Toronto Star

A compact with an outsized personalit­y

The 2019 Mini 3-Door has an enormous personalit­y and excellent driving dynamics.

- Jodi Lai AutoGuide.com

Remember when Mini just had one Mini and it was actually pretty, well, mini?

Minis were always supposed to be three things: Fun, small and affordable. With big, heavy crossovers now dominating the lineup, Minis all of a sudden were the opposite of what they were known to be.

And although Mini now sells more crossovers than anything else, the entry-level two-door hardtop hatchback still exists and we should be really happy about it.

So much personalit­y

The Mini 3-Door is a reminder that Mini still makes a car that is entirely affordable and way more fun than something its price ought to be. For just more than $23,000, you can get an ultra-adorable and unique compact car with a huge personalit­y, some cool features and famously smiley driving dynamics.

The personalit­y continues inside with a retro-futuristic circular theme with cute toggle switches and a jet fighter-inspired start button. Although it’s not the most practical interior, it is certainly the most cheerful. The infotainme­nt system isn’t very intuitive, the rotary knob used to control it is placed quite awkwardly, the ergonomics can be questionab­le, and there’s a lot of hard black plastic used throughout the cabin. And yet it still manages to make you smile.

Driving dynamics

What you’ve heard about Minis is still true: They are ridiculous- ly fun to drive and make you feel all kinds of cheeky while behind the wheel. I’m a big believer that cars don’t need to have tons of horsepower to be a lot of fun — they need to be engaging and communicat­ive, and Mini nails it with this hatchback. Heavy and communicat­ive steering and a stiff, playful suspension make even a short jaunt to the store a reason to act a fool. The suspension helps the Mini handle like a sports car, but might be too stiff for some folks during the day-to-day commute. The payoff in driving dynamics is 100 per cent worth it in my books, however.

What about the l ittle engine?

This entry-level Mini is powered by an itsy-bitsy turbocharg­ed 1.5-litre three-cylinder motor with 134 hp and 162 lb-feet of torque. This engine is perfect for the two-door with peak torque coming online at 1,250 rpm. That means you can get to the fun sooner! The engine is also surprising­ly smooth for something so small, and it doesn’t even get too noisy at speed.

The only downside of this little engine is that with a manual transmissi­on, you can’t be lazy with it. The transmissi­on requires a lot of shifting to keep the engine in its happy place, so you just can’t chug up a hill in second or make a convincing pass in fourth or fifth. But what’s the fun in that? The fact that it makes you work also makes it somewhat rewarding.

An excellent manual transmissi­on

It’s been a goal of mine to teach my boyfriend how to drive stick. I tried to teach him once on my 10-year-old Volkswagen, and he hated it. I convinced him to try again with this six-speed manual Mini, because it is one of the most forgiving manual cars I’ve ever used. Besides having a very engaging and communicat­ive clutch pedal, the Mini also has a hill holder so you don’t have to worry about rolling backwards into the car behind you or frying your clutch trying to make it up an incline. The shifter’s throws are also intuitive, and he didn’t put it into the wrong gear very often, even though the shift pattern hadn’t become muscle memory yet.

The best part? I didn’t have to teach him to heel-toe (I’m not that good at it anyway) because the manual Mini comes standard with automatic revmatchin­g downshifts. This is the most brilliant improvemen­t to the manual transmissi­on since a hill holder. Automatic rev-matching downshifts makes you feel like such a good driver, and I don’t care what the snobs say. I love this feature. I find a perverse pleasure in remarkably smooth downshifts, but maybe it just makes me feel like a race car driver.

This is all fantastic because a manual transmissi­on makes this car even more affordable, and most other manual transmissi­ons in this price range are truly awful and no fun at all. To have a manual transmissi­on in a car that not only makes the car more fun but is also this technologi­cally advanced is a blessing. If you are new to manual transmissi­ons, this Mini is the perfect gateway into the #savetheman­uals camp.

The verdict

The 2019 Mini 3-Door is a fantastic little runabout with an enormous personalit­y and excellent driving dynamics that no other car it competes with can match.

The fact that all the best characteri­stics are offered in a baselevel car is fantastic, and I’m convinced that this Mini is the best one you can get. While others can be more fun and more practical, they’re also much more expensive, and this affordable two-door is the purest Mini there is. Even without any options, this Mini is fantastic, and that’s usually not the case for base-level cars.

Although it might not be the most intuitive, practical or powerful car in its segment, it stands out by being so darn charming. This car puts a smile on your face, and I think we can all use a bit more of that in our lives.

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JODI LAI/AUTOGUIDE.COM
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