PressClub Canada · Article.
Three generations of driving fun: The MINI Cooper and MINI Cooper S through the years.
Wed Feb 06 23:55:00 CET 2013 Press Release
Munich. For three generations and over 50 years, the Cooper name has identified a MINI offering even more in the way of driving fun. The idea, hatched by brilliant Formula One designer John Cooper, to fuel the agile small car with an extra hit of performance and turn it into a sporting machine for the road and track has lost none of its appeal. But the Cooper has never been about horsepower, as a comparison between the classic Mini and its two successors resoundingly proves. The key here is the basic principle of the creative use of space, combined with the inimitable go-kart feeling that runs like a thread through the three generations of the legendary small car. These famous handling traits are enjoyed by drivers on bendy country roads and city streets around the world, with the classic Mini and 21st-century MINI still regularly crossing each other’s path.
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Author.
Barb Pitblado
BMW Group
Munich. For three generations and over 50 years, the
Cooper name has identified a MINI offering even more in the way of
driving fun. The idea, hatched by brilliant Formula One designer John
Cooper, to fuel the agile small car with an extra hit of performance
and turn it into a sporting machine for the road and track has lost
none of its appeal. But the Cooper has never been about horsepower, as
a comparison between the classic Mini and its two successors
resoundingly proves. The key here is the basic principle of the
creative use of space, combined with the inimitable go-kart feeling
that runs like a thread through the three generations of the legendary
small car. These famous handling traits are enjoyed by drivers on
bendy country roads and city streets around the world, with the
classic Mini and 21st-century MINI still regularly crossing each
other’s path.
The small British car positively craves twists and turns
demanding quick and precise changes in direction; this is where it
feels most at home. The classic Mini was tailor-made for tackling
hairpins and corner-strewn roads, and it still looks the part today –
aided by the healthy 46 kW/63 hp available in a Mini Cooper towards
the end of its production run. The classic Cooper was built up to
autumn 2000, by which time its successor was already twitching in the
starting blocks. In contrast to the original Mini, the new model was
available in Cooper guise from the outset. And with 85 kW/115 hp under
the bonnet, it would do its nameplate proud. From the word go, the
car’s powerplant and chassis formed a harmonious alliance to deliver
unbeatable driving fun. As John Cooper realised, sometimes you
actually can’t have too much of a good thing. 50 years ago he unveiled
the 70 hp Mini Cooper S. And today, its youngest descendant places
135 kW/184 hp at the disposal of its driver. As if that wasn’t enough,
the turbocharged engine powering the latest MINI Cooper S also sets
the benchmark for efficiency in its output class.
When Alec Issigonis set out to develop a new small car for the
British Motor Corporation in the mid-1950s, his priorities were space
and price. Indeed, at a touch over three metres in length, the classic
Mini offered astonishingly generous accommodation for passengers and
their gear alike. Issigonis settled on a front transverse installation
for the four-cylinder engine, under which lay the gearbox, plumb
between the wheels. The positioning of those wheels at the far corners
of the car and the Mini’s short overhangs did the rest. The Mini was
small on the outside but roomy on the inside, not to mention – at
around 600 kilograms – extremely light. The principles underpinning
its design remain the template for small and compact cars in the
modern era.
However, it was left to another key figure in the brand’s
history to uncover the vast well of sporting talent under that
diminutive shell. John Cooper, a friend and business partner of Mini
creator Issigonis and winner of two Formula One constructors’ world
titles, was quick to spot the car’s dynamic potential, and in 1961 the
first Mini Cooper hit the roads. Production of the Cooper was
temporarily suspended in the 1970s, but by that time the Mini Cooper
badge had long since become the signature of a sporty and agile small car.
As well as the intervention of John Cooper, the launch of this
famous sporting career also relied on the brilliance of the classic
Mini’s chassis. Issigonis had broken new ground with the steering and
suspension of his new creation, and in so doing laid the foundations
for the go-kart feeling appreciated by drivers to this day.
Homokinetic joints reduced torque steer, a subframe (to which the rear
wheels were fixed) improved directional stability, and rubber springs
and small telescopic dampers ensured accurate responses and
progressive spring action. The wealth of ideas packed into this small
car still impresses. And the result of those ideas – the classic
Mini’s much-celebrated handling – explains why the car continues to
enjoy such a loyal community of fans. When the successor to the
original car came along in 2001, it was clear that highly advanced
chassis technology would be needed in order to set the pace in driving
fun all over again. The MINI Cooper rose to the challenge in some
style, thanks to MacPherson spring struts at the front axle, axle
shafts equal in length, a multi-link rear axle unique in the small car
segment, disc brakes on all four wheels, and DSC (Dynamic Stability Control).
The latest-generation MINI Cooper S also features Electric Power
Steering with Servotronic function and a DSC system including DTC
(Dynamic Traction Control) and an electronic locking function for the
front axle differential. Known as Electronic Differential Lock Control
(EDLC), this system gives the MINI a crucial edge through the tight
bends of Alpine passes, for example, by braking a spinning wheel as
required to enhance drive out of corners as well as the car’s steering
properties. Added to which, pressing the standard Sport Button in the
MINI Cooper S makes the steering even more direct and stirs up a
particularly sporty soundtrack from the engine. All of this was
unimaginable 50 years ago, of course, but you get the impression John
Cooper would have wholeheartedly approved.