The Official CLASSIC Mini Thread

How do you get that rust look ... without it rusting?

It is rust. Only a slight surface rust though. Sand paint down to the metal in the areas you want to "rust". Mix 250ml Hydrogen Peroxide (hair dye chemical) with 2 tablespoons of salt and 150ml of white spirit vinegar in a spray bottle. Adjust the nozzle to Fine Mist and spray. It starts to react immediately as it touches the metal and it foams. Leave it overnight. And then apply a second or 3rd coat till it's the degree of darkness you want. Clear coat to seal the effect and stop the metal rusting any further. Fauxtina.
 
Wonder what they did to the 1275 engine to get so much extra power out?

Not too much.. I use to have a mechanic who had a collection of mini vehicles.

Mine was of the 63' 850cc Morris type and those took a beating with those old bodies, you put the 1275cc into it and the thing flies because the weight is very different. Another thing is that those have 1-2x 24l petrol tanks (has a link between tanks) vs the other models with larger single tanks. Lastly the wheels, exhaust etc can me modded to give it more power so I'm not surprised by the claim at all.

Always said I'd buy & restore a mini with the latest tech one day.. but yea.. why they didn't retrofit an electric motor or two with batteries and solar roof is beyond me. I saw documentaries where this is done in other countries with beetles.
 
R130k minimum for electronic motor + control system
Export of it excluded,
ancillaries, batteries, charger excluded.

I can see how the local guys get to their price of R250k for a electric conversion.
 
Last edited:
And the 'best' British-built vehicle of all time is…

Top British automaker bosses have teamed up with Auto Express – one of the UK’s most popular car magazines – to name the best British-built cars of all time.

And, following what the publication describes as “a rigorous voting process”, the original Mini was named the best British-built car of all time, seeing off stiff competition from the likes of the Jaguar E-Type and Land Rover Defender.

With a shortlist of 75 models, judges were asked to pick their top 10 based on sales, design and performance.

Auto Express says votes were received from industry big-hitters such as Aston Martin CEO Andy Palmer, BMW sales and brand board member Ian Robertson, McLaren CEO Mike Flewitt and Citroën CEO Linda Jackson.

Interestingly, the top 10 includes everything from economy runabouts and off-roaders to two-seater sports cars, record-breaking exotica and even a humble family saloon.

“This survey is a reminder of how many iconic cars Britain has produced over the years. So many of our Top 50 cars redefined segments and pushed the boundaries of what was possible,” said Auto Express editor-in-chief Steve Fowler.

“The spirit of innovation which created models as diverse as the Mini, E-Type and Defender continues today and the British automotive industry should be proud of its achievements and confident of the future,” he added.

Check out the results of the vote below…

Best of British:
1. Mini
2. Jaguar E-Type
3. Land Rover Defender
4. Aston Martin DB5
5. McLaren F1
6. Range Rover Mk1
7. Ford GT40
8. Caterham/Lotus Seven
9. Ford Escort Mk1
10. Lotus Elise

http://www.carmag.co.za/news_post/and-the-best-british-built-vehicle-of-all-time-is/
 
5af66c40c86e2c30dbfcbbfb6b4f4dd5.jpg
 
Will make the final decission tonight, but I think the mini's engine+gearbox is getting swapped.
 
ggrrr... bastit is running again after weekend.
Got brakes again after bleeding and adjusting it.
No funny noises from the gearbox yet ... do have to re-adjust the carb tho...
 
Insight: the story behind the Mini Remastered

Many firms have tried to reinvent the Mini, but David Brown Automotive’s take on the British icon is the most convincing yet

Well-known quotes from Hollywood blockbusters rarely get into car stories, but David Brown, the man behind Mini Remastered, produced one last week while explaining how he intends to cope with the unexpectedly high demand for his new family of modernised, customised classic Minis.

“Well,” he said, nicking Roy Scheider’s famous line from Jaws, “we’re gonna need a bigger boat…”

When the Remastered idea was revealed about six weeks ago, Brown and his small team talked about initial production of about 100 cars a year, a settle-down volume of about 250 and delivery of the first car this November. But by the end of the first day, serious enquiries – some from as far afield as Japan and Australia – had topped 650, and now the number has swelled beyond 2000. The phone rings all the time.

The company’s tiny sales team (comprising people who do other jobs but have had to learn a new skill) has started taking £2000 deposits so those with a particularly severe case of gotta-have-one disease can be on a waiting list. It’s not that the company really wants a waiting list at this stage; more that it’s a way of coping with relentless customer pressure. Brown calls the response “brilliant”, but also knows it’s going to force a re-think of his business model.

David Brown Automotive has long planned a move this month into new factory at Silverstone. The place was planned as home base for both the Mini project and Brown’s existing Speedback business: for several years DBA has been building an ultra-low volume £600,000 GT car with styling reminiscent of an Aston Martin DB5, based on the inner architecture of the all-aluminium Jaguar XK. But with orders already reaching into production years ahead, he knows he’ll have to think again – hence the “bigger boat” observation.

Any rethink will have to start with consultations with suppliers about their ability to deliver more components, Brown says: “In the meantime, our job is to make sure the cars are ready for production in every detail. We wouldn’t want to start and then find we had to make alterations.” He understands the requirements of production better than most people: one of his biggest businesses was a dump-truck manufacturing concern that started out making just one vehicle in its first year, but built up to produce 7.5 of these mammoth £300,000-plus vehicles every day – before his firm was bought by Caterpillar.

Why choose to remake Alec Issigonis’s famous little city car? “We’d been thinking about a new project for quite a while,” says Brown. “It had to be something with a bit of volume attached to it. Remastering and improving a famous British car seemed the most appealing idea. There were some obvious candidates such as the E-type, but the Mini appealed most of all.”

For the big Remastered announcement, Brown and DBA built three prototypes to show off potential themes: a luxurious Monte Carlo, a more basic Club Sport and a traditional Classic, ranging downward in price from £85,000 to £75,000 (before local taxes).

The prototypes may look rather like original Issigonis Minis (they have identical dimensions), but they are equipped and finished to far higher standards than those ever contemplated by Austin-Morris, BL, Leyland Cars, BLMC and the rest of the straggle of companies that built almost 5.4m Minis over 41 years.

Officially, DBA refurbishes Minis, rather than making new ones, which means it will never get into the copyright trouble that has dogged other revival schemes. It works with existing cars, obtaining new shells from British Motor Heritage (a legitimate form of restoration) then sets out on a long, labour-intensive job of preparing and de-seaming them, refitting as much of the original equipment as is relevant, equipping each car with a 1275cc engine and much, much more.

Every car has a redesigned dash that looks right for the car, yet houses niceties like air-con, sat-nav, Bluetooth capability, a starter button, a classy hifi, four dashboard eyeball vents, electric windows and a starter button on the dash. The wonder is that this stuff all fits, without appearing to be squeezed in. Brown and his designer, Mike Sampson, have taken great pains to make sure the interior – leather seats, Alcantara headlining – looks compactly, professionally designed. And it does.

Sampson has designed an elegant new grille that splits the difference between an original Mini shape and that of the Speedback. It’s pretty and appropriate. The Mini’s unsightly roof gutters are made far less prominent and the unsightly diagonal seam over the car’s rear flank is removed completely, along with other body crudities. The boot gets an electric catch and loses its handle. Under the skin are new rubber suspension units, carefully chosen from around 20 varieties on the market after an evaluation programme that involved buying various existing cars.

DBA is fanatical about fit and finish: the whole assembly process takes 1400 hours (of which 400 are painting alone) and the finished car, though so familiar to look at, might have been made by Porsche. If someone in the US or Japan wants a car, DBA will import one from that market, do the work, and send it back.

Brown has his own associations with Mini, having owned one in his youth, and struggled like everyone else to modify it. Remastered, he feels, fits into that tradition of modified Minis, even if the price will stop many people. A stickler for detail, Brown admits it’s a special thrill to remanufacture a car that was never made well in the first place.

“I had two heroes in my life,” he says, “Roger Daltry and my Dad — Daltry because I love rock music; my father because he taught me everything. He’d talk a lot about the Mini. He reckoned it was a superbly engineered machine that was never made well. Maybe I’m compensating for that now.”

https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/industry/insight-story-behind-mini-remastered

786f46884ae595d9fbfe4e86a44b8929.jpg


09562653b3531db9f2af7fb5db5fbc26.jpg


a90c695e883b5ab972906c90c887c991.jpg


ef4fad386fb5e0d0256e21c416c580a6.jpg


081bd315d69fc848010a6c6602711e4f.jpg


417879565f2cb25851c711ac09b101a4.jpg
 
Should I buy one?

No. It’s a £99,000 Mini. That’s the only rational answer to the question, but the Mini Remastered simply isn’t designed to be rational purchase. Instead, it’s intended to appeal to the affluent fashion-conscious city dweller, perhaps those who owned original Minis in their youth. As a matter of fact, David Brown Automotive has seen a huge cross section among those who have put down deposits. Orders have come in from all over the world, too.

As Singer Vehicle Design has demonstrated with its reimagined 911s, there’s enormous appetite out there for iconic cars that have been made more usable with modern technology and updated with a fresh aesthetic. Given how adored the original Mini is, it’s hardly a surprise that a Mini without the inconveniences has proven to be so popular.

There’s no getting around the fact the Mini Remastered is extremely expensive. It’s also a very likeable and characterful little thing, though, and it’s been finished to a high standard. Pricey or not, David Brown Automotive won’t be able to build them fast enough.

Mini Remastered

On sale Now; Engine Four cylinder, 1330cc, petrol; Power 94bhp at 6100rpm; Torque 87lb ft at 4000rpm; Gearbox 4-spd manual; Kerbweight 750kg; 0-60mph 10.6sec; Top speed 88mph; Economy 41mpg (combined); CO2 185g/km Rivals Frontline MG LE50

https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-revie...ered/first-drives/mini-remastered-2017-review

8b98b77263cc62a7314c6e332ab9ebde.jpg


08c7e7c0c582a3d17670f3729b4f904f.jpg


d83de71db3e22e93b4c5859d20625e99.jpg


adb00a0924d36eab283da55bf026e8bc.jpg


c4e8b4b4c79d438ff2b3cf35ceb5dfbb.jpg


74d261e5ed088710e4751e62f08f6cea.jpg
 
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter
X