2007 MINI Cooper: Offical Images

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BMW has released some photos of the 2007 Mini Cooper at the automaker's Driving Dynamics Workshop press preview event. The car is still wearing mild disguise, but it appears to be a production-ready version of the car. The car will be offered in MINI Cooper (120 hp) and Cooper S (175 hp) guise. Both cars are powered by a 1.6 liter four-cylinder engine. The MINI Cooper reaches its peak 120 horsepower output at 6,000 rpm and peak torque of 118 lb-ft at 4,250 rpm. It features Valvetronic technology for an added edge over the previous model. The turbocharged Cooper S makes 175 hp at 5,500 rpm, and peak torque of 177 lb-ft comes at just 1,600 rpm. While the 2.76-inch-longer exterior is mostly evolutionary, BMW describes the new interior as "revolutionary." However, no images of the cabin have been released. For increased safety, curtain airbags now protect all passengers.

FOR ALL OF THE PHOTOS, PLEASE CLICK HERE

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Sweet, I like it. Now I thought the engines were going to be co-developed with FIAT, so I'm not sure what the connection has been there. Hmmm, I still like it. Too bad there hasn't been any word on a US Diesel model...
 
Excuse my poor vision but is all they've changed is the lights?

I think M5Power is going to come in here and start ranting about facelifts and year alterations etc.
 
And the headlights, they're more flush with the car, more like the New Beetle's if you know what I mean. Other than that theres not much different.

It doesn't look as good as the current one.
 
I'm wondering why the grille at the bottom is taped off on all of the cars pictured...
 
Highlights:

A bit bigger inside & outside (e.g. 60mm longer)

Even greater Go-Kart-Feeling.

Evolutionary exterior, revolutionary interior with much better materials and fit & finish - with greater individual upholstery & trim options.

MINI Cooper: 1.6L I4; Valvetronic; 88kW (120HP at 6,000rpm); 160 Nm at 4,250rpm (140Nm available from 2,000rpm on), 12.5% better mileage (EU-test).

MINI Cooper S: 1.6L I4; twin scroll turbo; direct injection; 128kW (175HP at 5,500rpm); 240Nm from 1,600rpm - 5,000rpm; 260Nm at "overboost" at acceleration; no turbo lag.

Both engines having alu block & cylinder head. Both 84x77x85.5mm with 1,598ccm.

Euro4 eco standard met.

Mini One & Diesel coming later.

Both Cooper models have 6-gang manual gearbox.
6-gang automatic (with 5 clutches) optional - with Comfort & Sport modes. Available with steering wheel shifting paddles.

Cooper S coming with mechanical "Super LSD" differential.

EPAS - electro-mechanical Electric Power Assisted Steering" standard.
"Sport" button (ala Z4) for even greater steering & throttle response.

Reworked alu chassis for even greater driving dynamics.

Free sport suspension set-ups optional for Cooper & Cooper S.

Standard: 6 airbags, run flat tyres, ABS, EBD, CBC, ASC+T, DSC+ (with Hill Assist & Braking Assist), TDC, Chip-key & Start/Stop button.

autocar review
What is it?
Where have you been? This is the second-generation model of one of the most successful cars of recent years. And despite the mildly modified looks, it really is new. Indeed, one senior BMW engineer told us that the second-generation Mini is effectively a new car. Although the bulkhead and floor structure have been carried over from the current Mini, virtually everything else is new or substantially modified, from the front bumper to the rear lights.
We spent the day with new Mini Cooper S at Holland’s coastal Zandvoort ex-F1 circuit, which swoops and switches through the sand dunes. Although we couldn’t try the car on the open road, the high-speed track work and low-speed handling course told us a lot about it.
Starting at the front, the Mini has got a brand-new drivetrain. There’s a new all-aluminium 1.6-litre engine, co-developed with Peugeot-Citroen, which has direct injection and a twin-scroll turbocharger. The upshot is a maximum output of 175bhp and 177lb ft of torque at just 1600rpm. Under hard acceleration an overboost system delivers a brief 192lb ft slug of torque.
All Minis get a six-speed manual Getrag manual box and the option of an efficient six-speed automatic transmission. Paddle shifters will be an option and the CVT box has been killed off. The Cooper S is also available with a limited-slip differential.

What’s it like?
As soon as you pull on the distinctive door handles and the frameless window jumps down half an inch, you get on overwhelming sense of just what BMW has done with the second-generation Mini.
The whole car exudes a sense of polish and precision that the original just didn’t have. True, the first car – mostly developed by the old Rover Group in the UK – had immense character and endearing eccentricities, but it was also riddled with quirks and outright faults.
Settle in behind the wheel, and although the interior of this pre-production car is disguised, improvements are clear. The driving position remains straight-ahead excellent, and there’s noticeably more room in the footwells.
The seat is a massive advance: wide enough, sensibly bolstered and fitted with slickly smooth adjustment. The door trims on our car seem showroom-ready, are very well made and fitted with stylish aluminium trim.
The new dashboard uses the same design theme as before. The central speedo is even bigger and houses (rather small) fingertip controls for the radio and trip computer. The new climate control panel is also small and uses distinctive rocker switches for fan speed and temperature control.
To fire up the car, you push the large, circular key into a slot in the dashboard and press a button.
All the controls, indicators, rocker switches, handbrake and the control weightings are immediate step forward over those in the old car.

On the low-speed handling course (which was broken up enough to imitate British roads) the Cooper S demonstrates much greater civility than the outgoing car. The ride is very compliant, and at low speeds the steering is beautifully weighted, allowing the car to be threaded around with tremendous accuracy.
Others complained that the (electrically-assisted) steering lacked real feel and it is certainly much lighter at the rim. This, says BMW, is because many female drivers requested it. More sporting drivers might lament the loss of effort required, but sheer accuracy allows the Mini to be placed with outstanding fingertip ease and it’s quick enough, at just 2.7 turns lock-to-lock.
The sheer comfort of the standard-issue Cooper S is also a surprise, even though all three Mini models sit as low to the ground as regulations allow. The re-designed front suspension and taller suspension towers have allowed a vital extra 8mm front wheel travel. That and the lighter engine transform the front-end ride.
It’s a quick car without doubt, but the smoothness of the engine’s response and near-seamless integration of the twin-scroll turbocharger makes the new Cooper S less of an event than old model. The old supercharged car might have wheezed and rattled a bit, but it felt alive. The new Cooper S is smoother, more refined and very quick, but it does lack the visceral thrills of the old car.
From what could be gleaned at Zandvoort the Cooper S is easy and satisfying to drive quickly. It’s also refined, and excursions onto the rumble strips failed to encourage a single rattle or squeak in the pre-production cabin. If there is one outstanding complaint, it is that while bouncing off the red line there is an irritatingly characterless blare from the new engine.

Should I buy one?
Until the official launch in October, we won’t know for sure, but on first impressions the new Mini is every bit as good as the last one and then some. It’s much newer than it looks, better built, more comfortable, more refined, and slicker in everyway.
 
It’s still not a Mini in terms of size, wideness and length.
 
Looks sleeker with the updated grill and headlights.
 
Will they succeed in lowering the manufacturing price? That was a really large issue when the "original" Mini was out. I know that there was an article published in EVO a couple of years ago describing BMWs tactics to turn more profit with the newer Mini (the third one?), but I cannot remember anything that they talked about except eliminating the second colour for the roof (avoiding another trip to the paint room), which it looks like hasn't been taken care of.
 
I like the car, but the biggest problem I've had with it has been the fact that it was always a "premium" alternative to the Golf or Civic in the US, and the fact we don't have a MINI dealer here in Grand Rapids.

...Why oh why aren't they selling them in Grand Rapids???
 
They do sell MINIs in Michigan, but all of the dealers are in the Detroit Metro Area. Otherwise, people from Grand Rapids have to go to the Chicagoland area to pick one up, and that just isn't feaseable, IMO.

I'd say MINI is missing out on a HUGE market here. Given that we would be the mid-point between Chicago and Detroit, IMO, it makes a ton of sense to have a MINI dealer here. A friend of ours nearly bought a Cooper when they first came out, but after learning that the local BMW dealer cannot work on the Cooper, she decided to get a Japanese car instead.
 
Car still looks great! I wasn't sure about the changed grille and headlights at first, but I think it will grow on me. No doubt it will sell and keep its value well again no matter how ugly it is, though...
 
More news. Explains why some things were done to car styling:
Autozine.org
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New Mini Preview
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BMW has previewed the forthcoming second generation New Mini to motoring journalists in Holland. From the pictures, we can see the car is still disguised with rubber tapes around the lamps and front bumper, but everything else is exposed. Contrary to rumors, the new Mini kept the same compact size as the first generation. In particular, its wheelbase is unchanged. Overall length is increased by only 70mm due to the longer front overhang necessary for improved crash protection.

As BMW's survey found customers love the styling of the current Mini very much, chief designer Gert Hildebrand did not alter the exterior design much. The only obvious changes concentrate on the front end. Disappointingly, its pronounced bonnet (necessary to comply with pedestrian safety law) adds some bulkiness to the appearance. Besides, it lost the classical chromed grille thus has little in common with the original BMC Mini. It seems to me that this design is not as successful as the previous Frank Stephenson design.

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The chassis of Mini is mostly unchanged. It continues to use the outgoing car's MacPherson struts suspensions up front and "central-arm rear axle" rear suspensions, although the latter gets aluminum longitudinal arms to save 9 kg of unsprung weight. The standard suspension setting is more comfort-biased, but the new Mini also offer an optional sport suspension setting. Those tested the car reported improved ride comfort and refinement, and improved body control in the sport setting.

Following the trend of econo small cars, the steering system of new Mini has switched to electrical assistance. The merit is reduced fuel consumption and the ability of variable weighting. When Sport mode is selected by the driver, the steering weighs up (together with quicker throttle response). On the downside, some journalists complained it has become too light to delight female drivers, while the electrical assistance robs it some road feel.

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Biggest change to the car is undoubtedly the engines. Gone is the Chrysler-built Tritec engines, replaced by a real BMW-engineered engine. It is built at its UK Hams Hall plant and will be offered to PSA's cars like Peugeot 207 from this fall in order to share development and production costs. In exchange, PSA will offer the new Mini its HDI turbo diesel engines.

Back to the new petrol engine, it has a normally aspirated version (for Cooper) and a turbocharged version (for Cooper S). Both displaces 1598 cc, with aluminum head and block, twin-cam 16 valves and new fuel saving technologies such as electric-motor-driven water pump and oil pump (like the Magnesium straight-6 engine). The engines are made very compact and light - around 10-15kg lighter than the Tritec engines. They are also a lot of frugal.

The naturally aspirated Cooper engine has Valvetronic and Bi-Vanos to save fuel and improve torque curve. While its 120hp and 118lbft output seems not a big improvement from the old engine's 115hp and 110 lbft, it produces much stronger torque at lower rev. For example, at 2000 rpm there is already 103 lbft available.

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The Cooper S engine has switched from supercharger to turbocharger. Some journalists said it lost the aural thrill of the old engine, but it is undoubtedly more refined and flexible. The turbocharger is twin-scroll type, i.e., separate the exhaust flow from two groups of two cylinders to prevent from back pressure interference thus improve turbine response. Moreover, the turbo is small (it delivers only 0.8 bar) to reduce turbo lag. Unlike the naturally aspirated engine, it does not have Valvetronic, while Bi-Vanos is replaced by the intake-only Vanos, but it has added direct injection like the new 335i engine. This allows a very high compression ratio at 10.5:1 to improve low end response (old engine: 8.3:1). The engine produces 175hp at 5500rpm (old: 163hp at 6000rpm) and 177 lbft at 1600-5000 rpm (old: 155 lbft at 4000rpm). Furthermore, a short time overboost can even increase the torque output to 192 lbft.

Both engines mate to a standard Getrag 6-speed manual gearbox or optional 6-speed automatic gearbox, the latter should be a vast improvement from the outgoing CVT. Cooper S can be optioned with a mechanical LSD.
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^ Good post. Explains things a bit more...
 
Hmmm, I definately like the previous model more. I think I might try to put the chrome grille back on it in photoshop and try to make it look a bit better :p
 
I can see it, and I don't like it. The Mini is one car that doesn't benefit from the damn pedestrian crash laws...

Oh, for BMW to have plunked down the extra change for a popping bonnet so they could have kept the smaller front end!
 
Yeah, I don't understand why they felt the need to change the hood design. American magazines had said the clamshell design was costing BMW too much money, thus the change to a conventional hood.
 
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