Mini News

Sporty Cooper makes a comeback
By John Law · 23 Oct 2024
Following the first ever electric John Cooper Works models, Mini has revealed combustion counterparts in hatch and convertible guise. 
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Mini's EV double down with Aceman and 3-Door
By Laura Berry · 15 Oct 2024
Even as Europe weathers a slump in the take-up of electric cars Mini is holding fast and recruiting more EVs into its range with the arrival of the new fully electric John Cooper Works versions of the Mini 3-Door and Aceman.
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Stylish and rare new car confirmed
By Dom Tripolone · 09 Oct 2024
There's a bit of life left in convertibles yet.
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Mini gives the Cooper and Aceman EV JCW specs
By Samuel Irvine · 18 Sep 2024
Mini will give its electric Cooper and Aceman models the John Cooper Works treatment with a 190kW electric motor, marking the brand's most powerful electric car to date.
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BMW and Mini hit by major recall
By Samuel Irvine · 23 Aug 2024
BMW, Mini and BMW-tuner Alpina have been hit by a wide-ranging recall. According to a federal government recall notice, 26,491 BMW, Mini and Alpina vehicles sold between 2022 and 2024 have a manufacturing defect that may cause signal interference in the electronic braking systems, impacting a driver’s capacity to fully administer their brakes. 
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The car brands suffering the most in 2024
By Tom White · 21 Jul 2024
Meet the brands posting the biggest year-on-year declines as Australia's new car market permanently changes.
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Mini Cooper five-door goes combustion-only
By Tom White · 02 Jul 2024
Mini's five-door Cooper is back, but unlike the three-door version or its Countryman relation, it will initially arrive exclusively with combustion power.
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What an EV's price will buy you in ICE land
By Laura Berry · 23 Jun 2024
The cost of electric cars is coming down at last and it’s happening fast, too, with big brands slashing prices.
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Mini's hottest hatch will debut this month
By John Law · 20 May 2024
Mini has given a preview of its next-gen hi-po hot hatch, the John Cooper Works ahead of an official debut at the 24 Hours of Nurburgring endurance race starting May 30. For the first time, Mini is making the focused John Cooper Works spec available on electric models as well as petrol. Full powertrain and chassis details are yet to be revealed. Mini has yet to confirm when the Cooper S John Cooper Works will arrive in Australia. The rest of the range, priced from $41,990-$58,990 before on-road costs, is expected to land in the third quarter of the year.The red and white camouflage livery is made up of the outlines of the world racetracks and is said to be reminiscent of the red and white colour scheme of the 1964 Monte Carlo Rallye winning original Mini piloted by Paddy Hopkirk. Despite the camo, it’s pretty easy to see the changes made to the John Cooper Works. Don’t expect them all to make production, though, as #317 has been prepared to compete in the SP 3T category of the ‘N24’ endurance race by Bulldog Racing . The wider gloss black wheel arch covers are production items, as are extra intakes on the front bumper’s flanks to cool the brakes and tyres. Inside the new octagonal grille design there are cut outs to feed radiators, again the real deal. At the back, the John Cooper Works gets a unique twin roof spoiler design and different rear bumper valance that’s more aggressive than regular Cooper S models. Inside there will probably be red stitching and bucket seats.Don’t expect to see the single centre-exit exhaust, white multi-spoke alloy wheels with slick tyres, roll cage, or functional rear diffuser for the production model.The new Cooper S John Cooper Works will retain its more hardcore focus – its rival set is more Hyundai i20 N and Honda Civic Type R buyers than Polo or Golf GTI prospectives.We anticipated tauter springs, a lower ride height, sportier tuning for the adaptive dampers, bigger brakes and a bit more bark from the exhaust on the petrol variant. The ICE model will only be available with an automatic gearbox, with manual Minis axed from last year. As for power figures, Mini has yet to confirm any details. The petrol model will use the same 2.0-litre turbo-petrol unit found in the regular Cooper S with a bit more grunt. Given the old John Cooper Works boosted power to 170kW, we’d imagine 180kW to match the Golf GTI would be a good increase. For the electric Mini John Cooper Works, guessing is a little harder. It could carry chassis revisions and continue with the SE’s 160kW/330Nm front-mounted motor and 54kWh battery pack, though we’d love to see a bit more punch. Mini hasn’t mentioned a follow up to the hardcore John Cooper Works GP for the new Cooper hatch, yet.Further details such as power and chassis changes as well as Australian pricing – expect the petrol model to start around $60K – will be revealed closer after the car’s reveal. 
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Europe's latest electric car confirmed for Oz
By Dom Tripolone · 29 Apr 2024
Dubbed the Aceman, the little SUV will be electric-only and is sized in between the bigger Countryman SUV and smaller Cooper hatchback.
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