Here in Japan I’ve found one 998cc MK1 Cooper, my car was a Mazda MX5 NC version, so I sold the mx5 and still not having the money to buy that Cooper. I ended up with a crazy loan. And when I got that Cooper the car was full hidden with rust, even today the boot floor, back wheels arch and the floor still need replacement, since I have no money for a full restoration process for now I did the best to relief the rust. You can see the welded patches here and there when open the boot lid. The car came with original hydrolast, the interior with the original brocade finish, would say 95% of the car remains original, the head and valves still fitted with lead fuel seals. Me honestly after riding in others very nice cars, the classic mini is the only one that gives me smiles in my face when I’m driving… So damn proud of it!
If you have never driven a classic Mini even the least powerful versions you are really missing out on one of the most fun driving experiences. I have driven many high performance cars but they all have a major draw back "Speed limits" a Mini will give you the same feeling driving it within the speed limits as a super car will give you on a track.
We own one, a bit tickled to a hefty 60bhp, and your comment is so true. It screams from the top of its lungs, while every city bug in the country can still keep up. Everything comunicates so well, the rubber cones have gotten rock hard so you can even feel the tires think, and talk to them. And if you do go in a bit fast, a touch of unassisted brakes to get the rear a bit upset and she turns in a lot more. If you've never driven one, you wouldn't understand. What a fun machine, only downside is the tendency to run a bit hot in summer and all the angry audi's expecting you to go 80mph, while 55 is where the noise takes over
@@flappingflight8537 that is true, but i've driven a track prepped 80's starlet with a turbo and that was still a lot less precise. The mini lacks a lot of dampening, the subframe is bolted to the chassis without bushes, etc. The only bushes are from the lower suspensionmounts to the subframe. That gives it it's direct handling
The classic Mini is one of the automotive world's all time greats. An affordable, practical runabout with movie star appeal and motorsports pedigree; in fact you could argue it set the modern foundations of a whole automotive segment derived from its name; the Supermini.
People look at me funny when I say It's one of my all time favourite cars but they don't understand the legacy it has left behind. Truely a marvel of engineering in a time of sticks and stones.
I'm 6'2", and the first time I ever drove a Mini (belonging to a workmate), I was shocked by the internal room and the huge amount of headroom I had! I was daily driving a Datsun 1.8 SSS Coupé, which was no slouch in its day with its twin SU carbs, and I had a 2.0S Capri for weekends. Both were fun to drive and would make his little beige Mini an ever-decreasing dot in their mirrors from 0mph to 60, 70, or, ahem, 90mph; but Jeebus, was that thing *kerazy-fun* to drive around the tight, often cobbled, town centre back streets of Manchester! I thought the seats in the Capri were low, but in the Mini, it felt like my 4rse was a couple of inches above the road! It went around the tight corners in a way that shouldn't have been possible, and the handbrake turns had me laughing like a maniac! It would have smoked both my cars _every_ time around those backstreets, and the film _The Italian Job_ finally made total sense to me! 😄
Holy crap... Are you actually me!! My first car was a Datsun 180B SSS coupe (I swapped it for a motorbike, The 180B SSS needed a new clutch) I've never come across another person that knows what a SSS Datsun is! I stuck it in a ditch 6 months after a got it, but that Datsun SSS still has a place in my heart (along with the MK1 XR2 I had)
I too owned a Datsun 180B SSS coupe mk2 and a 1275 Mini unfortunately back then I also had a wife who crashed the Mini and while I was repairing that she then went and crashed the Datsun too writing it off
my first car was a 2010 Cooper S, and I think I have to thank the ups and downs of working with that vehicle for my lifelong love of cars and racing. thanks for the great summary!
@@andredeketeleastutecomplex Yes! Sure the BMW mini was perfect for its time, but the Mini, mini was the car to have on the road, in particular in cities... And before I get comments, I had a 1982 black Cooper S, MINI Cooper 2006, a MINI Clubman S. I simply liked the '82 version better.
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It was not a real Mini, and the first diesel model of the BMW Mini even had a Toyota D-4D engine.
Great video. When I was younger, my mum had an original Mini that had been chopped into a convertible and fitted with (if I remember rightly) a 1.3 turbo engine from a Metro. I now have an R53 (Gen 1 of the 'new' Mini) as my fun daily car, it's a great (supercharged) gokart :D
A friend of mine had a 1275GT clubman mini. He drove it around mainland europe seeing the sights while serving in the army. Then when i worked with him (plus enjoying loads of beer together on our days off) we went to a wedding and reception. Throughout the day i kept asking him where are staying tonight as it was miles from home. He just kept replying dont worry it's sorted. The evening wears on, its 1 AM and we're now on our own and im getting mightily suspicious. We walk back to his mini, without a word he unlocks the door, reclines the front seat "lays down" on the back seat and instantly falls asleep!!!! When I've picked my bottom jaw up off the floor i put the seat back, put it in gear and let off the hand brake. I got about 2 hours kip. I drove to the seaside in the morning, he's still asleep, he woke up eventually about 9AM saying what a fantastic night's sleep he'd had!!! Fantastic memories of a truly great mechanic and even better friend. Sadly lost to cancer. RIP Phil.
@@factoryelite Thank you. Phil was about 20 years older than me. I was a snotty nosed 16 yo when I started at our hgv fleet garage in 1984. He'd previously served in West Germany and Northern Ireland in the R.E.M.E (Royal electrical and mechanical engineers) He used to go to night clubs on his own about 30 miles away whilst on breakdown callout (strictly speaking against company rules) with the breakdown bleeper in his pocket!! He was a man of few words but never had a problem getting female company!! Truly top bloke.
In 1965 I was 21, footloose and fancy free, and earning good money so I splashed out on an early Mk1, 1275 S. British Racing Green (of course). Used to eat Lotus Cortinas on winding Welsh and Pennine roads.
Really well made video. It was suitable that Jack Brabham owned a Mini since he won his first two F1 World titles with Cooper. Incidentally, the Cooper stripes which now appear on the bonnets of Mini Coopers originate with the F1 team. In fhe '50s, there were so many British teams running in green, the Cooper team chose to put two white stripes on the front of their cars to tell them apart from BRM, Vanwall, Lotus and all the others. That then became their trademark which ended up on the Mini.
Thank you for this video from the USA about one of our British success stories. As an ex Mini rallycrosser racing in the UK and Europe I really appreciated it. We won an International Rallycross in Belgium up against Cosworths and Porsches, carrying the A Final trophy back to England. The Europeans were amazed and hated us at the same sime, we were surrounded in the pits by enthusiastic spectators. I specified and built the car, Engine by a 1430 Swiftune on Webers and straight cut gearbox with LS diff gearbox by Jack Knight. We retained the rubber cones at the front but replaced the rear suspension with coilovers from Koni having removed the heavy rear subframe and replaced it with a semi structural roll cage. 160bhp on the dyno and weighing about 500 kilos it was the last competitive mini in Rallycross.
...and in the US designers made their crude cars faster by stuffing in bigger engines and fatter tires. I love the early Minis, and their legacy, the efficient hatchbacks and hot hatches from the 1970s to the present day.
I accidentally clicked on this video after watching your Rally Cheating video, and I couldn't click off. I love your videos man, I didn't think I'd be interested in a Mini video but here I am! Love it 🙏
Glad to hear it, thank you! I think there's a lot of topics in the automotive world that don't seem too interesting on the surface, but once you dig deeper have a lot fascinating stories behind them. I love talking about those kinds of things so I'm glad to hear other people find them interesting too!
Great video, informative and entertaining. I was a mini car club member in the 80's here in Australia and had 2 Cooper S . Great fun cars and so quick up a mountain pass, I had drives where I would do up to 8 mountains on my way home from the parents place. The video mentions Australian endurance race wins so I'd bring to attention the 1966 Bathurst 500 mile race which the mini won 1st through to 9th, Known as 'The Year of The Mini' their dominance was only shattered by the local manufacturers Ford and Holden embarking upon a rivalry that has lasted since the 1967 GT Falcon until now with American made imposters in our top tintop series.
My most memorable trip in a Mini was in 1976 after the Irish vs. All Blacks test match... being a rear seat passenger in a 1275cc hotted up Mini which still sported it's 850cc badges.... There were 7 of us on board, 3 in the front and four in the back driving quickly up the motorway from Wellington to Lower Hutt in New Zealand. A Torana XU1 pulled alongside and indicated it wanted a race. I watched the Mini's speedo wind past 90mph and continue on until "0" on the clock...after which the Torana, 2 up, disappeared up the road ahead of us.... Interesting times....
the mini was the first production car to use a transversely mounted engine with front wheel drive. all front wheel drive cars use the same layout today.
The first time I saw the classic Mini I knew I would want one. With its Rally build, I thought it would be a blast to drive! That was a long time ago. I would still like to have one of the older ones one day.
The original Mini was, and still is, a true giant-beater! I grew up in New Zealand, and when I left school back in 1976, I got a job at a 2nd hand car yard, and that was the perfect job for me at the time. Never enjoyed work as much since then! Anyway, I got to drive so many different cars, some of which I would drive home at the end of the day, so that I could take the car to get it's annual "Warrant of Fitness" check at a station on the way to work the next morning. The car that remains my all time favourite, was a souped-up Mini. She wasn't pretty on the outside, rough of the inside, but mechanically she was totally solid. It had a bigger engine 1200cc (reportedly), twin carbs, short diff ratio, throaty exhaust, and widened 10 inch steel rims. To this very day, that little car remains -by far- the most fun on four wheels that I have EVER had! I have driven maybe a hundred different cars, including cars that are WAYYY faster than that Mini, but no other car could match the go-kart handling and the sheer fun of revving it's little engine to the max and zipping through the gears! That tiny tin box could go from corner to corner at speeds I would not even consider in "average" cars - including modern cars. Actually, when talking about cornering, that Mini was the most fun I've ever had on 3 wheels! 😉
Very interesting and well made video. Mini Cooper was simply a winner concept in a weird shape. As a Frenchman it makes me think of Alpine, a genius coming from nowhere also becoming a legend.
We use to run slaloms for pole position on our Sunday rallies. The minis always won the slaloms! We called them: "go carts with a body"! The 'S' models were absolute terrors though the slaloms!
I remember those times, I lived in the sleepy town of Abingdon where both MG and BMC special tuning works head quarters where based. My first car was of course a Mini minor. Shit that car got me in so much trouble.
The mini is really one of the best cars I've owned, it isn't the most reliable these days, and the cold weather and rain makes it not very happy, but its such a blast to drive, completely outweighing over cars in it fun factor
Terrific video! This entire video can be my explanation for my obsession. Although I fear for the identity of the brand is getting lost with the newer german owners 😅
The brand identity is getting lost, that's true. classic mini is the legend but imo the last true mini is the r56, still small, two dors, four really small seat, no luggage room, light and fast. From 2014 is a 1 series from bmw with different body panels. I have one from 2011 and my grandpa had one in the 80s. I still like the brand but i would not buy a newer mini, older ones are too good
I have a 1980 1275 classic mini as my daily driver. Ive had them since i passed my test in 1994. There's no other car that compares to a proper mini. We've also got a 1275GT which will be the other half's daily driver once its finished
I'm 58 and my first 3 cars as a teenager were Mini's. A '72 850, then a '72 1275GT and then another'72 1275GT bored out to 1400.... smoked the tyres in the first 3 gears and hilarious torque steer!
I learned to drive in a Mini, I knew Alex Moulton (because of his Bicycle Club museum) and my father in law knew Cooper, he used to drive a Cooper S sometimes instead of his own very boring car, it was stunning.
Mentions of 55hp and 71hp, just missing the *David Vizard modified race engines making 107hp!* That was typically 20hp or more than most other race engine builders could muster for the Mini.
@@themotorsportstory his YT channel has so many videos with mind blowing amounts of information! He talked about his days with the Minis a few times. Check it out, perhaps if you promote him, then you could use some of his clips.
I follow Mr Vizard on TH-cam, mostly because one of the first books I ever had on building small block chevys was written by him. Truly genius ideas to make power.
My first car was a 2008 Clubman Cooper S. It was abused when i got it and i was always on the fence about getting rid of it. But with my grandad rallying all 3 of his and my family always road ralying theirs it felt like a sin to even think of it. The germans just made them a little too complicated when they came back in the new shape. What i Wouldn't give for an original.
My first car was a low light side valve 11:37 '51 Morris Minor, 2nd a '59 850cc Morris Mini. Both fun to drive, both under powered. Wish I still had both! Leigh, NZ
I used to race against Nick Swift when he was a sixteen year old, in a mini of course. He was a dynamite driver even then. His father built his car and towards the end of our racing career built our engines too. I previously had some successes with engines from Dave Mountain when he first started up before becoming a force in Ford engine building.
I have a 67 the Weelad and a 79 dilivery van Bizzarow love driving them makes everyone smile when they see it and in return makes me smile i bring them to car shows we have in lots all around differint nights rather then bringing my 63 or 74 corvette convertables kuz there will be lots of vetts but hardly ever minis and it allways steals the show ........2 cheers 🥂🥂 to Mini
When it was hardly "au courant" in Southern California in the mid-'60's, I latched onto a first generation Cooper S, the 1100 cc model (the first Cooper, the 997 cc model, was not an "S"). The car it replaced was a '57 Pontiac Safari, a 5000 lb behemoth that was actually pretty cool and, restored, would be worth $60-$80k now. That was basically a one-year-only model as it was replaced with the 1275cc Cooper S, which several of my friends had. We used to have great fun giving 356 Porsches fits on Sunset Blvd. from the Beverly Hills line to Pacific Coast Hwy (granted, most 356 drivers had no idea how to drive a car that, albeit potentially quick, had as its defining handling characteristic "terminal oversteer" - I know! I had a 356 Roadster in the late '70's). The Mini convinced me of the wisdom that it's more fun to drive a slow car fast than a fast car slow. My last car before health conditions ended my driving was an NC Miata!
I had five or six of these between 1980 and 1987. Great little cars. They lent themselves to inexpensive tuning. I read a book by David Vizard 'Tuning the A series engine'. One section was about the Reece-Fish carburettor. I had a 1275 GT at the time. I bought the carburettor. My insurance company only wanted to know if I was changing it for twin-choke Webbers. The carb was unlike anything else I'd seen with a hollow needle through the butterfly valve. There were three holes on each side of the needle, slightly larger to the 'closed' side. As you put your foot down, the butterfly opened and more fuel went into the throat of the carburettor. It was like fuel injection. Coupled with an Oselli inlet manifold and a Ripspeed 3 into 1 exhaust manifold leading to a Peco big bore twin exhaust, the mini went like the proverbial sh*t off a shovel, with a fabulous sound. A brilliant car. I only felt the same enthusiasm for my first Mk1 1800 Golf Gti!
Still an all time great. Car of the century if I correctly remember. I had a Cooper 1.3i MY92 in 2001, until it got fire in 2005. Most likely I am going to get another one soon.
My grandfather was a machinist at Rolls Royce, and they made the special crankshafts for the 970cc Cooper S engine. Nitrided Steel. He saw with his own eyes a factory 970 doing 10,000rpm on a Dyno. The valves were Stainless with heavy valve springs.
I feel like the fiesta is sort of comparable to the classic mini, obviously without the huge legacy, but it was born out of high fuel prices as a car for the people but has done tremendously well in rally and is a blast to drive, especially the st of course
I’ve driven both….and am a huge fan of cars small and light. A fiesta is a great drive, but in a very similar way to all other small light hatches. A mini feels and handles like nothing else…..can’t even say it’s better than a fiesta…..but it’s very different.
Before I bought my Miata (a 2006 in 2016), I test drove a Fiesta ST. A spectacular car but I couldn't justify $22k when I got the Miata for less than half that. Plus the top went down!
Good comparison. I owned a 1978 Fiesta (captive import from Germany). It was a fun and capable daily driver. Years later, I bought a 1960 Mini 848, more as a toy than routine transportation. Both were great fun, although the Fiesta was a bit more practical on US highways. Both would be scary amongst the behemoths on the roads today, which was a big factor in my selling the Mini a few years ago. I wish we could go back to sensible and fun to drive cars again.
My first experience of a mini was in my school days, when I was driven by a friend's mum. My mum drove an Austin A35, which recalls the Ralph Nader warning "unsafe at any speed" (especially when driven by my mum). In the mini, we approached a 90 degree corner, at a little under 30 mph. Friend's mum turned the wheel without braking. I braced myself, expecting us to go rolling. The car merely went round the corner, and continued on its way.
Mini rules! Great video. I have never driven a classic Mini, but I love my 2013 R56 S. I don't condone street racing, and I usually won't give in to it. I smoked a Dodge Challenger off the line from a traffic light one day. The guy just kept messing with me, so I was like okay jack ass, let's go! He turned off left at the next light with his tail between his legs.
I had a 1966 mini coup. Still my favorite car to drive. No power unless you rebuilt but man fun to drive. Oh this is a story not based on fact. I lived it to a point. 😊
I'm not a front-wheel drive fan by any means but the Mini gets a pass. Just think how awesone it would have been if it was RWD. In another universe, maybe.
Not many cars made so much history! 🏆 Thanks to Sir Alec Issigoni's, father of the Mini and John Cooper, who immediately recognized the potential of this little car. I love my little Mk1 Morris Mini Cooper S ❤😍🤩🥰
... I Really Enjoyed That Little Documentary, Many People Called The Mini Car "Tree Climbers". I've Driven a Couple and I Think The New Owner of a Mini has To Grow Into the Car, So To Speak.... Greetings from Saturn 🪐
While John Cooper was the boss and took the credit for the Mini Cooper the major part was played by his employees who took A series Formula Junior parts and hotted up the company parts getter Mini with them. Staff at the time such as world F1 champion Jack Brabham driving the Cooper F1 cars to the first mid engined F1 championship wins in 1959 and 1960 and Bruce McLaren. With staff like that they also convinced Dunlop to make disc brakes small enough to tame the high powered Mini Cooper when needed. They convinced John Cooper with what they easily put together from mosrly existing Cooper parts.
I don't remember the UK being inundated with "bubble cars" to the extent stated here. Our doctor had one that he did his rounds in, and you saw them from time to time. Sure, there were three-wheelers, like the Bond as well as the Messerschmidt and the Heinkels shown, but we were still very much a cycling-motorcycling-sidecar-bus-and-train nation in 50s. Doctors and other professionals and farmers had decent cars and the rest had second hand-me-downs, it seemed to a car mad lad like me. And the Mini didn't really get underway until there were second hand ones available and within the financial reach of the plebs, around 1960. Our first car was a 1961 Austin Mini 850, bought in late 68 and which we used to catch up on our local tourism in double-quick time. The highlight was a 22 hour, 800 mile excursion to Le Teil, near Montélimar in France, to visit a family I'd met on a school exchange. Happy days. We did over 2500 miles including excursions up and down the Rhône valley to see the sights. The old girl never missed a beat and used very little oil, but after a continuous downpour for over an hour before we got to the warmer Mediterranean climate, the interior was just about flooded, as the early cars could. Soon dried out in the "beau soleil du midi", though, but it was horrible in the back with your feet squelching about on the carpet.
The programme briefly mentions the Mini being like a go-kart but it's a point that can't be overstated. It's fundamental to the way it handles and its fun factor. It hasn't really translated well on the BMW version.
Many, many years ago I rememember seeing Mini Coopers best Ford Galaxies on the tightest turns at Brands Hatch. Quite the sight. This would have been in the early 60s.
Here in Japan I’ve found one 998cc MK1 Cooper, my car was a Mazda MX5 NC version, so I sold the mx5 and still not having the money to buy that Cooper. I ended up with a crazy loan. And when I got that Cooper the car was full hidden with rust, even today the boot floor, back wheels arch and the floor still need replacement, since I have no money for a full restoration process for now I did the best to relief the rust. You can see the welded patches here and there when open the boot lid.
The car came with original hydrolast, the interior with the original brocade finish, would say 95% of the car remains original, the head and valves still fitted with lead fuel seals.
Me honestly after riding in others very nice cars, the classic mini is the only one that gives me smiles in my face when I’m driving…
So damn proud of it!
If you have never driven a classic Mini even the least powerful versions you are really missing out on one of the most fun driving experiences. I have driven many high performance cars but they all have a major draw back "Speed limits" a Mini will give you the same feeling driving it within the speed limits as a super car will give you on a track.
We own one, a bit tickled to a hefty 60bhp, and your comment is so true. It screams from the top of its lungs, while every city bug in the country can still keep up. Everything comunicates so well, the rubber cones have gotten rock hard so you can even feel the tires think, and talk to them. And if you do go in a bit fast, a touch of unassisted brakes to get the rear a bit upset and she turns in a lot more.
If you've never driven one, you wouldn't understand. What a fun machine, only downside is the tendency to run a bit hot in summer and all the angry audi's expecting you to go 80mph, while 55 is where the noise takes over
I had a new 1972, bought for $1,865 . Super predictable handling and fun !😊😊
It’s the funnest thing I’ve ever driven!
This is true for most small cars and especially for Japanese ones ! The main reason is the light weight.
@@flappingflight8537 that is true, but i've driven a track prepped 80's starlet with a turbo and that was still a lot less precise. The mini lacks a lot of dampening, the subframe is bolted to the chassis without bushes, etc. The only bushes are from the lower suspensionmounts to the subframe. That gives it it's direct handling
One of most legendary moment, in mini was in 1967 finnish rally.
Timo Mäkinen driving his mini's bonnet wide open and finished in 3rd fastest time.
A true legend!
The classic Mini is one of the automotive world's all time greats. An affordable, practical runabout with movie star appeal and motorsports pedigree; in fact you could argue it set the modern foundations of a whole automotive segment derived from its name; the Supermini.
People look at me funny when I say It's one of my all time favourite cars but they don't understand the legacy it has left behind. Truely a marvel of engineering in a time of sticks and stones.
Most exported British car. Most went to Japan I believe
I'm 6'2", and the first time I ever drove a Mini (belonging to a workmate), I was shocked by the internal room and the huge amount of headroom I had!
I was daily driving a Datsun 1.8 SSS Coupé, which was no slouch in its day with its twin SU carbs, and I had a 2.0S Capri for weekends. Both were fun to drive and would make his little beige Mini an ever-decreasing dot in their mirrors from 0mph to 60, 70, or, ahem, 90mph; but Jeebus, was that thing *kerazy-fun* to drive around the tight, often cobbled, town centre back streets of Manchester!
I thought the seats in the Capri were low, but in the Mini, it felt like my 4rse was a couple of inches above the road! It went around the tight corners in a way that shouldn't have been possible, and the handbrake turns had me laughing like a maniac! It would have smoked both my cars _every_ time around those backstreets, and the film _The Italian Job_ finally made total sense to me! 😄
Man, I'm jealous haha! I still need to drive a proper classic Mini myself!
Holy crap... Are you actually me!!
My first car was a Datsun 180B SSS coupe (I swapped it for a motorbike, The 180B SSS needed a new clutch) I've never come across another person that knows what a SSS Datsun is!
I stuck it in a ditch 6 months after a got it, but that Datsun SSS still has a place in my heart (along with the MK1 XR2 I had)
@@ChuckFickens1972 The 1.8SSS was the only badge I left on my car when I de-badged it. 😄
That's because they designed the Mini thinking on how people would seat inside, and made the rest before.
I too owned a Datsun 180B SSS coupe mk2 and a 1275 Mini unfortunately back then I also had a wife who crashed the Mini and while I was repairing that she then went and crashed the Datsun too writing it off
my first car was a 2010 Cooper S, and I think I have to thank the ups and downs of working with that vehicle for my lifelong love of cars and racing. thanks for the great summary!
I remember that car :) Thanks for watching!
A BMW can never be a mini. That thing is huge compared to a real mini.
@@andredeketeleastutecomplex Yes! Sure the BMW mini was perfect for its time, but the Mini, mini was the car to have on the road, in particular in cities... And before I get comments, I had a 1982 black Cooper S, MINI Cooper 2006, a MINI Clubman S. I simply liked the '82 version better.
It was not a real Mini, and the first diesel model of the BMW Mini even had a Toyota D-4D engine.
That’s not a mini.
Great video. When I was younger, my mum had an original Mini that had been chopped into a convertible and fitted with (if I remember rightly) a 1.3 turbo engine from a Metro.
I now have an R53 (Gen 1 of the 'new' Mini) as my fun daily car, it's a great (supercharged) gokart :D
Awesome! I have yet to drive any Minis but certainly on the bucket list. That convertible sounds pretty cool!
A friend of mine had a 1275GT clubman mini. He drove it around mainland europe seeing the sights while serving in the army. Then when i worked with him (plus enjoying loads of beer together on our days off) we went to a wedding and reception. Throughout the day i kept asking him where are staying tonight as it was miles from home. He just kept replying dont worry it's sorted. The evening wears on, its 1 AM and we're now on our own and im getting mightily suspicious. We walk back to his mini, without a word he unlocks the door, reclines the front seat "lays down" on the back seat and instantly falls asleep!!!! When I've picked my bottom jaw up off the floor i put the seat back, put it in gear and let off the hand brake. I got about 2 hours kip. I drove to the seaside in the morning, he's still asleep, he woke up eventually about 9AM saying what a fantastic night's sleep he'd had!!! Fantastic memories of a truly great mechanic and even better friend. Sadly lost to cancer. RIP Phil.
Rip Phil. He's lucky to have you as a friend that remembers him
@@factoryelite Thank you. Phil was about 20 years older than me. I was a snotty nosed 16 yo when I started at our hgv fleet garage in 1984. He'd previously served in West Germany and Northern Ireland in the R.E.M.E (Royal electrical and mechanical engineers) He used to go to night clubs on his own about 30 miles away whilst on breakdown callout (strictly speaking against company rules) with the breakdown bleeper in his pocket!! He was a man of few words but never had a problem getting female company!! Truly top bloke.
A fine tribute for a true English icon!
In 1965 I was 21, footloose and fancy free, and earning good money so I splashed out on an early Mk1, 1275 S. British Racing Green (of course). Used to eat Lotus Cortinas on winding Welsh and Pennine roads.
Keep putting out content of this quality and the channel will blow up in no time.
Appreciate that! Doing my best to keep the videos coming!
Loved every bit of the commentary
Really well made video. It was suitable that Jack Brabham owned a Mini since he won his first two F1 World titles with Cooper.
Incidentally, the Cooper stripes which now appear on the bonnets of Mini Coopers originate with the F1 team. In fhe '50s, there were so many British teams running in green, the Cooper team chose to put two white stripes on the front of their cars to tell them apart from BRM, Vanwall, Lotus and all the others. That then became their trademark which ended up on the Mini.
Thank you for this video from the USA about one of our British success stories.
As an ex Mini rallycrosser racing in the UK and Europe I really appreciated it.
We won an International Rallycross in Belgium up against Cosworths and Porsches, carrying the A Final trophy back to England. The Europeans were amazed and hated us at the same sime, we were surrounded in the pits by enthusiastic spectators.
I specified and built the car, Engine by a 1430 Swiftune on Webers and straight cut gearbox with LS diff gearbox by Jack Knight. We retained the rubber cones at the front but replaced the rear suspension with coilovers from Koni having removed the heavy rear subframe and replaced it with a semi structural roll cage. 160bhp on the dyno and weighing about 500 kilos it was the last competitive mini in Rallycross.
That's an amazing story, thanks so much for sharing! Sounds like a wonderful time
Great video. Who'd have thought that little car would have such a big impact. And to think it wasn't built for racing.
Thanks! Until I read up on it, I thought for sure that racing would have had some impact on its design, so I was equally surprised.
People often erroneously says that the golf GTI was the first hot hatch, completely forgetting about the Mini Cooper
The original minis weren't hatchbacks...
Got my first classic Mini 10 years ago restored it learned to drive still got it today and 3 more, nothing beats the real of driving one
I owned various models of mini and loved them all. They we FUN to drive that has never been replaced by ANY car since including rally cars….
...and in the US designers made their crude cars faster by stuffing in bigger engines and fatter tires.
I love the early Minis, and their legacy, the efficient hatchbacks and hot hatches from the 1970s to the present day.
Thanks for this lovely story avout the great Mini C. I loved it, great work!
Thanks so much, glad to hear it!
I accidentally clicked on this video after watching your Rally Cheating video, and I couldn't click off. I love your videos man, I didn't think I'd be interested in a Mini video but here I am! Love it 🙏
Glad to hear it, thank you! I think there's a lot of topics in the automotive world that don't seem too interesting on the surface, but once you dig deeper have a lot fascinating stories behind them. I love talking about those kinds of things so I'm glad to hear other people find them interesting too!
Thanks for the awesome video!
Thanks for watching!
your videos are the best dude
Thanks so much!
Great video, informative and entertaining. I was a mini car club member in the 80's here in Australia and had 2 Cooper S . Great fun cars and so quick up a mountain pass, I had drives where I would do up to 8 mountains on my way home from the parents place. The video mentions Australian endurance race wins so I'd bring to attention the 1966 Bathurst 500 mile race which the mini won 1st through to 9th, Known as 'The Year of The Mini' their dominance was only shattered by the local manufacturers Ford and Holden embarking upon a rivalry that has lasted since the 1967 GT Falcon until now with American made imposters in our top tintop series.
My first car was a 1000cc Mini Cooper back in 1969 , which i bought for 135 Pounds! It was a wonderful car , specially in London.
My most memorable trip in a Mini was in 1976 after the Irish vs. All Blacks test match...
being a rear seat passenger in a 1275cc hotted up Mini which still sported it's 850cc badges....
There were 7 of us on board, 3 in the front and four in the back driving quickly up the motorway from Wellington to Lower Hutt in New Zealand.
A Torana XU1 pulled alongside and indicated it wanted a race.
I watched the Mini's speedo wind past 90mph and continue on until "0" on the clock...after which the Torana, 2 up, disappeared up the road ahead of us....
Interesting times....
87 Mini was my first car. Loved it to bits.
Nice one
Being old enough to have owned a 1973 1275 get
This video brought a tear to these old eyes
Thank you 😎🇬🇧
the mini was the first production car to use a transversely mounted engine with front wheel drive. all front wheel drive cars use the same layout today.
Audi A4&6 don't.
Well crafted video, with good storytelling... Thank you for the upload
Thanks for watching! Glad you enjoyed it!
I fully agree 👍, do you know about the yearly mini meet in Michigan? On the macanaw bridge? That was a sight of THOUSANDS OF MINI COOPERS!
@@jasonruch3529 Wow, that's awesome! I hadn't heard of it, but just watched a video about it. Thanks for sharing!
Great video. I had a 1967 Mini 850. Completely gutless but I loved it. Would be worth a fortune now.
The first time I saw the classic Mini I knew I would want one. With its Rally build, I thought it would be a blast to drive! That was a long time ago. I would still like to have one of the older ones one day.
In 1969 I drove a basic Mini round Thruxton Race circuit a few times , Quite good fun compared to my Morris Traveller.
So enjoyable, I felt the need to subscribe! Thanks.
very nicely done, thank you
The original Mini was, and still is, a true giant-beater! I grew up in New Zealand, and when I left school back in 1976, I got a job at a 2nd hand car yard, and that was the perfect job for me at the time. Never enjoyed work as much since then! Anyway, I got to drive so many different cars, some of which I would drive home at the end of the day, so that I could take the car to get it's annual "Warrant of Fitness" check at a station on the way to work the next morning.
The car that remains my all time favourite, was a souped-up Mini. She wasn't pretty on the outside, rough of the inside, but mechanically she was totally solid. It had a bigger engine 1200cc (reportedly), twin carbs, short diff ratio, throaty exhaust, and widened 10 inch steel rims. To this very day, that little car remains -by far- the most fun on four wheels that I have EVER had!
I have driven maybe a hundred different cars, including cars that are WAYYY faster than that Mini, but no other car could match the go-kart handling and the sheer fun of revving it's little engine to the max and zipping through the gears! That tiny tin box could go from corner to corner at speeds I would not even consider in "average" cars - including modern cars. Actually, when talking about cornering, that Mini was the most fun I've ever had on 3 wheels! 😉
i love mini's, the classic ones. I have one myself, an Austin Mini Mayfair from 1986. LOVE IT.
They look Fantastic!
A brilliant little icon, and it's a joy when ever I see an original one on the road !!
I remember being a little kid and watching them flying covered in lights for Rally New Zealand 😁
Awesome! Must have been quite the sight!
Loving these videos! Great stuff my guy :)
Thanks so much, glad to hear it!
Very interesting and well made video. Mini Cooper was simply a winner concept in a weird shape. As a Frenchman it makes me think of Alpine, a genius coming from nowhere also becoming a legend.
Thank you! As an American, I love what Alpine has done!
We use to run slaloms for pole position on our Sunday rallies. The minis always won the slaloms! We called them: "go carts with a body"! The 'S' models were absolute terrors though the slaloms!
I remember those times, I lived in the sleepy town of Abingdon where both MG and BMC special tuning works head quarters where based. My first car was of course a Mini minor. Shit that car got me in so much trouble.
Great videos man! Keep it up
Thanks so much! More to come!
The mini is really one of the best cars I've owned, it isn't the most reliable these days, and the cold weather and rain makes it not very happy, but its such a blast to drive, completely outweighing over cars in it fun factor
Terrific video! This entire video can be my explanation for my obsession. Although I fear for the identity of the brand is getting lost with the newer german owners 😅
The brand identity is getting lost, that's true. classic mini is the legend but imo the last true mini is the r56, still small, two dors, four really small seat, no luggage room, light and fast. From 2014 is a 1 series from bmw with different body panels.
I have one from 2011 and my grandpa had one in the 80s. I still like the brand but i would not buy a newer mini, older ones are too good
Underrated channel👑
Thank you!
Throughly enjoyed this video 👏🏼👏🏼🔥🔥
Glad to hear it!
I have a 1980 1275 classic mini as my daily driver. Ive had them since i passed my test in 1994.
There's no other car that compares to a proper mini.
We've also got a 1275GT which will be the other half's daily driver once its finished
I'm 58 and my first 3 cars as a teenager were Mini's. A '72 850, then a '72 1275GT and then another'72 1275GT bored out to 1400.... smoked the tyres in the first 3 gears and hilarious torque steer!
I learned to drive in a Mini, I knew Alex Moulton (because of his Bicycle Club museum) and my father in law knew Cooper, he used to drive a Cooper S sometimes instead of his own very boring car, it was stunning.
What a great review.
Loved getting behind the wheel of my sisters mini, such fun. While the modern version is more refined, it lacks the charm and agility of the original.
Mentions of 55hp and 71hp, just missing the *David Vizard modified race engines making 107hp!* That was typically 20hp or more than most other race engine builders could muster for the Mini.
Vizard the wizard! I'm not an expert on engines by any means, but he has some really great books full of awesome info.
@@themotorsportstory his YT channel has so many videos with mind blowing amounts of information! He talked about his days with the Minis a few times. Check it out, perhaps if you promote him, then you could use some of his clips.
@@SteveSega Thanks for the tip! I didn't even know he had a TH-cam channel to be honest with you!
I follow Mr Vizard on TH-cam, mostly because one of the first books I ever had on building small block chevys was written by him.
Truly genius ideas to make power.
hold up.. I wonder if anyone has put hayabusa engine into a mini :D
My first car was a 2008 Clubman Cooper S. It was abused when i got it and i was always on the fence about getting rid of it. But with my grandad rallying all 3 of his and my family always road ralying theirs it felt like a sin to even think of it. The germans just made them a little too complicated when they came back in the new shape. What i Wouldn't give for an original.
My first car was a low light side valve 11:37 '51 Morris Minor, 2nd a '59 850cc Morris Mini. Both fun to drive, both under powered. Wish I
still had both!
Leigh, NZ
I had a yellow mini clubman 1100 1975 . I dont think they ever had hydralastic suspension ,that was morris 1300 etc corect me if i am wrong.🤔
@@peterwhite7252 Between 64 and 71 Minis had the hydrolastic, after which they returned to rubber cones.
Shout-out to Nick Swift, Goodwood legend.
I used to race against Nick Swift when he was a sixteen year old, in a mini of course. He was a dynamite driver even then. His father built his car and towards the end of our racing career built our engines too. I previously had some successes with engines from Dave Mountain when he first started up before becoming a force in Ford engine building.
"How do you start the story of Mini?" Small, you start small.
Indeed!
I have a 67 the Weelad and a 79 dilivery van Bizzarow love driving them makes everyone smile when they see it and in return makes me smile i bring them to car shows we have in lots all around differint nights rather then bringing my 63 or 74 corvette convertables kuz there will be lots of vetts but hardly ever minis and it allways steals the show ........2 cheers 🥂🥂 to Mini
When it was hardly "au courant" in Southern California in the mid-'60's, I latched onto a first generation Cooper S, the 1100 cc model (the first Cooper, the 997 cc model, was not an "S"). The car it replaced was a '57 Pontiac Safari, a 5000 lb behemoth that was actually pretty cool and, restored, would be worth $60-$80k now. That was basically a one-year-only model as it was replaced with the 1275cc Cooper S, which several of my friends had. We used to have great fun giving 356 Porsches fits on Sunset Blvd. from the Beverly Hills line to Pacific Coast Hwy (granted, most 356 drivers had no idea how to drive a car that, albeit potentially quick, had as its defining handling characteristic "terminal oversteer" - I know! I had a 356 Roadster in the late '70's). The Mini convinced me of the wisdom that it's more fun to drive a slow car fast than a fast car slow. My last car before health conditions ended my driving was an NC Miata!
Great doco' .
You cannot drive a mini without smiling. Awesome little beasts
My First car was a 1965 850 Mini £ 275 in 1970 Brilliant car so small but so much fun
as how I usually call minis these days
"small it is, but *mighty* it shall be."
I have a mini clubman 1208 with twin doletto carbs ,free flow exhaust etc. I love it. 201km/hrs on the track.
Best classic Mini cimmercial i have ever seen, one problem... i need one now
Thank you! Haha, I've got the same problem! I would love to modify one for light track duty someday!
LOVE LOVE LOVE my mini there's nothing else that drives like it!
They're such great cars! Driving and owning a classic Mini is high on my automotive bucket list.
I had five or six of these between 1980 and 1987. Great little cars. They lent themselves to inexpensive tuning. I read a book by David Vizard 'Tuning the A series engine'. One section was about the Reece-Fish carburettor. I had a 1275 GT at the time. I bought the carburettor. My insurance company only wanted to know if I was changing it for twin-choke Webbers. The carb was unlike anything else I'd seen with a hollow needle through the butterfly valve. There were three holes on each side of the needle, slightly larger to the 'closed' side. As you put your foot down, the butterfly opened and more fuel went into the throat of the carburettor. It was like fuel injection. Coupled with an Oselli inlet manifold and a Ripspeed 3 into 1 exhaust manifold leading to a Peco big bore twin exhaust, the mini went like the proverbial sh*t off a shovel, with a fabulous sound. A brilliant car. I only felt the same enthusiasm for my first Mk1 1800 Golf Gti!
I used to go around the various breakers yards getting twin carbs and big valve heads and 3 branch manifolds off of MG 1100,s to fit to my minis 👍🏻🇬🇧
Still an all time great. Car of the century if I correctly remember. I had a Cooper 1.3i MY92 in 2001, until it got fire in 2005. Most likely I am going to get another one soon.
Love your work, keep it up!
Glad you enjoyed it, will do!
I still miss my mid 80 Green Mini S with vinyl roof and a 1100cc H engine. We did modified with discbrackes from a cooper.
My grandfather was a machinist at Rolls Royce, and they made the special crankshafts for the 970cc Cooper S engine.
Nitrided Steel. He saw with his own eyes a factory 970 doing 10,000rpm on a Dyno. The valves were Stainless with heavy valve springs.
I feel like the fiesta is sort of comparable to the classic mini, obviously without the huge legacy, but it was born out of high fuel prices as a car for the people but has done tremendously well in rally and is a blast to drive, especially the st of course
Good comparison, I can see that! I have yet to drive one, but they look like a ton of fun!
I’ve driven both….and am a huge fan of cars small and light. A fiesta is a great drive, but in a very similar way to all other small light hatches. A mini feels and handles like nothing else…..can’t even say it’s better than a fiesta…..but it’s very different.
@@seshelbow336 that is absolutely fair, I've never had the opportunity to try a classic mini, the only way i would sort of compare them is in spirit
Before I bought my Miata (a 2006 in 2016), I test drove a Fiesta ST. A spectacular car but I couldn't justify $22k when I got the Miata for less than half that. Plus the top went down!
Good comparison. I owned a 1978 Fiesta (captive import from Germany). It was a fun and capable daily driver. Years later, I bought a 1960 Mini 848, more as a toy than routine transportation. Both were great fun, although the Fiesta was a bit more practical on US highways. Both would be scary amongst the behemoths on the roads today, which was a big factor in my selling the Mini a few years ago. I wish we could go back to sensible and fun to drive cars again.
I had the immense pleasure of being in an original Mini. It was so much fun. Most people can only understand if they try it.
Very interesting story, mate!
Glad you enjoyed!
My first experience of a mini was in my school days, when I was driven by a friend's mum.
My mum drove an Austin A35, which recalls the Ralph Nader warning "unsafe at any speed" (especially when driven by my mum). In the mini, we approached a 90 degree corner, at a little under 30 mph. Friend's mum turned the wheel without braking. I braced myself, expecting us to go rolling. The car merely went round the corner, and continued on its way.
Best, funner, awesome car I've ever owned.😊😊😊
Back in the day I owned / drove Mini Cooper S with 1275cc engine, twin SU carbs & dual fuel tanks. Certainly did corner like it was on rails!
Mini's are great rally cars one of my fav
Mini rules! Great video. I have never driven a classic Mini, but I love my 2013 R56 S. I don't condone street racing, and I usually won't give in to it. I smoked a Dodge Challenger off the line from a traffic light one day. The guy just kept messing with me, so I was like okay jack ass, let's go! He turned off left at the next light with his tail between his legs.
I had a 1966 mini coup. Still my favorite car to drive. No power unless you rebuilt but man fun to drive.
Oh this is a story not based on fact. I lived it to a point. 😊
At the age of 15, I was a passenger in a 1275 Mini Cooper S.
Even by today's standards, half a century later, its performance was - IMPRESSIVE !!!
I'm not a front-wheel drive fan by any means but the Mini gets a pass. Just think how awesone it would have been if it was RWD. In another universe, maybe.
Not many cars made so much history! 🏆
Thanks to Sir Alec Issigoni's, father of the Mini and John Cooper, who immediately recognized the potential of this little car. I love my little Mk1 Morris Mini Cooper S ❤😍🤩🥰
Nice one
My first car was a 1275GT (with the ugly squared-off front end). I swapped it for a guitar.
In fairness, It was a great guitar - I still have it.
Like racing a skateboard ,even at 50mph felt like 100 Great fun!Rule Britannia.Greetings from Montreal.
I have an r50 mini and Its been so fun to modify and just show up my friends that hate on it.
... I Really Enjoyed That Little Documentary, Many People Called The Mini Car "Tree Climbers". I've Driven a Couple and I Think The New Owner of a Mini has To Grow Into the Car, So To Speak.... Greetings from Saturn 🪐
A 1275GT was my first car. Great fun in the snow…
While John Cooper was the boss and took the credit for the Mini Cooper the major part was played by his employees who took A series Formula Junior parts and hotted up the company parts getter Mini with them.
Staff at the time such as world F1 champion Jack Brabham driving the Cooper F1 cars to the first mid engined F1 championship wins in 1959 and 1960 and Bruce McLaren. With staff like that they also convinced Dunlop to make disc brakes small enough to tame the high powered Mini Cooper when needed. They convinced John Cooper with what they easily put together from mosrly existing Cooper parts.
U got my subscription
Back in the 60's BMC also built twin engined 4 wheel drive mini's (Twini's)...double the fun
I don't remember the UK being inundated with "bubble cars" to the extent stated here. Our doctor had one that he did his rounds in, and you saw them from time to time. Sure, there were three-wheelers, like the Bond as well as the Messerschmidt and the Heinkels shown, but we were still very much a cycling-motorcycling-sidecar-bus-and-train nation in 50s. Doctors and other professionals and farmers had decent cars and the rest had second hand-me-downs, it seemed to a car mad lad like me. And the Mini didn't really get underway until there were second hand ones available and within the financial reach of the plebs, around 1960. Our first car was a 1961 Austin Mini 850, bought in late 68 and which we used to catch up on our local tourism in double-quick time. The highlight was a 22 hour, 800 mile excursion to Le Teil, near Montélimar in France, to visit a family I'd met on a school exchange. Happy days. We did over 2500 miles including excursions up and down the Rhône valley to see the sights. The old girl never missed a beat and used very little oil, but after a continuous downpour for over an hour before we got to the warmer Mediterranean climate, the interior was just about flooded, as the early cars could. Soon dried out in the "beau soleil du midi", though, but it was horrible in the back with your feet squelching about on the carpet.
The programme briefly mentions the Mini being like a go-kart but it's a point that can't be overstated. It's fundamental to the way it handles and its fun factor. It hasn't really translated well on the BMW version.
The Monte Carlo !!! 🎉
Many, many years ago I rememember seeing Mini Coopers best Ford Galaxies on the tightest turns at Brands Hatch. Quite the sight. This would have been in the early 60s.
1:25 Those ships didn't sink in battles, they were sunk by the Egyptians to deliberately block the canal
Dude, I had a clubman 1.1 and used to show all my mates out with it, Uno turbo ie, XR3, you name it in the 90s, I bet it.
Awesome, sounds like you got the most out of that car! Thanks for watching!