The Mini Countryman Thread

Mini Countryman JCW 2017 review: first drive video - CarsGuide.com.au

[video=youtube;T1J9TSlpEH4]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1J9TSlpEH4[/video]
 
Mini JCW Countryman & Clubman (2017) Launch Review

Mini expands its range of JCW products to the bigger Countryman and the longer Clubman and with it, all-wheel drive.

What is it?

The JCW Countryman and Clubman now come with all-wheel-drive. 18-inch, 40 profile wheels on the Countryman can make life harsh.

John Cooper Works (JCW) is the (now wholly owned) tuning arm of Mini that delivers its highest performance models to market. These two latest introductions join the Mini Hatch JCW to form a trifecta of performance Mini vehicles available. The Countryman JCW is a crossover with mild off-road ability, while the Clubman is a full-length hatchback with a reasonable luggage bay accessible by doors that open outward. JCW takes the Countryman S/Clubman S, then adds more power, tweaks the suspension and introduces a touch of flair to the exterior.

How does it go?

Both variants use the 2.0-litre, 4-cylinder turbopetrol engine with peak outputs of 170 kW and 350 Nm, some 29 kW up on the standard S. The motor is mated with a part-time all-wheel drive system and an 8-speed auto gearbox; the claimed 0-100 kph times for the derivatives are 6.3 seconds for the Clubman and 6.5 seconds for the Countryman. There is a six-speed manual option available in both cars if you wish to switch gears via a lever. In order to gain the extra power, the JCW versions have a bigger turbo, an enlarged air cooler and modified pistons.


The JCW engine gets a bigger turbo, reworked pistons and bigger air cooler.

The engine delivers excellent low down power and accelerates best at the lower end of the rev spectrum, it can feel like it’s running out of legs after 5 000 rpm, but the speedo needle will keep extending in spite of the somewhat strained engine note.

We only drove the 8-speed auto and if you want an auto, it’s a great transmission. Shifts up and down the ‘box are rapid and unlike many autos, doesn’t have to constantly hunt down the gears when you feed in the power on exit. On the overrun, there’s some scripted pops and bangs that keep you entertained when you’re not pinning the throttle pedal. Overall, the performance of the engine and gearbox is impressive.

Does it need all-wheel-drive?

With our temperate climate, probably not, but then again, the All4 system in the Countryman and Clubman acts mostly as a front-wheel-drive car. Only when it detects slip from the front wheel or a loss of grip does it engage the rear wheels to aid traction and stability.

We drove in horrendously wet conditions from George to Knysna via Uniondale in the Countryman. Some 50 km of that was on a dirt road that had a shiny layer of water on it. The All4 system is useful on terrain like that, especially when the Mini's scrabbling for grip on slow climbs and tricky descents.

All4 only engages the rear wheels when extra traction is needed or in a dynamic situation if the computers deem it will improve handling.

On the 18-inch run-flat tyres, the Countryman’s ride is firm on dirt, it’s not as smooth as a pure SUV like an X3, but copes with washboard gravel and rocks. The cabin feels the shakes and prolonged periods are likely to introduce rattles. The Countryman’s ground clearance of 165 mm isn’t great for off-roading and for reference, a VW Tiguan is 201 mm. If you’re looking at a JCW variant, it’s unlikely that off-roading prowess is a major priority.

The steering is quite light, even when Sport mode is selected and it can feel quite vague when you’re on a dirt road and trying to feel the traction levels under you. Out on the tarmac, the lightness is less noticeable and the rubber grips much better providing more confidence in the front end.

Inside stuff

Clubman interior, like the whole Mini range, is very busy inside. Metallic pedals are a JCW addition.

The JCW cabin doesn’t differ much from the S derivatives. You do get specific JCW seats, a special door sill and a JCW-branded steering wheel. The cabin remains typically busy with colourful lights that illuminate the cabin and the centre infotainment system. There’s also now a Mini Connected app that links your phone and car up so that you can send destinations from your phone to the car’s navigation (you can also see the fuel left in the tank, which is novel...). The JCW sports seats are firm and supportive, but, on the downside, are likely to get a little uncomfortable after a few hours of driving. The luggage bay on the Clubman remains the same at 360 litres and the Countryman’s Crossover's size enlarges the load area to 450-litres.

Sporty JCW seats are firm and supportive but not made for long journeys.

Final word

The Mini JCW range now totals 3 cars. We drove the Hatch version last year and it was a finalist for Fun Car of the Year category of the 2016/17 Cars.co.za Consumer Awards. Now with the Clubman JCW, the Oxford-based marque avails a more practical fun car that has a very distinct personality and design. The JCW upgrade endows it with really competitive power and acceleration figures that are a match for the competition. It’s a great alternative to the raft of 5-door premium hot hatchbacks out there and you’ll certainly stand out in a crowd of hum-drum VW GTIs.

The Countryman JCW is a little more difficult to place. It doesn’t really add anything to the Crossover’s abilities. The 18-inch wheels are likely to be a nightmare to keep scratch-free if you want to drive down dirt roads often. The Countryman JCW isn’t quite mad enough to make an audacious statement that the Mercedes-AMG GLA45 does and it’s not markedly more powerful than the standard S to make it a huge upgrade. The Countryman JCW feels like an added styling package to fit a sporty personal taste, but with a bit of extra performance to sweeten the deal.

Pricing

Mini sees itself as a premium brand with the likes of Audi, Merc and BMW so its pricing is in the same range as the competition from those brands.

Clubman John Cooper Works R558 612

Clubman John Cooper Works sports auto R584 516

Countryman John Cooper Works manual R610 726

Countryman John Cooper Works sports auto R636 792

All JCW Minis are sold with a 2yr/unlimited km warranty and a 5yr/100 000 km maintenance plan.

http://www.cars.co.za/motoring_news/mini-jcw-countryman--clubman-2017-launch-review/43842/

55a3c46ae75d423cfffc00a4f2688057.jpg


6e2df3e27cb4c9353757d5cc2ea1f7d6.jpg


f0210e34c619c0d4ac68d61826a06e1f.jpg


d490f2ba7e2194b8ce8775c9da4df499.jpg
 
MINI SA INTRODUCES NEW DIESEL-POWERED COUNTRYMAN

Mini South Africa is slowly building up its local Countryman range, which now sits at four distinct derivatives (each with a choice of transmissions). The latest addition? A diesel-powered version.

Back in March, the new Countryman touched down in South Africa, in Cooper (1,5-litre turbo-triple) and Cooper S (2,0-litre turbo-four) flavours. And in August, the range-topping John Cooper Works variant blasted onto the local scene, complete with 170 kW and all-wheel drive.

Now, the front-wheel-drive Cooper D Countryman has quietly arrived, positioned between the petrol-powered Cooper and Cooper S. The newcomer is powered by a 2,0-litre, four-cylinder turbodiesel worth 110 kW and 330 N.m (the latter spread between 1 750-2 500 r/min). The Cooper D Countryman is offered locally with either a six-speed manual or a six-speed automatic transmission (with Steptronic).

Mini claims a combined fuel economy of just 4,8 L/100 km for the manual and 4,7 L/100 km for the self-shifter. Regardless of transmission, the BMW-backed brand says the oil-burning Countryman will hit 100 km/h in 9,6 seconds, before running out of puff at 200 km/h.

If you think that’s it for the local Countryman range, think again. Mini SA plans to add the plug-in hybrid Cooper S E Countryman ALL4 – which combines the three-cylinder turbopetrol engine with a synchronous electric motor for a total system output of 165 kW and 385 N.m – at some point in 2018. One derivative that isn’t coming, however, is the Mini One Countryman…

Pricing:

Mini Cooper D Countryman: R457 342
Mini Cooper D Countryman auto: R475 684

http://www.carmag.co.za/news_post/mini-sa-introduces-new-diesel-powered-countryman/

Countryman D.png
 
Ugh please spare us from this monstrosity... I was eating breakfast and now threw away my sandwich after seeing this.
 
Mini Countryman JCW Automatic (2017) Quick Review

Facts & Figures

Price: R636 972 (October 2017)

Engine: 2.0-litre turbopetrol

Transmission: 8-speed sports automatic

Fuel consumption: 7.4 L/100 km.

0-100 kph: 6.5 L/100 km (claimed)

Top speed: 234 kph

Boot capacity: 450 - 1 390 L

Price and warranty

This Mini Countryman JCW sport automatic is priced at R636 972 and is sold with a 2-year/unlimited km warranty and a 5-year/100 000 km maintenance plan with service intervals set at 20 000 km.

Verdict

We really like the Mini Countryman JCW and we think it is an impressive product that has fashionable road presence while delivering solid and entertaining performance. It also happens to offer desirable practical qualities and overall it proves that a premium compact family crossover needn’t be boring.

It is on the pricey side of the spectrum, especially when you start dipping your wallet into the extensive options list but if you consider that there is nothing quite like it on the market, then perhaps it’s money well spent if you are looking for a crossover with more punch and appeal than the GLA, X1 and Q2. It certainly won’t disappoint you, that’s for sure…

https://www.cars.co.za/motoring_news/mini-countryman-jcw-automatic-2017-quick-review/44044/

a0b746201d21e022a30af3cf06111edd.jpg


809bc1d9aa2f08f61e25191ab0f8de95.jpg


558f0df62b8c6b5e95875a151a0b7664.jpg


7292e036545146f30131730ec847dc0a.jpg


0bd2892da3b7c7d3d6698ef47eb890c3.jpg
 
Likeable Countryman D is more than a Mini

I wasn't going to venture down that well-worn “Shock! Horror! Look how big it is!” path with this review of the latest Mini Countryman, but it’s really hard to ignore that fact that this new Mini-badge-wearing crossover is the same length as a Mitsubishi ASX, and even wider.
But really, what’s the point of a relatively portly Mini SUV, you might ask? Isn’t it just a slap in the face of Mini tradition? Those questions certainly bounced around in my head during my week with the Countryman, but when you really think about it, it actually makes perfect sense.

Not just because SUVs are such cash cows for the carmakers these days. A lot of young folk fell in love with the Mini brand when it was reincarnated as a premium brand at the turn of the century

But since then a lot of them would have outgrown the small hatch lifestyle, many having started families, and somewhere along the line they’ve started to hanker after the whole SUV lifestyle.

You don’t have to like the Countryman, but it certainly has a place in this day and age. There’s also a rather wide range, recently expanded to include the new Cooper D Countryman on test here.

Boot capacity is a decent-enough 450 litres, which should handle your average year-end getaway.
Driving the front wheels through either a six-speed manual or, as per our car, an eight-speed autobox, the two-litre turbodiesel produces 110kW and 330Nm. The resulting performance is really quite effortless, not necessarily brisk in any way but nor will you ever feel too feel shortchanged when stomping the right pedal.

Economy was quite good for a vehicle of this size, our car drinking 7.3 litres per 100km in a mixture of highway and city driving.

Indeed with a kerb weight of 1480kg it is quite a bit heavier than Mini’s hatchbacks and as a result of that, and its higher centre of gravity, it lacks the point-and-squirt agility we’ve come to love in Mini’s actual minis. And yet it handles brilliantly for an SUV of its size, and within that context the steering also feels direct and well weighted. It’s certainly more fun to chuck around than your average SUV. Sure, the suspension set-up is a touch on the firm side, meaning it’s not the plushest-riding vehicle out there, yet it is acceptably comfortable on most surfaces.

That characteristic giant ‘grandfather clock’ in the centre, housing a modern touchscreen command centre.
Given its premium positioning, and possibly the fact that the world might just not accept a Mini that’s any bigger than this, the Countryman is smaller than the crossovers that it competes with in price, namely the Tucsons, Kugas and Rav4s of this world. But most of those rivals have really huge interiors and though the Mini can’t compete with that kind of stretch-out indulgence, it is still quite practical. There’s enough legroom for larger teens or adults in the back, although perhaps not quite enough headroom for taller folk. The boot capacity is a decent-enough 450 litres, which should handle your average year-end getaway.

If we’re talking interior ambience, the Countryman is somewhat s****ier than your average compact SUV, with plenty of premium-looking materials and that characteristic giant ‘grandfather clock’ in the centre, housing a modern touchscreen command centre and sporting some colourful lighting effects to lift the mood, providing you’ve ordered the Excitement Pack for R3050, which includes a full ambient lighting package.

However, the bloated options list could see the diesel auto Countryman’s R475 684 base price swell way past the half-a-million mark.

VERDICT

Forget the fact that it has a Mini badge and the Countryman is actually quite comfortably sized - big enough for all your kit, but still small enough to be easily manoeuvrable and relatively agile. An insult to its heritage it may be, but then it is perfectly in tune with modern life, and particularly likeable in diesel form. For many Mini fans that’s just what the doctor ordered.

FACTS

Mini Cooper D Countryman AT

Engine: 2-litre, 4-cyl turbodiesel
Gearbox: 8-speed automatic
Power: 110kW @ 4000rpm
Torque: 330Nm @ 1750-2500rpm
0-100km/h (claimed): 8.8 seconds
Top speed (claimed): 208km/h
Boot space: 450 litres
Price: R475 684
Warranty: 2-year/unlimited km
Maintenance plan: 5-year/100 000km

https://www.iol.co.za/motoring/road-tests/likeable-countryman-d-is-more-than-a-mini-11822898

FAAC0B72-8E0D-4217-A556-DD7AF3730FA3.jpeg
BC68A304-89EF-4173-96A3-2A62CBB02BBC.jpeg
66CAF611-5FCA-4219-BA83-2205A60CEAE8.jpeg
 
Mini Countryman Cooper D auto (2017) Quick Review

Facts & Figures
Price: R475 684 (November 2017)
Engine: 2.0-litre turbodiesel four-cylinder
Power/Torque: 110 kW / 330 Nm
Transmission: 6-speed automatic
Fuel consumption: 4.7 L/100 km (claimed)
0-100 kph: 8.8 secs
Top speed: 208 kph
Boot capacity: 450–1 390 litres

Price and warranty

This Mini Countryman Cooper D automatic is priced at R475 684 and is sold with a 2-year/unlimited km warranty and a 5-year/100 000 km maintenance plan with service intervals set at 20 000 km.

Verdict

What the Countryman Cooper D loses in driving fun compared with its petrol siblings (it has a more laidback throttle response, for what that's worth), it more than makes up for it in terms of value for money and fuel economy. A turbodiesel offering literally and figuratively sounds like the antithesis of what Mini stands for, but the reality is that greater choice and variety benefits the consumer.

We don't expect the Cooper D will be much of a threat to its petrol-powered siblings in terms of sales, but it makes sense for those who have a keen interest in consuming the lowest possible litres per 100 kilometres. The engine pulls well, offers plenty of in-gear overtaking shove and, while petrolheads may scoff at the idea of a turbodiesel family-friendly Mini, in reality, the D represents a sensible, value-for-money proposition.

https://www.cars.co.za/motoring_news/mini-countryman-cooper-d-auto-2017-quick-review/44314/

image.jpg
image.jpg
image.jpg
image.jpg
image.jpg
 
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter
X