RE: Mini Electric | UK Review

RE: Mini Electric | UK Review

Friday 28th February 2020

2020 Mini Electric | UK Review

The battery-powered Mini goes mainstream - but is fitting in with the crowd what buyers really want?



Be in no doubt: the Electric is a hugely significant car for Mini. At its UK launch the assembled journalists were told in no uncertain terms that it is the most important moment for the brand since the entire relaunch in 2001. Why? Because it's the culmination of more than a decade of research, stretching back to the original Mini E trial and incorporating lessons taken from seven years of BMW i3 sales (the car with which this Mini shares a powertrain). Already 70 per cent of the UK's pre-orders are from buyers new to the brand (with one in eight new Minis now expected to be Electric), and the car is even a big deal for Mini Oxford: it's now the first factory in the BMW Group to facilitate the production of ICE and BEV cars on the same line. (Note the cradle that holds the power unit under the bonnet, an alteration to ensure the robots used to engines can easily install the EV powertrain.) This is a huge undertaking for Mini.

More than that, the Electric arrives at a critical time. Its maker celebrated 60 years of the Mini brand last year, which is the sort of heritage an EV maker would sell its Silicon Valley soul for. And, in case you hadn't noticed, electric vehicle registrations are soaring. 2019, for example, was the first year that BEVs outsold PHEVs in the UK, a trend that's set to continue in the 2020s. As charging times fall, ranges climb and EV options increase, further substantial growth is inevitable.

So, into that mix comes the Mini Electric. A car that, to all intents and purposes, is just a Mini; in very stark contrast to the Honda e a cute and almost twee creation at odds with the rest of the range, the Electric is just a Mini. The T-shaped battery back has been fitted so that interior space is identical, the digital display is as we'll see in the GP, the driving position feels the same and the dash is unmistakably Mini. For the sake of familiarity it's great, because this new car requires no acclimatisation - although you do wonder if buyers might be expecting a little more for their government subsidy?


It's a similar story outside. While 'Electric Yellow' accents can be optioned, they aren't mandatory; leave those boxes unticked and, badges aside, it'll appear just like any other Mini. Although personalisation remains a significant theme, it's never going to have the instantly recognisable appeal of several big-name bespoke EVs - think i3, e, Zoe and so on. That said its unassuming nature may well appeal to as many as it puts off - the perks of an electric vehicle in a car that looks like any other could be exactly what's needed. It certainly did the Volkswagen e-Golf no harm.

A brief refresh on the vital stats. The Mini Electric is now a 1,365kg car, 145kg more than an automatic Cooper S, producing 184hp and 199lb ft from an electric motor, itself powered by a 28.9kWh battery. As mentioned, it's borrowed from an i3 S, though with modifications for this front-wheel drive installation. It can reach 62mph in 7.3 seconds, ahead of a 93mph top speed. The WLTP range is rated at 145 miles and, via a fast charger, that can be 80 per cent replenished in 36 minutes. The charge socket underneath the filler cap (in exactly the same place as for petrol) can accept AC and DC chargers, with a full 100 per cent juice from a wall charger in just over four hours. Or 12 hours if plugged into the socket by the microwave...

How does all this translate on the road? By and large, absolutely tremendously. For all the spiel about retaining traditional Mini driving characteristics, this Electric really does feel like a Cooper S to drive. Indeed, on certain scores it's better: a slight rearward nudge in weight distribution (and less weight on the nose) aids the sensation that it's all pivoting around the driver, the centre of gravity has dropped 30mm and the new traction control - directly incorporated into the motor control unit - makes the old system seem dim-witted.


It isn't perfect, though. The weight gain inevitably takes its toll on the ride, the Electric thumping and fidgeting where a standard car wouldn't, the steering feels to have gained some unwanted stickiness and the E doesn't have the turn-in bite of a conventional Cooper. That could be attributed to the tyres. Whatever the case, the Electric remains great to drive, more accurate and satisfying than any rival currently on offer; it scoots and darts around bends eagerly, imbued with very nearly all of the Mini agility and friskiness we've come to expect. Very precise pedal responses help in this respect, although a middle setting for the regenerative braking - where just the throttle can be used to slow down - might help, with one a little ineffective and one fairly abrupt. Otherwise, the Electric drives like a Mini - which should be regarded as a wholly good thing.

Shame about the sound, then. Granted, complaining about no noise in a Mini EV is like whingeing about too much at a gig - because you rather signed up for it - nevertheless, it remains a little dispiriting for a brand where noise has always been so important. As someone who drove around with rear seats always down and the rudest of rude exhausts always at noisy in a Works 210, aural excitement really is vital to the Mini sense of fun. That it is missing here does detract from the experience. A racket has been part of the Mini charm for more than half a century; it's the sort of emotional, historical baggage an i3 or Honda e doesn't carry. Now, obviously, it can't be entirely replicated here, though some noise of something going on would be welcome - the Mini's electric whine is even done quite meekly.

The flipside of all that is the most serene Mini progress - ride notwithstanding - that there must have been in the 21st century. It also means almost tranquil progress on dual carriageways and motorways, too, though that's inevitably where you'll watch the range plummet. To its credit, the Mini Electric showed 143 miles of range when started, against a WLTP claim of 144 miles. Charge and range readouts are crisp and clear, so any panics about insufficient range could only be levelled at the driver. We all need a recalibration when it comes to EVs, too; while a 70-mile range in a combustion engined car would have you searching out a forecourt, here it means there's still half a 'tank' remaining. Plus, it should be noted that all the research suggest that the typical customer does a handful of miles every day, meaning weekly charges for a Mini E looks likely. Which is no great hardship.


Despite all that, there is no escaping the fact that similarly priced cars - the e-208, Leaf, Zoe and so on - will get you further. Mini's counter argument is that its battery and motor design are more efficient, plus the fact that smaller, lighter batteries - as Honda claimed with the e - make a smaller and lighter car that takes less time to charge. Given the dynamic benefits wrought from doing this in the Mini's case, that looks like a wise decision. After all, who wants a car that can go further if it's lardy and no fun to drive?

In addition, Mini has made concessions to range anxiety, charging concerns and environmental impact. An alliance with BP Chargemaster means a wallbox can be fitted at your home for £450 and a subscription to its public chargers will cost the same each month as your Netflix account. A deal is in place with Ovo Energy to offer customers renewable electricity to charge their Mini Electric, and 97 per cent of the battery is recyclable. Add into that the fact that the i3's components are lasting better than expected - BMW anticipated a seven-year battery life at launch, where it now looks like 10 - and at least some of the usual concerns appear to have been addressed. There's even a Mini Electric Hub, which will tell you how often a Mini Electric would need a charge given your typical commute, where the nearest charger is and how long it would take. The idea, in principle, is to make the transition from petrol to electric as painless as it possibly can be.

Which, in truth, is what the Mini feels like as a product. It's damn near everything we've come to admire about an F56 Cooper S - the quality, the impish sense of fun, the performance - that just happens to be powered by electricity. One suspects that retaining so much of what characterises a Mini in a car driven by volts and not V-Power is not the work of a moment, and the seamlessness deserves praise. And given that Mini customers - by definition - have already accepted previous compromises in space and (arguably) value, the car's price and range limitations are likely to be palatable. Subscribing to people's expectations is the Electric's speciality; so much so that this might very well be the zero-emission supermini to convince the sceptics - it's really that good, and that familiar. A multitude of future group tests will be needed to sort out the segment's final pecking order. But don't be surprised if the Mini does rather well in them.


SPECIFICATION - MINI ELECTRIC
Engine:
32.6 kWh battery (gross figure; 28.9kWh net), single electric motor
Transmission: Single-speed automatic, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 184
Torque (lb ft): 199
0-62mph: 7.3 seconds
Top speed: 93mph
Weight: 1,365kg
MPG: 144 miles WLTP range
CO2: 0g/km (at tailpipe)
Price: £27,900 (Mini Electric Level 1, without Government grant; Level 2 £30,900, Level 3 £33,900)









Author
Discussion

Zenzz

Original Poster:

66 posts

105 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
Nice motor 😆😆⚡️

Krikkit

26,527 posts

181 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
So it's this or the Honda in the same class was stylish mid range EVs. I'd have the Honda.

dobly

1,187 posts

159 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
Would have been nice to see a cutaway showing the location of the battery vs. the location of the ICE fuel tank, for example.
Saying that the T-shaped battery back has been fitted so that interior space is identical doesn't help much.

cerb4.5lee

30,614 posts

180 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
I really enjoy driving my F56 Cooper S because I find it punchy and great fun. Usually I struggle to embrace electric though...but I have to admit that this really intrigues me.

tgx

147 posts

150 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
Wonder how hard it would be to retrofit this drivetrain into an R50.

NDNDNDND

2,022 posts

183 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
Aww, got my hopes up when you said i3 drivetrain - for a moment I thought we might be looking at a RWD mini!

Now wouldn't that make it an enticing prospect compared to the petrol-powered version...?

Mouse Rat

1,812 posts

92 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
I like this but would rather the e golf.

But at last we're starting to get normal cars that are EVs rather than the niche oddball leafs, zoes, Teslas, i3s etc.

Otispunkmeyer

12,593 posts

155 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
Like this.... Clubman version?

GTEYE

2,096 posts

210 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
Looks interesting- I think it could do rather well. A bit more conventional than an i3 might be just what the market wants.

Evanivitch

20,078 posts

122 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
Jumping on the battery longevity comment before someone else does:

BMW said:
"Consistent vehicle range confirms the quality of the high-voltage battery.

Experience obtained by customers who use a BMW i3 from the first years of production shows that even with the original battery, the achievable vehicle range decreases only marginally even after high mileage. This validates the BMW Group’s expectations in regards to the quality of the high-voltage battery unit. Not one BMW i3 high-voltage battery has had to be replaced due to premature ageing to date. As the battery’s potential is far from being exhausted when reaching the previously quoted 100,000 kilometres, the BMW Group has now extended its European warranty for the battery in new BMW i3 vehicles even further. The maximum mileage over a warranty period has been extended to 8 years and/or 160,000 kilometres."

Battery cells for the i3 are supplied by Samsung SDI, while the liquid-cooled battery packs are produced by BMW itself in Germany.

BMW i3
BMW i3
Additionally, BMW has gained experience with reusing older battery packs from in electric cars in energy storage systems. So far, batteries for those early projects were from pre-series vehicles and BMW i3 retrofit program in Europe.


"The BMW Group has also developed solutions for re-using batteries that are no longer suitable for demanding use in automobiles. After a long life in cars they can still provide valuable service as stationary energy storage units. High-voltage batteries from pre-series vehicles and those handed in by customers participating in the BMW i3 retrofit programme are used on the grounds of the BMW plant in Leipzig as storage units for the green power produced there by means of wind turbines."

RobDickinson

31,343 posts

254 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
Evanivitch said:
Jumping on the battery longevity comment before someone else does:

BMW said:
"Consistent vehicle range confirms the quality of the high-voltage battery.

Experience obtained by customers who use a BMW i3 from the first years of production shows that even with the original battery, the achievable vehicle range decreases only marginally even after high mileage. This validates the BMW Group’s expectations in regards to the quality of the high-voltage battery unit. Not one BMW i3 high-voltage battery has had to be replaced due to premature ageing to date. As the battery’s potential is far from being exhausted when reaching the previously quoted 100,000 kilometres, the BMW Group has now extended its European warranty for the battery in new BMW i3 vehicles even further. The maximum mileage over a warranty period has been extended to 8 years and/or 160,000 kilometres."

Battery cells for the i3 are supplied by Samsung SDI, while the liquid-cooled battery packs are produced by BMW itself in Germany.

BMW i3
BMW i3
Additionally, BMW has gained experience with reusing older battery packs from in electric cars in energy storage systems. So far, batteries for those early projects were from pre-series vehicles and BMW i3 retrofit program in Europe.


"The BMW Group has also developed solutions for re-using batteries that are no longer suitable for demanding use in automobiles. After a long life in cars they can still provide valuable service as stationary energy storage units. High-voltage batteries from pre-series vehicles and those handed in by customers participating in the BMW i3 retrofit programme are used on the grounds of the BMW plant in Leipzig as storage units for the green power produced there by means of wind turbines."
yep i3 packs are aging very well like most liquid cooled packs


the mini looks good for what it is, I dont think its any lighter than the competition though but it has its whole look/style thing going on if you like that.

The mini/zoe/e208/ecorsa market is going to be a hot one.

The honda-e is cute but way off the pace in terms of cost/range.

KJH

156 posts

204 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
This is a reskinned I3s model.

Jex

838 posts

128 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
There's a bit of a waiting list.

Luke.

10,995 posts

250 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
KJH said:
This is a reskinned I3s model.
It's not. Shares battery and some tech. But that's about it.

RemarkLima

2,375 posts

212 months

Thursday 27th February 2020
quotequote all
Mouse Rat said:
I like this but would rather the e golf.

But at last we're starting to get normal cars that are EVs rather than the niche oddball leafs, zoes, Teslas, i3s etc.
But have you driven an e Golf? We did as a potential replacement for the i3 and it was do dire, slow, poor range, the lightest steering known to humanity and more expensive... So, I was hoping that the ID3 would be out, but still not there.

I'd not say the egolf is a serious proposition at all!

spikyone

1,454 posts

100 months

Friday 28th February 2020
quotequote all
This might work as a commuter car, but the range is pitiful for anyone that lives in the real world where you need to make longer journeys that aren't practical by public transport. That range wouldn't get me from my home to where my parents live, so in reality I'd need it to be a second car.
Even the e208 only has a range of 211 miles. Throw in a hot/cold day where you need to use the air con or heater, and I wouldn't be surprised if a 150 mile journey became a nervy affair in the Peugeot.
I don't buy the idea that it's fine because "70 miles is half a tank" either - 70 miles is 70 miles, no matter what your overall range is, and you're currently going to be much closer to a petrol pump than a fast charger.

For £25k I'd rather have a hot hatch with a 400-500 mile range and not need something else for non-commuting miles. It'd probably be 200kg lighter and much better to drive too.

hammo19

4,993 posts

196 months

Friday 28th February 2020
quotequote all
Will replace our Cooper S in 2 years time. Perfect as a second car for nipping around and restricted to home charging but will need something else for those 500 mile round trips we do.


ghost83

5,478 posts

190 months

Friday 28th February 2020
quotequote all
A regular cooper s can be had from around 20k I believe I’d rather save the 7-10k personally and have the regular car

Filibuster

3,156 posts

215 months

Friday 28th February 2020
quotequote all
ghost83 said:
A regular cooper s can be had from around 20k I believe I’d rather save the 7-10k personally and have the regular car
But these come with a better spec! Like for like, the EV is slightly cheaper than the petrol one.

As a F56 Cooper S owner, I'd love one of these. But unfortunately I have no possibility to charge it....
Also since I don't commute by car, and sometimes doesn't need a car for a whole week!
This means that mostly, also the Mini gets used for trips on the weekend of 100+miles. Also, while the holiday home is just within reach for the Mini, since there are again no charging capabilities, it's also not suited for that....

If I'd be commuting by car, I'd have one in a heartbeat! Bravo Mini, well done!!

BaronVonVaderham

2,317 posts

147 months

Friday 28th February 2020
quotequote all
Hideous, expensive and pointless POS.