DimON Опубликовано June 4 Жалоба Share Опубликовано June 4 MINI has clearly evolved over the years and there are plenty of opinions on what that has meant for the cars themselves. But what do the numbers tell us? So we dug through decades of factory data, MotoringFile tests, and every timing sheet we could get my hands on to get answers. What we found was a clearer of evolution; models have gotten faster, a little larger and a lot more advanced. But just below the surface were some numbers that even surprised us. First, some important notes. What you see below is data from MINI. 0-60 and HP: These are both lower than most independent publications will get because BMW is notoriously conservative when it comes to such things. HP is taken from EU figures Weight: We went with DIN curb-weight in kilograms and pounds. DIN is measured differently (i.e. lighter) than what you would see in the US. If something is wrong (you have the original source), kindly let us know us know in the comments and we’ll be happy to update the data. First Generation (R50 / R52 / R53) The reborn MINI burst onto the scene with supercharged charm, kart-sharp steering, and a cheeky attitude. Early Coopers felt nippy rather than fast, but the blower-fed Cooper S cut the sprint to seven seconds and set a new small-car benchmark. Factory JCW kits and the stripped-out 2006 GP showed just how much pace BMW could squeeze from the tiny chassis. Power crept past 200 hp, weight stayed close to a ton, and the classic MINI recipe—light, lively, loud—was locked in. CodeMYBody styleVariantPower (hp)Weight0-60 mphTop speedR502001 – 2004Hatch 3-drOne902,51310.9106R502001 – 2004Hatch 3-drCooper1152,5358.6115R532002 – 2004Hatch 3-drCooper S1632,6806.9135R50 LCI2005 – 2006Hatch 3-drOne902,51310.8110R50 LCI2005 – 2006Hatch 3-drCooper1152,5358.5118R53 LCI2005 – 2006Hatch 3-drCooper S1702,7016.8138R522005 – 2008ConvertibleCooper1152,7568.9122R522005 – 2008ConvertibleCooper S1702,8667.0140R522005 – 2008ConvertibleJCW Kit2102,8666.3148R532005 – 2007Hatch 3-drJCW Kit2102,7016.4143R532006Hatch 3-drJCW GP (Gen 1)2182,4476.0150 Second Generation — R56 / R55 / R57 / R58 / R59 / R60 / R61 Buckle up because this generation is a big one. And the first thing you’ll notice is something we’ve long talked about – the R56 is LIGHTER (with DIN measuring protocols) than the R50 . That may shock some but for those in the know, it won’t be a surprise as the R56 is actually a heavily modified R50 underneath. But make no mistake, there were big changes with this generation. Turbocharging replaced the old supercharger and with it came a broader torque band, cleaner emissions, and easier tunability. The Cooper S settled into the mid-six-second bracket while full JCWs dipped a touch lower, all with better fuel economy than before. MINI also exploded the line-up—Clubman estate, Roadster, Coupe, Countryman, and Paceman—proving the performance DNA could flex into almost any body style. The 2013 GP2 was the hero, lapping circuits as quickly as it dashed to sixty. CodeMYBody styleVariantPower hpWeight0-60 mphTop mphPre-LCI (launch spec 2007-2010)R562007Hatch 3-drCooper1201 135 / 2 5028.8126R562007Hatch 3-drCooper S1752 6136.5146R562008Hatch 3-drJCW 2 6572 6576.3149R552008ClubmanCooper1202 5579.1124R552008ClubmanCooper S1751 210 / 2 6687.1139R552008ClubmanJCW2082 7126.4148R572009ConvertibleCooper1202 7789.8123R572009ConvertibleCooper S1751 310 / 2 8887.4141R572009ConvertibleJCW2081 325 / 2 9216.5150LCI (mid-2010 build ? 2011-2014 MY)R562011Hatch 3-drCooper LCI1202 502?8.7124R562011Hatch 3-drCooper S LCI1842 613?6.8140R562011Hatch 3-drJCW LCI2111 205 / 2 6576.3148R552011ClubmanCooper LCI1221 160 / 2 557?8.9125R552011ClubmanCooper S LCI1841 210 / 2 668?7.0138R552011ClubmanJCW LCI2111 230 / 2 7126.4148R572011ConvertibleCooper LCI1222 778?9.6124R572011ConvertibleCooper S LCI1842 888?7.3141R572011ConvertibleJCW LCI2111 325 / 2 9216.5150 CodeMYBody styleVariantPower (hp)Weight lb0-60 mphTop mphR562007-2013Hatch 3-drCooper1202,5028.8126R562007-2013Hatch 3-drCooper S1752,6136.5146R552008-2014ClubmanCooper1202,5579.1124R552008-2014ClubmanCooper S1752,6687.1139R552008-2014ClubmanJCW2082,7126.4148R562008-2013Hatch 3-drJCW2082,6576.3149R572009-2015ConvertibleCooper1202,7789.8123R572009-2015ConvertibleCooper S1752,8887.4141R572009-2015ConvertibleJCW2082,9216.5150R602010-2016CountrymanCooper1222,8889.8118R602010-2016CountrymanCooper S ALL41843,1537.4135R56 LCI2011-2013Hatch 3-drCooper1222,5028.7124R56 LCI2011-2013Hatch 3-drCooper S1842,6136.8140R56 LCI2011-2013Hatch 3-drJCW2182,6576.3148R55 LCI2011-2014ClubmanCooper1222,5578.9125R55 LCI2011-2014ClubmanCooper S1842,6687.0138R55 LCI2011-2014ClubmanJCW2182,7126.4148R57 LCI2011-2016ConvertibleCooper1222,7789.6124R57 LCI2011-2016ConvertibleCooper S1842,8887.3140R57 LCI2011-2016ConvertibleJCW2182,9216.5148R582011-2015CoupeCooper S1842,6466.5143R582011-2015CoupeJCW2182,7236.1149R592011-2015RoadsterCooper S1842,7016.6141R592011-2015RoadsterJCW2182,7456.3147R562013Hatch 3-drJCW GP2182,5575.2150R60 LCI2012-2016CountrymanCooper1222,92110.1118R60 LCI2012-2016CountrymanCooper S1843,1867.2136R60 LCI2012-2016CountrymanJCW ALL42183,2196.5140R612012-2016PacemanCooper1222,9329.7119R612012-2016PacemanCooper S1843,0867.5136R612012-2016PacemanJCW ALL42183,1976.5140 Third Generation (F56 / F55 / F57 / F60) The first all BMW MINI came with a new chassis and a modular three- and four-cylinder engine family. With it came more torque and refinement, and a larger footprint improved stability without dulling the go-kart feel (too much). The 228 hp JCW hatch ran 0-60 in 5.9 s all day long, yet remained civil for the school run. Two LCIs freshened styling and infotainment, but the stopwatch barely moved until the 306 hp GP3 and the 301 hp Countryman JCW pushed MINI into sub-five-second territory. The battery-powered Cooper SE proved electric can be fun, even if range was modest. CodeMYBody styleVariantPower hpWeight lb0-60 mphTop mphF562014-2018Hatch 3-drCooper1362,6017.3130F562014-2018Hatch 3-drCooper S1922,6786.4146F562015-2018Hatch 3-drJCW2312,7455.9153F552015-2018Hatch 5-drCooper1362,4257.6129F552015-2018Hatch 5-drCooper S1922,7246.6146F572016-2018ConvertibleCooper1362,8227.7127F572016-2018ConvertibleCooper S1923,0426.7146F572016-2018ConvertibleJCW2313,1096.1150F542016-2020ClubmanCooper1362,9328.9126F542016-2020ClubmanCooper S1923,1316.9145F542016-2020ClubmanJCW2313,2526.3148F60 2017-2020CountrymanCooper1363,2419.3126F602017-2020CountrymanCooper S1923,4177.2138F602017-2020CountrymanCooper SE PHEV224†3,6616.8120F602017-2020CountrymanJCW ALL42313,4956.2145F56 LCI 12018-2021Hatch 3-drCooper (LCI 1)1362,3927.3131F56 LCI 12018-2021Hatch 3-drCooper S (LCI 1)1922,6786.4146F56 LCI 12018-2021Hatch 3-drJCW (LCI 1)2312,7455.9153F55 LCI 12018-2021Hatch 5-drCooper (LCI 1)1362,4257.6129F55 LCI 12018-2021Hatch 5-drCooper S (LCI 1)1922,7246.6146F57 LCI 12018-2021ConvertibleCooper (LCI 1)1362,8227.8127F57 LCI 12018-2021ConvertibleCooper S (LCI 1)1923,0426.7146F57 LCI 12018-2021ConvertibleJCW (LCI 1)2313,1096.1150F562020Hatch 3-drJCW GP3062,7565.2165F562020-2024Hatch 3-drCooper SE EV1843,1757.393F54 LCI2020-2024ClubmanCooper Auto (LCI)1363,1648.9126F54 LCI2020-2024ClubmanCooper S All4 (LCI)1923,4866.9145F54 LCI2020-2024ClubmanJCW (LCI)3063,5714.6155F60 LCI2020-2024CountrymanCooper (LCI)1363,2419.3127F60 LCI2020-2024CountrymanCooper S (LCI)1923,4177.2138F60 LCI2020-2024CountrymanCooper SE PHEV (LCI)224†3,7816.8120F60 LCI2020-2024CountrymanJCW ALL4 (306 hp, LCI)3063,6604.9155F56 LCI 22021-2024Hatch 3-drCooper (LCI 2)1362,3927.2131F56 LCI 22021-2024Hatch 3-drCooper S (LCI 2)1922,6786.4146F56 LCI 22021-2024Hatch 3-drJCW (LCI 2)2312,7455.9153F55 LCI 22021-2024Hatch 5-drCooper (LCI 2)1362,4257.5129F55 LCI 22021-2024Hatch 5-drCooper S (LCI 2)1922,7246.6146F57 LCI 22021-2024ConvertibleCooper (LCI 2)1362,8227.9127F57 LCI 22021-2024ConvertibleCooper S (LCI 2)1923,0426.7146F57 LCI 22021-2024ConvertibleJCW (LCI 2)2313,1096.2150 Fourth Generation (F66 / F65 / F67 / U25 / J01 / J05) MINI now runs a two-track strategy: efficient turbo petrols for traditionalists and punchy EVs for the future. Early figures put the new Cooper S hatch at 6.5 s to sixty—right on par with its predecessor—while the lighter JCW should sneak under six. The electric JCW is projected at 5.7 s thanks to instant torque, and the U25 Countryman JCW matches that time while hauling family-car space. Weight is finally edging toward two metric tons in the bigger EVs, but clever chassis tuning and low-mount batteries promise that the MINI grin will survive the transition. CodeMYBody styleVariantPower (hp)Weight kgWeight lb0-60 mphTop mphF662025Hatch 3-drCooper C*1561 3352,9437.4131F662025Hatch 3-drCooper S2041 3602,9986.5146F652025Hatch 5-drCooper C156 (161*)1 3653,0097.6129F652025Hatch 5-drCooper S2041 3903,0646.6146U252025CountrymanCooper C (M-HEV)1671 5353,3848.1132U252025CountrymanCooper S ALL42411 6503,6386.2150U252025CountrymanCooper SE EV3132 0254,4645.4112U252025CountrymanJCW ALL4301 (312*)1 7353,8255.2155J012025Hatch EVCooper E1841 4803,2637.099J012025Hatch EVCooper SE2181 6803,7046.5106J012025Hatch EVJCW Electric2521 7253,8035.7112J052025Aceman EVAceman E1841 6453,6277.699J052025Aceman EVAceman SE2181 7853,9356.9106J052025Aceman EVAceman JCW2581 7853,9356.2112F662026Hatch 3-drJCW2311 4053,0975.9153F672026ConvertibleCooper C156 (161*)1 4503,1977.9127F672026ConvertibleCooper S2041 4753,2526.8146* US figures Our Take Two decades in, the stopwatch confirms what we’ve felt in every first drive: MINI doesn’t stand still and has been on methodical evolution. Some will bemoan the loss of the visceral quality of the supercharger era while other miss the performance and feel of the R56 generation. But what’s clear is that, with every step, MINI has responded to an evolving market. Back in 2001 a 90-horse One ambled to 60 in more than ten seconds, yet the steering was so alive we hardly cared. Fast-forward to 2025 and a 312-horse Countryman JCW launches the family to 60 in 5.2 while storming past 155 mph—proof that practicality no longer means sacrificing pace. Numbers tell only half the story. Across every generation MotoringFile’s road tests keep coming back to the same core ingredients: steering that feels wired to your wrists, a chassis that begs for the next apex, and an engine (or motor) that punches above its weight. The recipe has evolved—superchargers gave way to turbos, turbos now share the stage with electrons—but MINI’s engineers have never chased raw output at the expense of character. They add power, yes, but they also add grip, shorter gearing, smarter diffs, and in the latest EVs, battery packs placed so low the centre of gravity drops below that of the old GP2. Even as curb weight inches upward, balanced mass keeps the cars eager, not ponderous. What began as a cheeky hot hatch has multiplied into estates, convertibles, crossovers, and soon an all-electric Aceman that weighs as much as a 1990s 5-Series yet still claims a sub-seven-second sprint. That breadth could dilute a lesser brand; instead, MINI bends each silhouette around the same agile DNA. The stopwatch charts steady progress—every generation trims another tenth or more—but it’s the smile factor MotoringFile readers rave about in the comments. A Cooper SE’s 7.0-second run may not headline a drag strip, yet instant torque and go-kart poise make city traffic a playground. Looking ahead, the dual-track strategy is clear: petrol JCWs will hold the analogue torch for purists while electric JCWs rewrite what hot hatch means in a decarbonising world. As the stopwatch keeps dropping, can MINI’s soul stay the same. There are differing opinions but ours is clear, MINI has balanced performance, tech and sustainability as its products have gotten faster and continue to be market relevant. The post MINI Cooper 0-60, Weight, Top Speed: Definitive Performance Guide 2001-2025 appeared first on MotoringFile. View the full article Ссылка на комментарий Поделиться на другие сайты More sharing options...
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