Oct 28th, 2005

I live in the land of the Autobahn. There is a lot you can do here in Germany to enjoy the performance of a MINI Cooper S. But what’s the point of going fast on a wide, flat straight with a MINI? Isn’t it made for narrow, twisty country roads?
Fortunately here in Germany we also have one of the worlds most demanding and famous twisty country roads: the Nürburgring Nordschleife. Ok, calling it a country road is quite a drastic understatement. Let’s make it clear from the beginning: The Nordschleife is a racetrack. A quite hazardous, tight, and very long track that goes up and down and left and right like a roller coaster all the time. Because of its location in the green and hilly mountains of the volcanic “Eifel” region and its reputation for danger, the Nordschleife is also known as the “Green Hell”. Jackie Stewart coined the term and I think he’s damn right.
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Oct 27th, 2005

MINI United: First International
Annual Meeting of the Global MINI Fan Community.
MINI United is celebrating its premiere ‘ and many fans of the brand are coming: Several thousand participants from three dozen countries have registered for a unique three-day event on the Misano Race Track south of Rimini in Italy, with fans of MINI coming from countries as far away as Ghana and Thailand. Other participants are coming by car from distant places such as Lisbon, Birmingham, and St. Petersburg to enjoy this very special highlight of the season.
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Oct 27th, 2005
We’ll have the full press release and official photos soon… but to tide you over here are the preliminary numbers that have been released by MINI Press:
- 218 BHP (around 215 HP)
- 88lbs weight reduction (for a total of just under 2600 LBS).
While neither is quite as high as some had hoped for, these figures could still represent the fastast MINI ever to be officially released. We’ll have more info soon.
Update: MotoringFile has learned that we should expect an official MINI USA annoucement about the Works GP availability in the US next week. We’ve also learned that the Works GP will come equipped with only select options and will not be custom configurable.
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Oct 26th, 2005

MINI.com has a fantastic feature on both the 2005 MINI Concepts that have recently debuted. The site features both the Concept Frankfurt and Concept Tokyo as well as the various prototype components that went into both. The site also has an in-depth video showing the process of designing and building of the concepts. Excellent stuff and definitely worth checking out:
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Oct 25th, 2005
Rumored no more.
MINI2 is now confirming what many of us had assumed all along. The images posted on the web this weekend are indeed early sketches of the upcoming MINI Cooper S John Cooper Works GP Tuning Kit. The photos are to be part of a larger press package to be released later this week (and will be seen on MotoringFile).
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Oct 25th, 2005
Dan over at dcmini.blogspot.com has a great write-up concering the growing problem with the ever popular web-spoke wheels. Here’s an excerpt:
The Problem:
Sometime in the middle of June I noticed a consistent clicking upon each revolution of the wheel. I initially noticed it coming from the front left wheel but after I had others people lend me their ears, I was told that it seemed to be coming from the other wheels as well.
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Oct 25th, 2005

For those that just can’t get enough about the latest MINI concept, here’s a transcript of the speech given by Dr. Michael Ganal (Member of the Board of Management of BMW AG) at the introduction:
MINI Press Conference
39th Tokyo Motor Show 2005
Tokyo, 19 October 2005
Hello and welcome at our MINI stand. I am very pleased to present MINI to you here in Japan – the country in Asia where the MINI has touched people’s hearts for decades.
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