RE: Shed of the Week: Mini Cooper S

RE: Shed of the Week: Mini Cooper S

Friday 15th February 2019

Shed of the Week: Mini Cooper S

Yes, that really is a supercharged Mini in Shed budget. With only one small proviso...



Capital letters are very useful. Without them, it would be hard to start a new sentence, to feel good about yourself when writing down your name, or to shout at somebody on Twitter.

MINI used capitals to distinguish itself from the old 1959 Mini when its new version was launched, to much global ooo-ing and aah-ing, in 2000. Not all of the noises were done with a smiley face, mind. Some, like Shed, wondered where all the interior space had gone, given that the new outfit (BMW, they were called) had had plenty of time to improve on the genius of Issigonis.

Over the course of the following two decades, in a remarkable parallel with his marital life, Shed's feelings toward the MINI softened and then gradually re-hardened as it got bigger. Today's Shed, a 2002 MINI Cooper S, is from his soft time.


Shed remembers folk paying over the odds for the S when it came out. That's because it was quite a tool. S is a capital commonly used in the automotive industry to denote sportiness. In the case of the R53 Cooper S it also meant supercharged, a very satisfactory method for getting 163hp out of a 1.6-litre four.

Our Shed looks like it might be a Chili pack car, which in the UK included front fogs, an interior light package (footwells, reading lights, illuminated vanity mirrors), air-con (manual), 17-inch S-spoke alloys, xenon headlights (the early ones of which were oddly rubbish on main beam, apparently) and Dynamic Stability Control.

The £1,350 Chili pack was so popular that MINI ran out of the alloys (which came with runflat tyres). They had to put out a stopgap Chili-lite pack called Pepperoni which was basically the Chili but with the standard S's 16-inch rims. The ride on those 17-inch alloys was great by the way, especially over washboard roads or Belgian pavé. No, only joking, the ride was rubbish.


Chilis are supposed to have half-leather sports seats with lumbar support and passenger seat height adjustment, but the perches on show here are either sporting an amazing new development in leather-look cloth or they're full leather. Whatever, the point is that packed MINIs weren't short on spec. The bamboozling range and variety of MINI personalisation was one of its unique selling points. You'd be unlucky to spot one identical to yours coming in the opposite direction. Having said that, there was a good general take up of the classy silver/black paint scheme you see here. Nearly 20 years on, the finish on our car still looks more than decent.

There were a few less pleasing bits and bobs with those early MINIs, like transmission issues, power steering motors melting looms and/or whining like a dog caught in a bear trap, steering columns whining even more, and rusting door check and fuel tank retaining straps. MINIs of this vintage also had an odd habit of pulling to the left, which was to do with faulty front struts and turrets. Models specifically from 2002 had valve spring issues, but they should all have been fixed under warranty.

On the positive negative side, so to speak, the troublesome pano roof isn't here to worry you. There is something that might, though. Those of you who naughtily skip straight to the ad without doing the equivalent of eating your greens, i.e. reading this old tut, will have noticed that this car is Cat N.


Here's where capital letters aren't so welcome. Still, you might think that the value-depressing effect of insurance damage categorisation is actually quite a good thing for buyers. An uncategorised Cooper S of this year and mileage would normally be around £2.5k, so the £1,400 being asked for this one represents a grand saving, quite literally.

What does Cat N mean? As you know, the Cat rules were changed last October, when the old categories were replaced by new A, B, S and N ones. Don't bother trying to repair cars in Cats A and B because you won't be allowed to put them back on the road. Cat S is like the old Cat C. A car in this category will have had a noticeable thump, bending or weakening its structure, but not to the extent that it can't be professionally repaired.

Cat N is the one we punters should fear the least. It's the old Cat D, which means no structural damage. In fact, there might not have been much damage at all: what there was may well have been purely cosmetic, but the cost of sorting it out was high enough to generate a thumbs down from the icy-eyed insurance assessor.


Shed reckons that this car probably had its Cat N incident sometime within the last year, because it went in for two MOTs in 2018, and why would you do two MOTs unless you had to? The first in March which it passed with two advisories (minor exhaust leak and wobbly front bumper) and the second (current) one in November. Skimpy service histories are never ideal, but some front suspension rebushing was carried out in 2017 to get it through that year's test, and Shed is further reassured by the £430 pre-MOT service that was carried out last November.

Shame that service didn't manage to fend off the two advisories of slight play in the o/s front wheel bearing and the continuation of the exhaust gas leak. Life with the horribly gaseous Mrs Shed has somewhat inoculated Shed against that sort of thing, so it wouldn't put him off buying a car. Nor would Cat N-ness. But then again, as Shed's Dad said to himself when he saw his son beaming proudly at Mrs Shed as she rumbled gracefully down the full width of the church aisle, fools rush in where angels fear to tread.

Obviously, you need to go into anything like this with your eyes open, and you might think it worth investing some of your savings in an engineer's inspection. If you think you're hard enough, or as brave as Shed, though, here's the ad.


 

 

 

 

Author
Discussion

carinaman

Original Poster:

21,291 posts

172 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
Thanks. Some interesting sheds this year.

howardhughes

1,006 posts

204 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
Wrong front bumper for starters...

Cambs_Stuart

2,868 posts

84 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
howardhughes said:
Wrong front bumper for starters...
Might be a result of the cat N incident.
The dealer has some nice cars on their website (2018 Porsche 911 audi R8 v10 etc). Could be they're just tying to get rid.
Looks like it could be a bargain. Espcially if you could get the dealer to chuck in a warranty for a few months.

aston addict

423 posts

158 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
Great shed article this week, had me chuckling into my old fashioned at the mention of Mrs. Shed’s gasses and walking down the aisle. The mind boggles!

Top quality stuff.

LankyLegoHead

749 posts

132 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
I’ve popped into that particular dealer before. If you enjoy being pushed into the sale of an obviously dodgy motor whilst being called “bruv” every 5 seconds, it’s great.

2smoke

216 posts

111 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
The front bumper doesn't seem to fit so well, perhaps there was front end damage. Not really an issue for shedding around though.

KPB1973

918 posts

99 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
LankyLegoHead said:
I’ve popped into that particular dealer before. If you enjoy being pushed into the sale of an obviously dodgy motor whilst being called “bruv” every 5 seconds, it’s great.
My experience too. I went to see an E92 that was apparently immaculate but had a massive amount of damage to the bonnet.

Nice friendly lads in shiny suits though.

AC43

11,484 posts

208 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
Interesting shed which I want to love but can't quite. I test drove one and after 100 yards and two speedbumps I knew it wasn't for me. Real shame as I love the design and can see the appeal and Ioved everything else about it.

FerdiZ28

1,355 posts

134 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
Good steer these.

Nothing looks more awkward than a man getting out of a mini though.

Ian_C

193 posts

210 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
Tony Middlehurst said:
Yes, that really is a supercharged Mini in Shed budget. With only one small proviso...
It's at ASM?

GranCab

2,902 posts

146 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
A man getting out of a Lotus Exige perhaps ? wink


911stu

643 posts

213 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
I recognise the dealer..... don’t think I’d touch it!!

mooseracer

1,885 posts

170 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
These (not necessarily this particular one) have got to be a smart buy. Good fun to tootle around in and I can't see prices going anything other than up over time.

Butter Face

30,298 posts

160 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
Write off date was 20/02/2018 in case anyone is interested smile

WigWonder79

24 posts

97 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
Got to wonder about a car that has apparently had 11 owners...

robemcdonald

8,784 posts

196 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
I had one of the first of this generation of cooper S. The car cost £17K with the Chilli pack and a few options; Blue and Black leather and a minidisk player. (in case there is any doubt I also had a HD DVD player and my ability to predict the correct future technology is terrible)
I was offered £20K for it by the dealer within a week of picking it up, god only knows what he would have sold it on for. I kept it for a year and sold it back to the dealer for £15K.
I really liked it. I never had an issue with being a man in a mini either. It was best car I ever had for impressing the ladies.
Nice little car.

soad

32,894 posts

176 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
911stu said:
I recognise the dealer..... don’t think I’d touch it!!
Had a quick Google. I'll pass, no thanks.

Frimley111R

15,652 posts

234 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
It's got to be a slight concern if they couldn't even be bothered to fit the right bumper to it!

J4CKO

41,543 posts

200 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
I like that but agree the ride can be challenging.

A colleague has one and its hada few issues, they can get pricey but they aren't too bad for parts and diy if you can wield a spanner. They dont seem to rust much either, brake pipes can be a bit of chore on them, most of its pretty simple though, not a lot of room to play with though.

As for being a bloke and having one, its a smart looking mini in a decent colour not a pink Micra CC, dont miss out on a fun car because of your fragile male ego.

As for the dealer, dotn worry about their suits and colourful street talk, just check the car over and hand over some cash if its ay good, I am sure they wont have made the car go all working class or anything.

These are getting cheap now but I think, at some point prices will firm up, not massively but cant see it dropping any more, the new Mini is getting towards classic age/status, doesnt that make you feel old !

Get a few mods done, track it, have fun, spend lots on petrol !


Halo in reverse

147 posts

107 months

Friday 15th February 2019
quotequote all
11 owners, CatN, spares or repair sale - £1400 is better spent elsewhere IMO