Mini GP driven (7/10)
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£28,790
Driven January 2013

This was an insanely tantalising drive. Just five
laps of a super-tight circuit, no road driving, no way to see how it
went at big straight-line speeds or how it felt in bumps. But, most of
all, not enough quick third-gear corners. There was just one of them
each lap, and it felt ridiculously good. Ah well. We'll be back for
more.
But, for the moment, Mini's people aren't letting these precious cars
out of their sight. There will only ever be 2,000 of them, and they
were all sold before anyone outside Mini had driven it, even at nearly
£29,000.
Big price, big name. Mini John Cooper Works GP. You might remember
there was something like this before, a last hurrah to the supercharged
R50 Mini. This is the final encore for the R56 Mini, because next year
there will be an all-new hatchback on the Mini/BMW UKL platform. The old
s'charged car is now a collectors' item. But then it was bespoke, and
final assembly was at Bertone.
The new one isn't quite so out of the ordinary, but it's more
effective. The engine, for instance, is hopped up to 218bhp, barely more
than a standard JCW. So that's not the main story. The car is
lightened, too, though again, not vastly. Main evidence of the diet, the
absence of any kind of rear seat, is probably largely symbolic.
The big deal is in aerodynamics and chassis tuning. The roof spoiler
and rear diffuser actually do work, and they're as close to the ones on
the Challenge one-make race car as legislation allows. They not only
reduce lift, they also act together with the snowplough front spoiler
and an undertray so that there's lower overall drag too.
The chassis starts with different geometry: a bit more camber at the
front to cut initial understeer, and less toe-in to improve agility.
Conversely, at the rear there's less camber, for better on-limit
balance. The front dampers are fancy (read: costly) racing units and are
mounted upside down to reduce their lateral bending. Under-bonnet and
boot strut braces add rigidity to the shell.
Finally, the whole suspension is adjustable for height. All of which
means it can take advantage of smooth tracks, and especially get the
most from its specially developed sticky tyres. Though if it's wet or
cold, you can use normal Cooper S tyres, too.
You can switch out the traction control but leave the inside-wheel
braking function active. The old GP had a mechanical limited-slip diff,
which I remember tugged at the wheel. This one feels more pure, despite
the fact it's done by microchip. There are race-derived brakes too, with
six-piston front calipers, so it shouldn't wilt on a track. Oh, and
don't forget those madly OTT graphics, all red lipstick and earrings,
roof stripery and the rest. Inside, there are new seats, different clock
graphics and red gearknob and seatbelts.
Red seatbelts, as we all know, are worth a couple of seconds a lap.
But Mini says this car is 18 seconds a lap faster around the Nürburgring
Nordschleife than that old GP, which also had 218bhp but was actually
40kg lighter than this one. So all that chassis and aero work has paid
off. That said, the new car's 8min 23sec won't give the hottest
RenaultSport hatches any trouble.
Our frustratingly curtailed drive also bears out what they're saying.
The engine is sharp and bappy on the exhaust and revs out more keenly
than any other Cooper S. But the main action is the traction and
cornering.
Even at the point where the regular Cooper S spins its inner tyre
helplessly, out of an uphill cresting hairpin, the new GP isn't greatly
upset. You just aim the thing, and the combination
of ideal wheel location, gummy tyres and clever electronics just sees you right. Then it's a pretty serious cannoning off down the straight to the next corner.
of ideal wheel location, gummy tyres and clever electronics just sees you right. Then it's a pretty serious cannoning off down the straight to the next corner.
The brakes are terrific, firm and easy to work even while you're
busily heel-and-toeing your way through the gearbox. Meanwhile, the back
end stays true and stable as you do it. So you're down at the next
hairpin, just chucking the thing in. It's nimble and terrier-like.
But it's the fast corner when things really gel. There's a subtlety
to it, a communication with the playfulness and the precision. Every
little lift on the throttle trims the line. It's precise and neutral by
default, leaving you to rearrange it as you want. And the communication
through the seat is terrific, even if the electric steering isn't the
most talkative. Oh sure, it's not as slideable as a GT86, but if you
were brought up on front-drive, you might think the Toyota's a bit of a
handful with the electronics switched off. This is just the antidote:
playful but contained.
I took a deliberate excursion over some lumpy concrete near the pits,
but a test of the ride on anything like British backroads must await
another day. Even so, it's obvious that the the ride is less pattery and
brittle than the rest of the JCW range. Thank the extra rigidity from
the strut braces, and the expensively fluent dampers.
On the face of it, you've got to really like Minis to pay this money
for this car. But Mini's boss Kay Segler - who once ran BMW M and
therefore knows a bit about selling superheated versions of everyday
cars - claims they could have asked quite a lot more and still sold out.
Or asked the same but sold a lot more than the 2,000 run. They didn't,
he says, because the GP is allocated to Mini's best customers, people
who have several Minis in their household. People they don't want to
cheese off by undermining the GP's exclusivity.
Paul Horrell
The numbers
1598cc, 4cyl, FWD, 218bhp, 207lb ft, 39.8mpg, 165 g/km CO2, 0-62mph in 6.3secs, 150mph, 1235kg
1598cc, 4cyl, FWD, 218bhp, 207lb ft, 39.8mpg, 165 g/km CO2, 0-62mph in 6.3secs, 150mph, 1235kg
The verdict
Expensive, but, if you like the feeling of Minis, this one is exquisite through a set of twisty, smooth corners
Expensive, but, if you like the feeling of Minis, this one is exquisite through a set of twisty, smooth corners
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