BBC Top Gear Magazine

MINI ELECTRIC

Britain’s most iconic small car gets electric power. We’re especially loving the wheels that look like wall sockets

- WORDS JACK RIX PHOTOGRAPH­Y WILSON HENNESSY

How far have electric cars have come in the past decade? No need to answer that – simply refer to the Mini Electric. Both of them. The first, you may recall, arrived in 2008 – a test bed rather than a production car, born into a time when your EV options were a G-Wiz or a well used Sinclair C5. Mini built 500 and leased them to human guinea pigs in the US – the beginning of a data and opinion harvest that would inform the launch of the BMW i family five years later and every electrifie­d BMW since.

Fast-forward 11 years and you might expect performanc­e and range to have grown handsomely, but I’m staring at the spec sheet for the new 2019 Mini Electric, and you’d be wrong: 204bhp (2008) plays 181bhp (2019); the range was 150 miles then, 144 miles now; 0–62mph in 8.5secs in the old one, 7.5secs today. What has changed is price and practicali­ty – the batteries on the old one were, er, chunky. Chunky enough to swallow the entire boot and back seats. The new Mini Electric, with its 32kWh T-shaped lithium-ion battery slipped under the floor is still 160kg heavier than a Cooper S, but you get the same (read: still cramped) boot and rear seat space, and with prices starting at £24,400 (or £299pcm) after the £3,500 government grant, it costs £500 less than an equivalent­ly specced Cooper S, too. This is significan­t.

There’s a reason why there’s an armada of small, affordable, everyday electric cars – the majority with ‘e’ grafted onto their badges – coming our way in the next six months. Stuff like the VW ID.3, Peugeot e-208, Corsa-e and Honda e – y’know, the ones we might actually be able to afford. We’ve reached a tipping point, where battery size and cost has reduced to the point where cars like this, with a little help from Her Majesty’s Government,

“IT’S TAKEN A WHILE, BUT MINI HAS MADE THE SUMS ADD UP”

can be priced in line with petrol or diesel equivalent­s. And because most people with an interest in EVs have been ogling I-Paces, Teslas and e-trons, without the wedge to actually buy one, there’s pent-up demand.

It’s taken a while, then, but Mini has made the sums add up… but only by positionin­g this car carefully. Firstly, you’ll only be able to buy it as a 3dr – Mini’s best-selling body style, fair enough. There will be only one power and performanc­e level – 0–80 per cent top-up in 35mins from a 50kW DC charger, 181bhp, 199lb ft, FWD, totally insignific­ant 93mph top speed, which puts it in the Cooper S bracket for performanc­e. That explains the bootlid’s Cooper S badge (despite it not actually featuring anywhere in the car’s name) and the fake air-scooped Copper S bonnet. Bit of customer hand-holding right there.

Then we come to the WLTP range of 144 miles, only a handful more than the Honda e. Disappoint­ed? I am. I know Mini will tell us that this is meant to be a second car, designed for the urban environmen­t, most of us commute less than 10 miles, blah blah blah. But we are still in the first wave of an electric revolution; buyers need reassuranc­e that they’re not going to be left stranded if they want to venture somewhere further than their office. To me, 144 miles sounds mean, especially when in the real world it’ll be less than that and most of us won’t have the bottle to ever dip below 20 per cent charge. It’s the same thinking as the Honda, of course – fit a smaller battery, and spend the money on stuff that matters, like interior quality and equipment – but when you can have a recently updated Renault Zoe with a 242-mile range for less, or an electric 208 or Corsa with over 200 miles for a couple of grand more, it casts doubt.

The good news is that Mini the brand reaches beyond the realm of People That Like Cars. In a sea of indistingu­ishable grey superminis, it’s the one that stands out, looks different. Your mum couldn’t tell you what the new Polo looks like, but stand on any street corner and she’ll point you out a Mini, no probs. So, little wonder Mini has resisted the temptation to over-tinker with the design. Want a spaceship? There’s already the BMW i3 for that.

Your opportunit­y to make a statement is the optional 17-inch, asymmetric­al Corona wheels, lifted straight from the concept

(anyone else seeing a three-pin plug?). Smaller changes include a new largely blanked-off front grille, protruding by an extra 17mm and striped in Energetic Yellow, although you can switch back to body colour if you suffer from sensitive retinas. The front and rear bumpers are a unique, slippery design to eke out a few extra miles – no splitters or Sport packs here – and you get LED lights front and back as standard. Get your ruler out and you’ll note the car rides 15mm higher than standard

– a necessary evil to fit those batteries in – although extended wheelarche­s disguise the damage.

Inside, it’s the first Mini with a new floating digital instrument screen behind the wheel – something that’ll be rolled out on all its models when their replacemen­ts arrive. A consumptio­n dial, to let you know how leaden your right foot is, sits on the left, battery charge is on the right, and the whole thing is wrapped in an anti-glare coating that, while necessary on a sunny day, is a bit like looking at your vitals through a frosted bathroom window. A mildly different centre console features an electronic handbrake (boo) – a first for the 3dr – while the dashboard houses toggle switches for adjusting the level of brake regen, flipping between Sport, Mid and Green driving modes and turning the traction control off.

Mini is open about this being very much a chassis designed for a combustion engine, modified to make batteries and motors fit… fortunatel­y that made its goal of making it drive as close to a Cooper S as possible infinitely simpler. There are tweaks to the suspension to account for the extra height and weight, and a new ARB system that’s supposedly three times faster than traditiona­l DSC to eliminate wheelspin when you stomp on it at the lights, but the fundamenta­ls are shared.

Frankly, I’m amazed I’ve managed to find 1,000 words to talk about a car that’s familiar in every regard, besides a powertrain transplant. Heck, Mini’s even found a way to build it on the same production line in Oxford as the petrol and diesel versions – marrying the batteries, motor and power electronic­s in the exact same way the engine and transmissi­on meets the chassis. So let’s embrace our sense of wonder for everyday electric cars while we still can; another decade, and they’ll be the norm.

“THE BUMPERS ARE A SLIPPERY DESIGN TO EKE OUT EXTRA MILES”

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 ??  ?? With no engine to cool, why not put your bonnet scoop to use as a nesting box for sparrows?
With no engine to cool, why not put your bonnet scoop to use as a nesting box for sparrows?
 ??  ?? It’s not justj the batteries that have shrunk over the past 11 years – badging is at least 47 per cent more subtle too
It’s not justj the batteries that have shrunk over the past 11 years – badging is at least 47 per cent more subtle too
 ??  ?? Plug in to go from empty to massively smug in just 35 minutes New floating instrument panel provides limited buoyancy in a maritime environmen­t
Plug in to go from empty to massively smug in just 35 minutes New floating instrument panel provides limited buoyancy in a maritime environmen­t

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