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Performance Mini Magazine No.64 Low Rider Back Issue

English
42 Reviews   •  English   •   Aviation & Transport (Automotive)
I’ve recently got back from road testing the latest Gen 3 Hatch and first
impressions are good. Apart from the obvious design cues that have been followed over from the R56, under the skin it is a completely new and thoroughly up-to-date car. The techy geeks among you will absolutely love the new rendition, which is packing more toys than Hamleys to keep you totally connected with the real world. BMW
has, without a doubt, gone back to the drawing board with this new model and enhanced it to create what truly is the MINI of the future.
Of course it will sell; the Hatch is MINI’s most popular model – 22,682 were registered in the UK last year – but there will always be the die-hard Gen 1 and Gen 2 owners who prefer their model of MINI for a whole host of reasons and there’s nothing wrong with that. Would I personally consider buying a Gen 3 MINI Hatch? Judging by pictures of the JCW
Concept, I’d hold out for this super-tuned model. From face value, it looks as striking as any GP special edition. You can read our full report on the twin turbo Gen 3 1.5-litre Cooper D and 2.0-litre Cooper S from p27. As well as the publicity surrounding the all-new Hatch, we were given a teaser of what the new Clubman will look like, just before its
world premiere at the Geneva Motor Show. It is still somewhat of a niche model in the current seven-car lineup, slotting into fourth place overall of UK total registrations in 2013, just marginally in front of the Paceman. With MINIs getting bigger by the minute and catering for almost every type of lifestyle change, I wonder where the Clubman now fits into this. The latest F56 Hatch has grown in length and offers more legroom, headroom and boot space, while the 2015 five-door F55 version will offer even more, since it will share the same platform as the new Clubman. Then of course you can’t rule out the spacious and popular Countryman, which is a hit with growing families.
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No.64 Low Rider I’ve recently got back from road testing the latest Gen 3 Hatch and first impressions are good. Apart from the obvious design cues that have been followed over from the R56, under the skin it is a completely new and thoroughly up-to-date car. The techy geeks among you will absolutely love the new rendition, which is packing more toys than Hamleys to keep you totally connected with the real world. BMW has, without a doubt, gone back to the drawing board with this new model and enhanced it to create what truly is the MINI of the future. Of course it will sell; the Hatch is MINI’s most popular model – 22,682 were registered in the UK last year – but there will always be the die-hard Gen 1 and Gen 2 owners who prefer their model of MINI for a whole host of reasons and there’s nothing wrong with that. Would I personally consider buying a Gen 3 MINI Hatch? Judging by pictures of the JCW Concept, I’d hold out for this super-tuned model. From face value, it looks as striking as any GP special edition. You can read our full report on the twin turbo Gen 3 1.5-litre Cooper D and 2.0-litre Cooper S from p27. As well as the publicity surrounding the all-new Hatch, we were given a teaser of what the new Clubman will look like, just before its world premiere at the Geneva Motor Show. It is still somewhat of a niche model in the current seven-car lineup, slotting into fourth place overall of UK total registrations in 2013, just marginally in front of the Paceman. With MINIs getting bigger by the minute and catering for almost every type of lifestyle change, I wonder where the Clubman now fits into this. The latest F56 Hatch has grown in length and offers more legroom, headroom and boot space, while the 2015 five-door F55 version will offer even more, since it will share the same platform as the new Clubman. Then of course you can’t rule out the spacious and popular Countryman, which is a hit with growing families.


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Performance Mini  |  No.64 Low Rider  


I’ve recently got back from road testing the latest Gen 3 Hatch and first
impressions are good. Apart from the obvious design cues that have been followed over from the R56, under the skin it is a completely new and thoroughly up-to-date car. The techy geeks among you will absolutely love the new rendition, which is packing more toys than Hamleys to keep you totally connected with the real world. BMW
has, without a doubt, gone back to the drawing board with this new model and enhanced it to create what truly is the MINI of the future.
Of course it will sell; the Hatch is MINI’s most popular model – 22,682 were registered in the UK last year – but there will always be the die-hard Gen 1 and Gen 2 owners who prefer their model of MINI for a whole host of reasons and there’s nothing wrong with that. Would I personally consider buying a Gen 3 MINI Hatch? Judging by pictures of the JCW
Concept, I’d hold out for this super-tuned model. From face value, it looks as striking as any GP special edition. You can read our full report on the twin turbo Gen 3 1.5-litre Cooper D and 2.0-litre Cooper S from p27. As well as the publicity surrounding the all-new Hatch, we were given a teaser of what the new Clubman will look like, just before its
world premiere at the Geneva Motor Show. It is still somewhat of a niche model in the current seven-car lineup, slotting into fourth place overall of UK total registrations in 2013, just marginally in front of the Paceman. With MINIs getting bigger by the minute and catering for almost every type of lifestyle change, I wonder where the Clubman now fits into this. The latest F56 Hatch has grown in length and offers more legroom, headroom and boot space, while the 2015 five-door F55 version will offer even more, since it will share the same platform as the new Clubman. Then of course you can’t rule out the spacious and popular Countryman, which is a hit with growing families.
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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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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.64 Low Rider.

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