Japanese Car Zone
    

Go Back   Japanese Car Zone > Other Forums > European Cars > BMW > BMW AG (Other) > MINI > Clubman



Welcome to Japanese Car Zone.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will be able to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own pictures and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please,
join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 10-01-2007, 04:11 PM   #1
Advocate
 
far2000's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Swaziland / South Africa
Posts: 658
Thanks: 402
Thanked 336 Times in 169 Posts
far2000 is a jewel in the roughfar2000 is a jewel in the roughfar2000 is a jewel in the roughfar2000 is a jewel in the roughfar2000 is a jewel in the rough
Post Preview road test: Mini Clubman station wagon

- ONLY REGISTERED AND ACTIVATED USERS CAN SEE ALL LINKS - CLICK HERE TO REGISTER
- ONLY REGISTERED AND ACTIVATED USERS CAN SEE ALL LINKS - CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

Transmission: Six-speed gearbox, front-wheel drive .
Performance: 200km/h, 0-100km/h in 9.8sec, 5.5 litres/100km official average
In SA: First quarter of 2008.

By John Simister

Mini too small? You need a bigger one. But would it still be a Mini? Dimensionally, not really.

Mini design chief Gert Hildebrand dismisses this notion, claiming that because it measures under four metres in length, the new Mini Clubman is still a small car
The Clubman is a Mini staton wagon, square of tail, longer in the wheelbase, with van-like rear doors.

Small, maybe, but not exactly mini. Never mind. It's still clearly a member of the Mini family and that's enough.

The Clubman is a Mini station wagon, square of tail, longer in the wheelbase, with van-like, vertically-split rear doors.

Just like the original Mini Countryman and Traveller, but without their timber mock-framework. But why "Clubman", when the concept car shown two years ago at the Frankfurt show bore the Countryman name?

It turns out that " Countryman" is licensed to someone other than BMW, and "Traveller" was too suggestive of commercial travellers. Hardly the right image.

So Clubman it is, the name used on the curious, square-nosed alternative Mini whose decade-long lifespan was comfortably bracketed by that of the cuddlier original
The door-catches are electric, and the doors are helped open on gas struts.

There was a Clubman estate, too, initially with an unpleasant fake-wood appliqué along its flanks. British Leyland was very keen on saving money back then.

A Mini estate. The problem with the hatchback Mini is there isn't enough room in it. It's hard to see where the space has disappeared to – my daughter's little Peugeot 106 has much more space than a Mini – but the rear legroom is minimal and the boot no better.

The Clubman fixes this. Two adults can travel in the back without their knees buried in the back of the front seats, and behind the individually shaped back seats is a properly usable boot.

It has a false floor with a hidden space underneath (provided you order your Mini with one of the Pepper or Chili equipment packs), and with the seats folded there's a long, flat load bay level with the rear opening.

Round the corner

Ah yes, the rear opening. See where the hinges are? They're round the corner from the doors, so the entire rear corners of the Clubman open up, leaving the tail lights where they were and a light-shaped hole in each door.

This complication is partly for practicality (it lets the load opening be as wide as possible), partly for elegance and partly for reasons of legislation (the rear lights must remain fully visible with the doors open).

The door-catches are electric, and the doors are helped open on gas struts. It's all a long way from the original Minivan.

And now, the Club Door. This has proved controversial, because this abbreviated rear-passenger door (there's only the one) is mounted not on the left side, as you would expect it to be, but on the driver's side.

At this point we can huff and puff and be annoyed that this British-built Mini, evolved from a British automotive institution, has suffered a Germanisation too far at the hands of its BMW creators.

But to have mounted it on the left side would have demanded a redesign of the fuel-filler system, besides which, making different versions for left-and right-hand-drive markets would have been too expensive.

Ditto fitting rear passenger doors to both sides for all markets.

Sling your bag

Anyway, says BMW bullishly, it's great to have the door on the right. You can open it and sling your bag behind the driver's seat, and much of the time when you're loading and unloading rear passengers you're not parked by the kerb anyway.

Whatever, the rear-hinged Club Door is a very solid construction, as it needs to be given that it incorporates the latch mounting for the front door and the driver's upper seat-belt anchorage.

With the Club Door open, that belt is pulled just far enough away not to trip up those entering the rear seat.

Is the Clubman as cute as a regular Mini? You could hardly call that bluff tail beautiful, its bluffness accentuated by the contrasting colour of its frame.

It will always be either black or silver, to choice, but never the same as the main body although it is allowed to match the roof.

Fascinated apprentices

Beautiful or not, the example I was about to borrow from BMW GB's headquarters was surrounded by fascinated apprentices as I drew near. It was the first new Clubman they had seen.

It was also in fairly typical specification, with the Pepper option pack, 16" rims and a 1.6-litre, 89kW, non-turbo engine.

Our photographs show a Cooper S, but there's little visual difference apart from the S's fake air-scoop in the bonnet.

The nominal price of a Clubman Cooper 1.6 is £14 235 (R198 000), but this car's options took it to £16 435 (R229 000) – again, typical for a new Mini because most wear a hefty load of options.

It's longer and heavier than the hatchback, two things which you would expect to chip away at the Mini driving feel in which agility is key.

But the suspension is altered to suit, and apart from the fact that the view in the interior mirror has a vertical bar the driving experience is much as normal. There's the usual strong grip, instant "pointability" and firm-but-bearable ride.

I hadn't tried a Mini with this 1.6-litre engine before, although I know it from various Peugeots that also use this BMW-designed unit.

It's matched here to a very smooth-shifting six-speed gearbox, all gears of which are needed to stoke the engine into action, upon which it feels quite eager and emits a sporty engine note. Pull from low speeds is lacking, though.

Efficient Dynamics

New for Minis, and now fitted as standard, is a version of BMW's Efficient Dynamics package which dramatically improves fuel economy. It helps the Cooper D diesel version to a CO2 figure of only 109g/km, and even the petrol Cooper manages an impressive 132g/km.

There are two elements. The first is regenerative braking, in which the alternator (which charges the battery) is engaged only when slowing down or braking.

Thus the engine has to work less hard and the act of charging contributes to the braking effect.

The second is a stop-start system, which cuts the engine when the Mini is stationary and in neutral provided the engine is warmed up, the battery is properly charged and it's not too cold outside.

Pressing the clutch pedal starts it again, instantly and smoothly.

So that's the Clubman, a Mini with more room and more usefulness. The Club Door is a bit of a gimmick but it's also a talking point.

Good car? Undoubtedly. Better than a more conventional, five-door, supermini-based station wagon car that's almost certainly cheaper?

Practically, no. But you'll have more fun owning it. -
far2000 is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote

Reply

Bookmarks

Tags
clubman, mini, preview, road, station, test, wagon
Search Cloud
"2009 porsche 911 turbo" "cars as fashion" "hannes oosthuizen" "johan wejedal" "loic kernen" 2008 honda accord 2009 audi r8 2009 wrx 3mturing 600 swb amazing car amg+w124 antivirus astra sedan audi a3 audi a4 b8 s line audi a5 audi a8 audi on gallardo wheels audi rs audi rs 8 audi rs4 b5 audi rs6 audi rs6 new audi rs8 audi s3 audi s5 benz 230e w123 bmw 3 series bmw 333is bmw 502 for sale bmw e30 333is bmw sport bugatti c class w204 umi navigation car zone car zone japan carzone carzone japan carzone tuning cl63 amg ferarri wallpaper fiat sedici flewitt coachbuilders fortuner ganizonda hamann m6 hanomag rl20 zu verkaufen honda honda accord coupe 2008 honda civic honda civic mugen rr honda fit http://www.japanesecarzone.com/q7/11986-audi-q7-got-tangled.html interior designer bmw f01/2 inurl:thread funkey itzkirbphotography.com japanese car zone japanese carzone japanesecarforum.com japanesecarzone.com koenesig koenesig ccx lambo's lamborghini alar lamborghini embolado lamborghini muira lamborghinis lexus rs400h vs mercedes ml320 cdi m6 maxima interior mazda5 mercedes 600 swb mercedes c tenorit mercedes c126 amg mercedes pre-save inactive mercedes w112 heckflosse mercedes w204 umi new audi rs6 nissan gt-r merc1 pagani zonda vin paganikon phaeton playboy mustang rav4 rs4 rs6 rs8 seat leon fr1 skyline gtr skywarim drive tiguan toyota venza volt concept vw torsional rigidity nm/degree w126 w204 interior w204 palladium silver w211 e320 faults www.japanesecarzone.com

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:39 AM.