Bussey Vehicle Leasing: All makes of Car and Commercial vehicle leasing in Norwich, Norfolk, Ipswich, Suffolk, Cambridge and Cambridgeshire.
Car leasing search Car leasing search and car leasing browse by car manufacturer Van and commercial vehicle leasing search Van and commercial vehicle leasing search and commercial vehicle leasing browse by van manufacturer

Contract hire in
Norfolk, Suffolk &
Cambridgeshire

t. 01603 909 968

Car leasing search
List all car makes
Commercial vehicle leasing search
List all commercial vehicle makes
Leasing and contract hire for all makes of cars and commercial vehicles in Cambridge & Cambridgeshire, Norwich & Norfolk, and Ipswich & Suffolk. Car and Commercial Vehicle Leasing covering Norfolk, Suffolk, and Cambridgeshire... Search for Car Leasing and Commercial Vehicle Leasing offers online...
HOME
CONTACT US
CAR LEASING
COMMERCIAL LEASING
WHY BVL
5 POINT PROMISE
ULTIMATE ARRANGEMENT
MAINTENANCE
BiK TAX AND CO2 DATA
TRAVELLING ABROAD
DRIVER GUIDE
TESTIMONIALS
ROAD TESTS
MOTORING ADVICE
INDUSTRY NEWS
  Car Leasing: Select
  Manufacturer...
   Alfa Romeo Leasing
   Aston Martin Leasing
   Audi Car Leasing
   Bentley Car Leasing
   BMW Car Leasing
   Cadillac Car Leasing
   Chevrolet Car Leasing
   Chrysler Car Leasing
   Citroen Car Leasing
   Daihatsu Car Leasing
   Daimler Car Leasing
   Dodge Car Leasing
   Ferrari Car Leasing
   Fiat Car Leasing
   Ford Car Leasing
   Honda Car Leasing
   Hyundai Car Leasing
   Jaguar Car Leasing
   Jeep Car Leasing
   Kia Car Leasing
   Lamborghini Leasing
   Land Rover Leasing
   Lexus Car Leasing
   Lotus Car Leasing
   Maserati Car Leasing
   Mazda Car Leasing
   Mercedes Leasing
   Mini Car Leasing
   Mitsubishi Car Leasing
   Nissan Car Leasing
   Peugeot Car Leasing
   Porshce Car Leasing
   Proton Car Leasing
   Renault Car Leasing
   Rolls Royce Leasing
   Saab Car Leasing
   Seat Car Leasing
   Skoda Leasing
   Smart Car Leasing
   SsangYong Leasing
   Subaru Car Leasing
   Suzuki Car Leasing
   Toyota Car Leasing
   Vauxhall Car Leasing
   Volkswagen Leasing
   Volvo Car Leasing

ROAD TESTS: Mini Cooper-S

Mini Cooper-S

The original Mini is a true British icon. Like the VW Beetle, it brought motoring to the masses. Simple, tiny yet deceptively spacious, fun to drive, and ridiculously affordable was the recipe. I could write all day about the achievements (and pitfalls…) of the old Mini, but that would be rather missing the point…

If you want a car along the lines of the classic Mini, then buy a Ford Ka… honestly, as a modern interpretation of the theme the Ka is a close as it gets. But if you are looking for a well built, fun and funky fashion trinket, the new ‘king-size’ Mini could well be your bag…

The new car has carried on the cult following of the old one, with 6 month waiting lists at one point. Whether you like the retro-modern style or think of it as a poor pastiche to the original (to be honest I was in the latter camp), it still is unmistakably a Mini, with the wheel at each corner stance and cheeky detailing scattered everywhere.

The Cooper-S adds a dose of menace to the cutesy standard car, with a subtly sporting body kit, a choice of arch-filling alloys, big bonnet scoop, and twin exhausts. The dainty simplicity and function-over-form feel of the original is certainly a thing of days gone by!

It is of course, a much bigger car, though still not as long as say a Ford Fiesta. The car is quite wide, which results in plenty of shoulder room front and rear. The back seats are a little cramped (although this has been improved with recent revisions) and as for the boot, well, you would struggle to keep a cat in their let alone swing it.

To specify a Cooper-S properly you need to spend around £19000, with the ‘Chilli’ pack at £2020 being essential. This includes Air-Conditioning, front fogs, trip computer, leather steering wheel, mats, and bi-xenon headlamps amongst other features. The Mini certainly isn’t cheap anymore. However, residual values are higher than anything else in its class, which makes the Mini a much more chirpy proposition (as long as you don’t go silly with the spec) and excellent value to Contract Hire. 

So it’s no longer simple, it’s deceptively cramped, and expensive to buy. If this car isn’t about affordability or practicality, what is it about?!

Well, two things I think- the aforementioned fashion, and secondly, fun. I realised the new Mini’s sense of spirit when I first drove a basic, no frills, wheel-trimmed, Mini One a couple of years ago, and driving this new, turbocharged, fun-filled Cooper-S reinforced that.

Whether you go for the basic 95 pint-size pony 1.4 Mini One, or the 175 force-fed crazy horse Cooper-S (or, for that matter the Cooper-S ‘Works’ with an extra 13 gees-gees) you get the engineering expertise of none other than BMW. The Munich legends certainly know a thing or two about making ‘the ultimate driving machine’, something that is noticeable very quickly when driving the Mini.

Sit in the seat. Everything feels right. All controls instantly at hand, nice chunky steering wheel, good seating position, and a good view out of the near- vertical screen. There certainly is so much more chic to the interior, especially compared to the bargain-basement feel of one of the Mini’s rivals, the Clio Renaultsport 197. Retro details abound, gorgeous chrome toggle switches, aluminium or piano black finishes (an extra £40 but well worth it) and a huge central speedo the size of a dinner plate (a bit naff!). The plastics are good, and the fit and finish seem generally up to scratch, although the 7000 (probably hard-driven) mile car I tested had a very annoying creak somewhere in the rear. The big, heavy doors shut with a solid thud.

The old Cooper-S had a supercharged engine. The new 1.6 is turbocharged. Without getting over-technical and boring you, where the old engine needed to be worked hard to extract the performance, the new one provides bundles of torque at all revs (torque being the kind of acceleration that pushes you back in those figure hugging sports seats).

This makes it flexible when driving around town (something missing from the aforementioned rev-happy Clio), but willing when out on the twisty country roads driving in the fashion of the legendary Paddy Hopkirk (Google him).

This should be really called ‘the ultimate flying machine’, because that is exactly what it is. The engine reminds me of a Trebor extra strong mint… very small but blimey it can blow your socks off! It has so much acceleration, in any gear, at any revs, you soon click through the six gears… BMW say that 60 should appear on the dinner-plate in just 7.1 seconds, and it feels every bit as quick as quick as this claim.

The engine sounds a little muted from inside, although wind down the window (electrically of course – leave keep-fit windows to the old Mini!) and you are treated to a bassy bellow on hard acceleration and pops and crackles from the twin centre-exit exhaust on the over-run. Apparently there is a louder, freer flowing ‘Works’ exhaust system available for all you boy and girl racers…

Driven in a more sedate manner, the car is pretty quiet and refined, with the exception of quite a bit of tyre noise, particularly for the rear passengers.

So it goes well and sounds nice, but what about when you get to a corner? The view through that letter-box windscreen allows you to point the stubby little nose exactly where you want it, the steering responds positively and once pinned to your chosen line generally feels steadfast. There is little body roll, although even on the 17 inch wheels the ride is on the bearable side of firm.

One complaint I had however, was torque-steer. Particularly on changing cambers and over bumps under power, the steering pulls and tugs like an angry Jack Russell. For £115 you can specify a ‘Limited Slip Differential’ which in my opinion should be standard, and is an essential if you are buying a Cooper-S. This shouldn’t be a problem on the other models.

All Cooper-S’s come with a ‘Sport button’ as standard, which gives the throttle and steering a little more response, my advice would be to keep this on all the time. It doesn’t compromise smooth driving at all, whereas some of the systems I have used in other cars make the throttle so sensitive that it makes every attempt at a subtle get away look and feel like you are doing a grand-prix start.

For a hardcore hatch the Cooper-S should still be reasonably easy going on your wallet. BMW are putting a huge amount of effort into ‘Efficient dynamics’ (Munich speak for saving the planet). The target for this is improved CO2 emissions, increased mpg and reduced weight. To you and I, the buying public, this basically means cheaper road tax and smaller fuel bills. The Cooper-S gently puffs out 149g/km of CO2 (compared to the 190g/km of the similarly engined Vauxhall Corsa VXR) and sips from the fuel tank at a rate of 45.6mpg on mixed driving (Corsa: 35.8). So this little rocket will certainly look after your pocket. 

I was sceptical before I drove the Mini, I thought it was completely form over function. But driving it revealed a depth of talent that runs so much deeper than mere style. It can truly mix it with the best hot hatches, and the Mini name and image will always have people more impressed when they ask you what you drive. ‘I drive a Vauxhall Corsa’ somehow doesn’t quite have the same appeal…! 

The best word to describe the Cooper? ……………….Super!


Mini Cooper-S

Lease the Mini Cooper-S

Previous Road Test
Next Road Test 
Back to Road Tests

BUSSEY VEHICLE LEASING - design spacer

Alfa Romeo
Aston Martin
Audi
Bentley
BMW
Cadillac

Chevrolet
Chrysler
Citroen
Daihatsu
Daimler
Dodge

Ferrari
Fiat
Ford
Honda
Hyundai
Isuzu

Iveco
Jaguar
Jeep
Kia
Lamborghini
Land Rover

LDV
Lexus
Lotus
Maserati
Mazda

Mercedes-Benz
Mini
Mitsubishi
Nissan
Peugeot

Porsche
Proton
Renault
Rolls-Royce
Saab

Seat
Skoda
Smart
Ssangyong
Subaru

Suzuki
Toyota
Vauxhall
Volkswagen
Volvo

Search for:
Lease Cars

Vans and Commercials

New Ford Cars | Used Cars | Ford Parts & Accessories | Ebay Parts Shop | Ford History in Norfolk | Busseys Family | Contact Us

© Copyright Bussey Vehicle Leasing 2006.
Car and Commercial Vehicle Leasing and Contract Hire in
Norwich & Norfolk, Ipswich & Suffolk and Cambridge & Cambridgeshire.

design by astutech | powered by wordserver



powered by wordserver website design software
website design software