to fall apart. The Getrag That Changes the Story Our recent deep dive into the Getrag GS6-59BG tells a very different story. This is the same 6-speed manual used in the F56 JCW, and on paper it is rated for torque approaching 590 Nm, or roughly 435 lb-ft. That figure is not just close to the GP3’s output, it exceeds it by a significant margin. In other words, from a purely engineering standpoint, a manual GP3 was entirely feasible. The gearbox already existed, it was already in production, and it had more than enough capacity to handle the GP3’s torque. This wasn’t a case of MINI lacking the hardware. The capability was there all along. The Real Challenge Wasn’t the Gearbox The real challenge lay elsewhere. Looking back at conversations with the program’s leadership, one point stands out clearly. The biggest hurdle wasn’t generating power, it was managing it through the front wheels. Putting 331 lb-ft of torque through a front-wheel-drive platform introduces a host of issues. Torque steer becomes pronounced. Traction can become unpredictable under hard acceleration. The car can quickly shift from feeling precise to feeling overwhelmed if that power isn’t carefully controlled. MINI’s solution was to rely heavily on electronics. The GP3’s stability and traction control systems were extensively tuned to meter torque and keep the car usable at the limit. Crucially, those systems were closely integrated with the automatic transmission. That integration allowed for precise control over how torque was delivered, smoothing out spikes and maintaining composure under aggressive driving. A manual transmission would have introduced far more variability. It would have placed more responsibility in the driver’s hands and made it significantly harder for engineers to control how torque was applied in real-world conditions. The Decision MINI Made At some point, MINI had to decide what kind of car the GP3 would ultimately be. The fastest MINI ever built, or the most engaging. The automatic transmission helped achieve outright performance. It allowed the car to put its power down more effectively, reduced the risk of unpredictable behavior and made the GP3 more accessible to a broader range of drivers. From a pure performance and usability standpoint, it was the safer and more controlled choice. But that decision came with a tradeoff. While the automatic enhanced speed and stability, it also filtered part of the driving experience. The connection between driver and machine became more managed, more refined and arguably less raw. The What-If That Won’t Go Away The GP3 remains a compelling car. It is fast, focused and visually unmistakable. Yet it is also a car that is often discussed with a lingering sense of what might have been. A manual version would almost certainly have been more demanding. Managing 331 lb-ft through the front wheels with three pedals would not have been easy. It likely would have introduced more torque steer, more wheelspin and more moments where the car felt on edge. But it also would have been more alive. More involving. More aligned with the kind of driving experience that has defined MINI for decades. The data makes one thing clear. MINI didn’t skip the manual because it couldn’t build one. It chose not to. And in doing so, it left us with one of the most intriguing what-ifs in modern MINI history. The post New Details Confirm MINI Could Have Built a Manual JCW GP3 — So Why Didn’t It? appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article
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