PH Heroes: Mini JCW GP Works
The new one looks the part but the first-gen Works GP was the real deal
Period reviews of the car - the celebratory run-out model for the first-generation BMW Mini - typically enthused over the driving experience but pouted about the chintzy looks and the £22K asking price. Six years later a new GP has arrived, sticking to the same, stripped-out two-seat formula but now costing almost £29,000. That makes the original car look like a bargain, but how does the drive stands up?
Combat ted?
I borrowed BMW UK's own 11,500-mile timewarp example for the drive home from 2012 Paris motor show to find out. Sitting defiant among the concrete columns and florescent light of an underground car park, the GP bristles with immediate purpose. The bodywork addenda and red accents at once faintly ridiculous and endearing.
This is no teddy bear underneath the combat gear. We're all familiar with the GP's boxy spoiler, lightweight 18s and strut bar substitute for the back seats; what's less well remembered are the bespoke aluminium control arms at the rear - gorgeous, and plainly visible through those wheels. It was assembled by Bertone in Italy, and although its 218hp was only 8hp up on the existing JCW variant, it was still more than contemporary Mini Challenge racing cars.
Arrested development
With total weight savings over 50kg (where buyers didn't option back the no cost air con), a proper limited slip differential, 10mm ride height reduction and fettled engine, it has all the makings of a proper pocket rocket. Starting it for the first time in a subterranean car park, the aural impact is every bit as bold as its optical clout - the whine and fizz from the supercharger seems more superbike than supermini, and it's almost impossible to resist indulging the snap of the delivery to exacerbate the way the exhaust merrily crackles and pops.
Giddy already, it's out into the daylight and straight onto one of those mad multi-lane French roundabouts with the right of way issues. Although painfully aware I'm in a vaguely irreplaceable car (in terms of mileage, anyway), the GP's compact size and assertive, snarling responses make short work of out-muscling the native commuters: who is this foreign idiot in his shouty, aggressive-looking little right-hand drive car? Eyebrows are raised, passers-by gawp - it really does arrest the attention.
Trust issues
Approval swells as the journey progresses. The gearbox is light but precise, the clutch less so. The engine feels absolutely immense for just 1.6 litres - BMW's own work on the intercooler and engine-mapping adding to JCW's existing upgrade of the 'charger, intake and injection.
With a new 7,150rpm rev limit (peak power comes at 7,100) and a meaty 184lb ft at 4,600rpm, it feels good for its claimed 149mph. The suspension is remarkably supple. The Recaro seats fabulous. I want one.
Back in the UK it begins - albeit slightly - to unravel. I'm finding it hard to trust the front end. Anticipating something sharp and pointy and tenaciously adhesive, compared to the best current hot hatches the GP doesn't quite transparently deliver. Could be the tyres or the geometry on this particular car - though it's also clear the diff does much better with the electronic traction gizmos disabled.
You wanna piece of me?
2,000 were built, and although 449 were originally destined for the UK, according to GPMini.net only 437 actually found homes here; judging by the PH classifieds you'll be needing at least £11K to join the ownership ranks. The imminent arrival of the new version is unlikely to diminish these values. The two are similar in character, but from my own brief squirt in the new GP2, all that clever aero can't quite make up for the missing mechanical diff, and the 1.6 turbo can't match the supercharged engine for charm.
And that's what really makes the MINI GP (version 1) a PH Hero: it might not be the fastest thing on four wheels, nor the hardest, but it's absolutely bursting with attention to detail and charisma.
MINI COOPER S WITH JOHN COOPER WORKS GP KIT
Engine: 1,598cc supercharged four cylinder
Transmission: 6-speed manual, front-wheel drive with mechanical LSD
Power (hp): 218 @ 7,100rpm
Torque (lb ft): 184 @ 4,600rpm
0-62mph: 6.5 seconds
Top speed: 149mph
Weight: 1,195kg (EU)
On sale: 2006
Price new: £22,000
Price now: £12,000
Agree about a standard 'S', and these just turn me cold.
Sorry but I couldn't own something that looks so st, irrespective of its dynamic capabilities; if I wanted something with 2 seats I'd have an S2000 roadster or a Coxster.
I imagine the JCW GP Works is fairly fun to drive but I'd rather have my far slower, older and cheaper car than be seen in one
And though I like the GP with it's supercharged 1.6 and LSD and all that made it a good car ( nearly changed my Clio 200 for one) I couldn't live with those looks
And though I like the GP with it's supercharged 1.6 and LSD and all that made it a good car ( nearly changed my Clio 200 for one) I couldn't live with those looks
Examples
I had £7k for little fun hot hatch 2009 - Clio Trophy (does it need explaining)
Wanted something a bit bigger and newer in 2010 when Jnr came, but still fun - Clio 200. Looked at MCS, Corsa VXR and segment above (Astra, Golf, Megane), but nothing beat it for outright fun within the parameters I needed.
Wanted a cheap track car - Clio 172 for £1500. Again at price nothing came close for fun, though 106 GTis came close. Plus cheap parts.
Wanted something a bit different as a weekend car - Clio V6. Had lots of choice, Elise/Exige, Z3MC, Z4MC, Boxsters etc. Clio has incredible noise, not a fiddly/leaky as an Elise, not as ruinous on servicing as the BMWs or Porsche and hopefully not too bad in the depreciation stakes.
Anyway, I digress. I think the GP is deserved as a hero car. I define 'hero car' as one I would take a sceond look at when it drove past which would happen with a GP
Alas, it doesn't quite stack up to my old R26.R, which dynamically has the GP licked, which probably isn't suprising to people here. In terms of straightline speed, it's probably very close, but of course it's not what these cars are about.
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