No idea. I thought £6k at first but then
£10,000
That's a complete guess! Lovely car.
No idea. I thought £6k at first but then
£10,000
That's a complete guess! Lovely car.
Nice! Must be comfortably north of £15k with that mileage.
I nearly bought an R53 last year, owned by a D-list celeb as a Monaco run around. 5k on the clock - he wanted way over the odds though.
How many miles has it done in the past 12 months out of interest?
78 miles. However, 12 of those was me picking it up and dropping it off again.
Nice.
I had one in BRG but without the wide boy arches.
I miss everything about it. Except the brakes. Oh, and the rust. Mine had done about 22k miles and was around three years old when I sold it.
A friend of mine bought one last year, a 1997 R reg with 358 miles on it. Paid £21500.
Yes, just 358. It was originally bought by a local guy for his daughter, who apparently didn't like it, so parked it up in one of his garages (heated of course). The chap passed away last year and the car was one of a few curiosities auctioned off by his widow and daughter. I bid myself, but bailed out after it went above £10k. The whole idea of owning a classic mini (IMO) is to enjoy it on a nice day. This particular car was more valuable because it has never been used. If you start using it, the value starts to drop. I figured a proper old Mini Cooper would be a better proposition.
130 thousand miles,
Mrs R's car, owned from new since August 1997.
This is a 2010 photo, the car is away for new metalwork and a respray at the moment, but should be looking good when it returns.
Lovely car....enjoy it!
Mini fan here too..... 1963 Mk1 850 Crayford... (Nearest to a factory convertible until the Rover Lamm in 90's) as came with a BMC warranty to the owner....
Ours was in Mini magazine July 2016 issue (and May Practical Classics too)
Been in family since 1972 and I passed my driving test in it... Less than 21 Crayfords left (& some of those just body shells not OTR)
Not for sale either and I was offered very silly money for it last year....
Passed my test in a Mini, but never really saw the appeal of something with lumps of rubber for suspension for daily use
A doddle to drive, though, so great for the driving test!
I can recall banging my head on a friend's Mini roof as we went along a fairly smooth road 4 up, back in my youth!
M.
My first car in 1976 was a 1968 850 mini it was quite a laugh to drive having just passed my test but not quick enough to make
it dangerous. Then about 3 years later had a Downton tuned 1275 GT, that was a great car.
Then in 1999 went and test drove a new one and couldn't believe I had even fitted into the other 2, and I haven't put on that much weight.
Don't you miss it stopping when it rained or water filling up the footwells? How about the suspension which the only practical use for was churning butter on bumpy roads?
They really were not very good cars but, they were great fun to drive - in the same way that surviving an accident was fun!
Loved them
A guy that I'm friendly with sold his to Tom Hartley Jnr earlier this year and THJ resold it within hours for his asking price of £44950, a mark up of approx £20k. This one had never been used and had only 'delivery' mileage of 14 or 17. My friend and his two brothers bought one each in 2001 and this one was the last to be released.
You can read about it on THJ's Twitter feed ( around February I think) where he announces that he's just bought the best Mini in the world. He'd actually bought it on a phone call, on the strength of the owners description.
See:
http://www.tomhartleyjnr.com/used/20...r-sale-fxz8916
Last edited by TomGW; 29th July 2016 at 03:05.
I know of two or three of the last Coopers sitting in a farm shed, unused and unregistered and stored in Permabags. Seemed nuts at the time but there you go!
My first one, about every other week it would stop and you had to go round the back and give it a thump underneath just behind the bumper and it was fine (for a while) - fuel pump, could have have fitted a new one but money was very tight back then and only fixed things when it was absolutely necessary.
It also had the sliding windows, plastic string to open the doors and dip switch in the foot well.
Mmmm, Mini Lovers here?
Start watching Bad Obsession Motorsport! Not only this video, but the complete BOM YouTube Channel!
I've been watching Project Binky for the past couple of years, its going to be awesome when finished! Always look forward to the next episode coming out, its one of the best YouTube channels going if you're into that kind of thing!
Indeed - It was a sensible choice (and quite original for the period and, of course, DID bless the Mini with go-kart handling) when cost (low) and size (extremely limited) were constraints, but, even by 1959 standard, it was never cutting edge.
Is Hydrolastic expensive to 'pump up'? I always heard horror stories about Citroen suspension, but we had our old Xantia's done once or twice and it was pretty cheap even when we had the reservoirs replaced.
M
Last edited by snowman; 29th July 2016 at 11:27.
My 1989 60s Cooper S lookalike (!) freshly MOT'd today, AND tentatively on SC as we speak. She just won't give in! A monstrous 43k from new & costs me booger all relevant to the fun value tbh. Everyone should have/had one.
My mate's 1970 MK3 Cooper S also nearing bare metal resto completion so looking forward to that.
Wasn't that expensive but, it was a pain in the neck when it leaked as the suspension was front / rear so a leak meant it leaned over to one side and had no suspension, not great when you were miles from home. The rubber doughnut suspension was far more reliable if not exactly comfortable.