Evo

AC Schnitzer JCW

Can more power and torque along with a cha ssis upgrade add some vitality to the Mini JCW?

- Photograph­y by Dave Smith Bob Harper (@m5bob)

YOU CAN’T HELP BUT FEEL A LITTLE sorry for Mini’s engineers. With the first generation of the BMW Mini – a car that is now 18-years-old – they created a classic. British-built, encapsulat­ing the style and classless appeal of the original but with a funky, retro-modern twist. Brilliant handling, class-leading dealer back-up, unimpeacha­ble image. It won prizes and plaudits and sold by the bucketful.

Since then they’ve been asked to do it all again – twice. To reimagine the Mini, to retain that funky character and those best-in-class dynamics, but in bigger and bigger packages. There comes a tipping point where size and weight start to count against a car, and for those who place involvemen­t above all else, we may have reached that point as far as Minis are concerned. With 228bhp the John Cooper Works should be a proper hot hatch, but it’s not as sharp as it could be. So, can the ministrati­ons of the aftermarke­t tuners spice up the JCW?

AC Schnitzer has been fettling BMWS for over 30 years and making Minis go faster since BMW reintroduc­ed the model. With success, too, having held lap records at both Hockenheim and the Sachsenrin­g for roadlegal Minis. The example we have here is based on the JCW, but Schnitzer also offers upgrades for the Cooper S that can bring it up to John Cooper Works power levels.

For the JCW, the company adds a new ECU (£2441) to bring power up from 228bhp at 5200rpm to 261bhp at 5500rpm, while torque swells from 236lb ft at 1250rpm to 287lb ft at 4500rpm. If that makes the tuned car look like its torque peak has taken a wander up the rev range, a glance at the torque curve demonstrat­es that it in fact already has the standard car beaten at 1250rpm, and the curve just swells from there. A performanc­e advantage is claimed, the quoted 0-62mph time with the auto ’box, as fitted to our test car, trimmed by 0.2sec to 5.9sec. To cover the 80 to 180kph increment (50 to 112mph) it takes just 10.4sec rather than 12.9. Certainly worthwhile gains.

There’s more to this car than a performanc­e upgrade, but the body has more or less been left alone, gaining just a simple front splitter (£400). However, the arch-filling 7.5 x 19-inch AC1 alloys (£2208) may let the cat out of the bag that this isn’t a standard Mini. The ride height is also lowered, by 20-25mm, thanks to a spring kit (£313), and aural stimulatio­n is taken care of by stainless steel centre and rear exhaust sections (£1726).

While we’d generally opt for the manual, the choice of the automatic transmissi­on

doesn’t hamper the performanc­e. The car feels as quick as the figures suggest and on dry roads there’s little in the way of torquestee­r. The exhaust features an active flap, and when closed at a cruise it’s subdued, but open it up and it delivers a surprising­ly bassy and tuneful soundtrack, with plenty of crackles when you come off the throttle as the unburnt fuel explodes in the pipework, giving a rousing impersonat­ion of distant small arms fire.

The progressiv­e-rate springs give a surprising­ly compliant ride, coping well with compressio­ns and crests, and while the majority of the roads we come across are typically smooth German tarmac, it does cope well with less-than-perfect sections. The chassis tweaks have reduced body roll, and turn-in is impressive, with little in the way of understeer, which allows you to get on the throttle early and put the extra torque to good use. It feels more lithe and more on its toes than the standard car, perhaps not staggering­ly so, but the bottom line is it’s very entertaini­ng and a great companion for a back-road blast without compromisi­ng the normal car’s usability.

The thorny subject of cost is often where tuner cars can fall down, though, and for a complete conversion as here, AC Schnitzer UK will charge you over £8500. On a new JCW, that’s going to take the total price beyond £30k, which is a lot of money in anyone’s book. You don’t have to fit everything, though – you can cherry-pick the parts you want and we’d certainly be looking at the performanc­e upgrade, springs and exhaust. And with F56 JCWS now available from around £16k secondhand, you can make a good case for carrying out the upgrades on a used example.

Ultimately, the AC Schnitzer JCW is a better propositio­n than the standard car – faster and with a little more verve. It’s not a night-andday character change, but it is a worthwhile one, all the same.

‘It feels more lithe and more on its toes than the standard JCW’

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 ??  ?? Left: lower stance and 19-inch wheels mark out the AC Schnitzer JCW. Above right: £1726 exhaust upgrade makes its presence felt
Left: lower stance and 19-inch wheels mark out the AC Schnitzer JCW. Above right: £1726 exhaust upgrade makes its presence felt

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