Mini Wagon - R55
Mini Wagon - R55
Author
Discussion

sshenton1975

Original Poster:

791 posts

246 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Good evening all

New shed incoming.......

The continuing rise in fuel prices meant that my better half's Merc ML 350 is getting a bit pricey to run as a daily driver. My wife has a 100 miles round trip 4 days a week which, at 28mpg, was getting a bit wearing......

A little mention of this to me resulted in me looking for fun, frugal run around......

The ML is staying but she wanted something for the commute. It had to be able to fit our two dogs plus a couple of kids when needed!

Ive always liked Minis....I've owned a beautiful R53 in the past, a super modded R56 JCW and finally a petrol R55 - all since been and gone.

I decided to start looking for a diesel R55 Clubman....great fun to drive, very quirky and surprising roomy....

I trawled FB, Autotrader, Ebay for several days. Came close to getting a lightly damaged one on Copart too! Prices for these are all over the place from £500 snotters with broken timing chains up to £5K+ JCW versions.

Eventually, I found something very unusual.....a Hampton edition. This means facelift, limited run, full lounge interior, special paint (Reef Blue), special wheels, great spec - heated seats, cruise, etc.

Guy selling it was a private seller, having owned it for 7 years as a family car and now getting rid due to the immiment arrival of a Polestar. I loved it as soon as I saw it...but it did have issues:
Both front anti roll bar bushes perished.....terrible knocking at any speed
Diamond cut wheels knackered
Rear brakes binding (just had new pads fitted)
Noisy tensioner on cold start (N47 BMW engine)

Long story short - got it for a bargain - £1400

First pics:

Lovely colour



Lounge interior with red piping



First job was to tackle wheels. This is a cheapy car so didnt fancy 400-500 quid wheel refurb so decided to tackle it myself. I've watched plenty of Youtube videos showing how to improve diamond cut wheels with various grade grit sanding followed by polishing

Wheels prior to sanding - pretty knackered - kerbing and lacquer peel



In process



Finished result


Really happy with how they came up! About 30-40 mins of sanding, polishing and then lacquering. Two wheels down, two to go!

Handed the car over to the missus - smiles all round!



Part of the cheapy fleet - R230, R55 and L322 Overfinch - all for about £10K!




Next up was to tackle some maintenance issues.

First, the anti roll bar bushes. The specialists will tell you you have to drop the front subframe down to do this job. Frankly, i was not keen to do this on the drive so set about tackling it differently.
Front wheels off, jacked up, wheel liner out, disconnected ARB from hub, drop tie rods from hub and get a very long 18mm ratchet spanner. You can JUST about undo the front of two bolts holding the bracket over the ARB bushes. ONce undone, I managed to bend the bracket up, slide the bush out and then replace. Challenge was then to bend the bracket back down and refit the huge bolts which screw into the subframe.
First side was about 90 mins start to end. The 2nd side was a nightmare due to seized bolt. Ended up putting lots of heat in the bolt and using a huge piece of pipe on the end of the spanner.....we got there in the end.
Result? No more knocking and fixed for £6 (price of two bushes). Specialist wanted £400+ due to labour charge to drop subframe.

Next rear brakes - the MOT had shown advisories of rear pads so the owner had them changed. God knows you fitted them as when I got the car the brakes were smoking from one side as they were binding. Caliper off only to reveal knackered piston - I suspect whoever changed pads didnt wind the caliper back correctly (it rotates). Long story short - new caliper from GSF, fitted in 30 mins, job jobbed!

Today it completed its first 100 mile round trip at 56 mpg! Its great fun to drive, very darty and very different to the lumbering ML. But its not the last word in refinement....

Im now down a slippery slope as I want it to be near perfect. Both rear doors are rusty but I have found a pair in colour from a breaker.......a trip to Yorkshire is calling!!!

Other points - the N47 likes to rattle its chain on cold start. It runs a oil pressured tensioner which loses it pressure over night. First 2-3 seconds are rattly as the tensioner builds pressure but then it quietens down. I may try to change the tensioner (push in spring type) but is a bastXXard to get to....

Wish me luck!

Ruskie

4,402 posts

225 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Interesting! I am having the same thoughts, and this would be perfect for me and at that price a real bargain.

anomaly

506 posts

198 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Love this! We have an r55 Hampton Cooper S as a dog car. The back seats are permanently folded and it’s perfect for our two Irish Terriers. As you say, they’re great fun to drive, look great and have a high spec. We’ve been unlucky with reliability though. The timing belt slipped on ours at less than 40k miles and caused quite a bit of damage. I suspect your diesel is a better bet. Enjoy!

Here’s ours:

21TonyK

13,068 posts

234 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Nice job on the wheels OP, they are a million times better.

On the ARB bushes, did you have to fully remove the bolts on the front to get the bushes out?

Tempted to order one of these if it can be done without dropping the subframe.


sshenton1975

Original Poster:

791 posts

246 months

Thursday
quotequote all
21TonyK said:
Nice job on the wheels OP, they are a million times better.

On the ARB bushes, did you have to fully remove the bolts on the front to get the bushes out?

Tempted to order one of these if it can be done without dropping the subframe.

hey buddy - that is EXACTLY the spanner I bought! Works a treat!
Yes, bolt has to come all the way out. You then need to bend the bracket up to about 45 degrees. Provided you disconnect the ARB from the drop link on the hub, you can then pull the whole bar and bush out of the bracket and then coax it off of the bar.
Then use silicon grease on the new bush and push it back into place.
To get the bracket back down, I put a bar horizontally across th front of the bracket and pulled down on the bar.
You have to pull the bracket down (with pry) whilst you put the bolt back in
Then tighten bolt and it all pulls back into place
No need to drop the subframe!

CoolHands

22,586 posts

220 months

Thursday
quotequote all
got that very cheap. You can change the tensioner but could probably do with the whole timing chain kit if you have the skills and time, at some point.

21TonyK

13,068 posts

234 months

Thursday
quotequote all
sshenton1975 said:
21TonyK said:
Nice job on the wheels OP, they are a million times better.

On the ARB bushes, did you have to fully remove the bolts on the front to get the bushes out?

Tempted to order one of these if it can be done without dropping the subframe.

hey buddy - that is EXACTLY the spanner I bought! Works a treat!
Yes, bolt has to come all the way out. You then need to bend the bracket up to about 45 degrees. Provided you disconnect the ARB from the drop link on the hub, you can then pull the whole bar and bush out of the bracket and then coax it off of the bar.
Then use silicon grease on the new bush and push it back into place.
To get the bracket back down, I put a bar horizontally across th front of the bracket and pulled down on the bar.
You have to pull the bracket down (with pry) whilst you put the bolt back in
Then tighten bolt and it all pulls back into place
No need to drop the subframe!
I saw this method described on another mini group, sounds like I'll spend a couple of hours loosening everything up next week. Got two R56's which could both do with new ARB bushes all round.

CoolHands

22,586 posts

220 months

Thursday
quotequote all
Did mine the correct way wink



Did take me about a week though

Mr Tidy

30,008 posts

152 months

Thursday
quotequote all
It looks fantastic, especially the interior, and the OJ+H looks very happy so that's a winner!

But having had a BMW 123d with the N47 engine and reading all the horror stories about them when I still had it I'd want to do something with a noisy cam-chain sooner rather than later.

I sold mine. laugh

Bobberoo

44,905 posts

123 months

Yesterday (13:35)
quotequote all
Great little car the R55, I've had mine since September 23, a lot of fun to drive!!
Here's mine.

21TonyK

13,068 posts

234 months

Yesterday (20:00)
quotequote all
OP, be interested to hear how your chain plans work out. I have an N47 Cooper and the chain is on its way out and an engine out chain swap is not realistic on a 14 year old car.

danb79

13,158 posts

97 months

Yesterday (20:19)
quotequote all
Reading this thread has got me looking at Clubmans now and the 2.0 JCW version biggrin

They're lovely motors; my Mum's got the BR Green EV Mini and it's a great motor and goes like stink hehe

This ones local enough to me for me to go across and have a look

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/406865377729