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Performance Mini Magazine No.63 Small Wonder Back Issue

English
42 Reviews   •  English   •   Aviation & Transport (Automotive)
As I write, just a little over 24-hours ago I was on my way to Heathrow airport for a flight to Munich and a drive on to Sölden in Austria, to participate in some ice driver training in a Countryman. Sadly, however, my early morning stint didn’t go to plan as a van driver slammed into the
back of my Cooper S JCW GP as the traffic slowed for the variable speed limits between junction 8 and 9 of the M25. I managed to avoid hitting the car in front, but the initial impact meant the MINI wouldn’t restart. Shock soon turned to terror as I was marooned in the outside lane during rush hour, with no way of getting the MINI across to the hard
shoulder and relative safety. After a somewhat hysterical call to the Police, then my husband and the recovery services, I had to sit it out
and hope that both myself and the van driver behind would not become ‘sitting ducks’ at the worst possible time. Eventually at about 7.30am the Highways Agency brought the motorway to a standstill and then helped
push me across. After being checked over by paramedics and swapping insurance details via the Police, I sat it out with the Highways Officers while waiting for a low-loader. It was then that the friendly Police biker highlighted to me something rather important. The news broke earlier this month that the Highways Agency plans to scrap portions of our
motorway hard shoulders during peak times to help reduce congestion – a scheme known as ‘Smart Motorways’. I can appreciate the need to speed up traffic flow by using the hard shoulder as an extra lane, but going by my own recent personal experience, this is suicide for anyone whose car breaks down or who has been involved in an RTA as there is nowhere to go. But not only that; emergency teams will not be able to use the hard shoulder as a quicker route to get to the scene of an accident.
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Performance Mini

No.63 Small Wonder As I write, just a little over 24-hours ago I was on my way to Heathrow airport for a flight to Munich and a drive on to Sölden in Austria, to participate in some ice driver training in a Countryman. Sadly, however, my early morning stint didn’t go to plan as a van driver slammed into the back of my Cooper S JCW GP as the traffic slowed for the variable speed limits between junction 8 and 9 of the M25. I managed to avoid hitting the car in front, but the initial impact meant the MINI wouldn’t restart. Shock soon turned to terror as I was marooned in the outside lane during rush hour, with no way of getting the MINI across to the hard shoulder and relative safety. After a somewhat hysterical call to the Police, then my husband and the recovery services, I had to sit it out and hope that both myself and the van driver behind would not become ‘sitting ducks’ at the worst possible time. Eventually at about 7.30am the Highways Agency brought the motorway to a standstill and then helped push me across. After being checked over by paramedics and swapping insurance details via the Police, I sat it out with the Highways Officers while waiting for a low-loader. It was then that the friendly Police biker highlighted to me something rather important. The news broke earlier this month that the Highways Agency plans to scrap portions of our motorway hard shoulders during peak times to help reduce congestion – a scheme known as ‘Smart Motorways’. I can appreciate the need to speed up traffic flow by using the hard shoulder as an extra lane, but going by my own recent personal experience, this is suicide for anyone whose car breaks down or who has been involved in an RTA as there is nowhere to go. But not only that; emergency teams will not be able to use the hard shoulder as a quicker route to get to the scene of an accident.


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Performance Mini  |  No.63 Small Wonder  


As I write, just a little over 24-hours ago I was on my way to Heathrow airport for a flight to Munich and a drive on to Sölden in Austria, to participate in some ice driver training in a Countryman. Sadly, however, my early morning stint didn’t go to plan as a van driver slammed into the
back of my Cooper S JCW GP as the traffic slowed for the variable speed limits between junction 8 and 9 of the M25. I managed to avoid hitting the car in front, but the initial impact meant the MINI wouldn’t restart. Shock soon turned to terror as I was marooned in the outside lane during rush hour, with no way of getting the MINI across to the hard
shoulder and relative safety. After a somewhat hysterical call to the Police, then my husband and the recovery services, I had to sit it out
and hope that both myself and the van driver behind would not become ‘sitting ducks’ at the worst possible time. Eventually at about 7.30am the Highways Agency brought the motorway to a standstill and then helped
push me across. After being checked over by paramedics and swapping insurance details via the Police, I sat it out with the Highways Officers while waiting for a low-loader. It was then that the friendly Police biker highlighted to me something rather important. The news broke earlier this month that the Highways Agency plans to scrap portions of our
motorway hard shoulders during peak times to help reduce congestion – a scheme known as ‘Smart Motorways’. I can appreciate the need to speed up traffic flow by using the hard shoulder as an extra lane, but going by my own recent personal experience, this is suicide for anyone whose car breaks down or who has been involved in an RTA as there is nowhere to go. But not only that; emergency teams will not be able to use the hard shoulder as a quicker route to get to the scene of an accident.
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Modern MINI is the only UK-based magazine dedicated to the BMW MINI which is sold globally. Each issue of Modern MINI is jam-packed full of industry news, latest products, road tests, owner’s features, technical articles and all the goings on from the vibrant MINI scene, including up-to-date show reports. Modern MINI: it’s the best way of getting your new MINI fix!

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4.5
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Based on 42 Customer Reviews
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Good

Helpful road tests and a must for any mini fans Reviewed 19 November 2015

Great mag

Really enjoy reading this magazine, my mini magazine works great on my ipad mini too.

Full of great articles and features
Reviewed 15 November 2015

Digital version photos are veeery low quality

I tried a new and modern way of purchase and got digital issue. My overall comment is - this is the last purchase. Text is not a problem, you can zoom in and read without any doubts. The biggest problem are pictures. All pictures are veeery low quality (resolution) and zooming in makes it..... Terrible.. these days with all portable toys this is a big mistake. Poor guality photos will make your purchase useless. Reviewed 03 November 2015

Articles in this issue


Below is a selection of articles in Performance Mini No.63 Small Wonder.

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