DimON Опубликовано Жалоба Share Опубликовано For all the talk of MINIs being small, cheeky, and irrepressibly eager, the JCW Clubman exists in defiance of easy categorization. It’s a contradiction that shouldn’t work. A high-powered, all-wheel-drive wagon with 306 hp and a 4.6-second sprint to 60 mph. A MINI that has outgrown its own mythology but remains tethered to it in all the ways that matter. One year in and 11,000 miles later, the JCW Clubman remains a singular experience—spiky when provoked, docile when required. A car that never fully settles into any one role, and in doing so, becomes something greater than the sum of its parts. Before I go any further, I have to point out that, in many ways, reviewing this car makes no sense. MotoringFile is the largest MINI news and reviews site in the world, and its primary focus—especially for reviews—is new MINIs. Put simply, they pay the bills and are what most people are looking for. Frankly, buying this car didn’t make much sense either. It has old tech, outdated JCW logos, and a shape that the public has largely rejected with their wallets. And yet, as I considered a new car, nothing appealed to me more than what the JCW Clubman delivered. The Performance Side: A MINI That Bites Back You don’t expect a small wagon to deliver this kind of acceleration, but the JCW Clubman is deceptive. The 301-horsepower B48 engine is relentless, the mid-range torque surge coming thick and fast as if the car has something to prove. And maybe it does. As one of the last proper JCW models before MINI goes fully electric, it carries an unspoken responsibility to be memorable. So, the power was taken care of. But that didn’t mean the JCW Clubman was a perfect product. Having driven and tracked the JCW Clubman extensively over the years, I knew I wanted my car to have a slightly more eager turn-in and sharper handling than what I found in stock form. To achieve that, I followed my typical OEM+ philosophy of modifications—a targeted approach that refined rather than reinvented. Rebel Green is my favorite MINI color of all time for a few reasons. One is how different it can look depending on lighting. Eibach Pro Kit lowering springs dropped the front by 1.2 inches and the rear by 1 inch, subtly improving the stance while enhancing stability and responsiveness. To complement this, 12m spacers were added, pushing the wheels flush with the body for a more planted look and sharper turn-in. A Chassis Brace by Cravespeed tightened front-end rigidity, reducing flex and improving steering precision, while a NM Engineering 22mm Rear Sway Bar minimized body roll and sharpened rotation through corners. The result? Not only a sharper, more responsive front end but also an overall sense that the car had shrunk in size and felt more MINI-like. You can read much ore about my modifications in this previous article. It’s not a hot hatch in the traditional sense, nor is it a true wagon in the BMW M3 Touring vein. Instead, it operates in a space of its own, delivering an experience that is equal parts engaging and unorthodox. Winter tires on 18” BMW 554M Y-Spoke M Performance Forged Wheels – the lightest BMW 18” wheels made. Most importantly they fit perfectly, clearing the F54 JCW’s six piston front brakes. The Utility Side: Capability Without Compromise Performance cars rarely excel in the mundane. They tolerate it. They suffer through it. But the JCW Clubman does something unexpected: it thrives. Its size plays tricks on the eye—at times, it looks substantial, yet next to a typical SUV, it’s undeniably a MINI. But no matter the context, it offers a surprising amount of cargo space in tight quarters. The cabin, while still unmistakably MINI in layout and personality, is spacious enough to make you question why the wagon is a dying breed. Fuel economy, for what it is, remains respectable—hovering around 25 mpg in mixed driving. And despite its newfound rigidity, the ride quality hasn’t devolved into something punishing. It still soaks up long distances with ease and threads through city streets without complaint. There’s an Autobahn-ready solidity to it, an ability to cover ground with an effortlessness that feels at odds with the car’s branding. The Duality: A Foot in Two Worlds The JCW Clubman refuses to be pinned down. It is, at once, a fast wagon, a grown-up MINI, and a car that fundamentally does not fit into any single category. That is its strength. It has a sense of a quiet confidence, delivering performance without pretense and practicality without compromise. MINI’s decision to axe the Clubman ensures that My Rebel Green example will remain a rare thing—an outlier in the brand’s history. And yet, a year in, it still feels like an answer to a question few were asking: What if you didn’t have to choose between engagement and usability? Between outright performance and everyday livability? One year later, the answer remains the same: you don’t. The post 2024 MINI JCW Clubman One-Year Review: The Ultimate MINI Daily Driver? appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article Ссылка на комментарий Поделиться на другие сайты More sharing options...
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