Battle of the Hot Hatches: Toyota GR Corolla vs. Hyundai Elantra N

Battle of the Hot Hatches: Toyota GR Corolla vs. Hyundai Elantra N

It seems Hyundai's premiere hot hatch/sedan packs more a punch than the carmaker claims
NASA's Splashdown Safety: Balancing Cost and Astronaut Protection

NASA’s Splashdown Safety: Balancing Cost and Astronaut Protection

Is saving money on splashdown safety the right priority for NASA?
Metal Mayhem: Truck Spill Causes Chaos on Australian Highway

Metal Mayhem: Truck Spill Causes Chaos on Australian Highway

The incident took place during early morning hours in New South Wales, Australia
Revving Through the 80s: Discover the Ultimate Car Lineup of the Decade

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Forget shoulder pads, think fuel injection. The 80s had no shortage of memorable cars, but which automaker had the best overall range?
Rediscovering the Charm of the First-Gen BMW Mini: A Collector's Dream

Rediscovering the Charm of the First-Gen BMW Mini: A Collector’s Dream

mini not quite a classic Now is finally the time to pull the trigger on the first generation of BMW Mini

R50. Y-reg. Preferably with a plate ending in ‘OBL’. Eh? To decode, the R50 is the codename of the original BMW Mini, co-developed with Rover. 

Y-reg is a car from 2001. And if its registration number ends with ‘OBL’, then it was very likely owned by BMW and used as a demonstrator, a press car or a promotional vehicle. 

In classic car collecting circles that gives it provenance, even if it means that this Mini may well carry some of early bugs exorcised in later models, such as front seat backrest mechanisms that fight back, a rattling accompaniment to your journey and, as the cars age, oil leaks too.

But there are some desirable items too, just as there were with the original Mini. The early, 1959-built examples of these are coveted as much for their age as an assortment of features soon modified in production, such as the addition of drain holes in the roof gutter, two-piece road wheels welded rather than riveted together and hubcaps with differently shaped ventilation cut-outs.

Those who revel in such pedantic details (who, me?) will be delighted to hear that there are similarly arcane variations peculiar only to the very earliest of R50s too. One is the longitudinal indentations moulded into the seats, a design flourish soon considered unnecessary.

Another is the embossing of the pedals with an ‘M’. The upshot is that there is now a register for these Y-registration Minis, and a website detailing the differences is apparently on the way too. I won’t be looking at that, of course.

Now you may be healthily unbothered by such collectors’ trivia, and simply like the idea of an early new-generation Mini. And why not? These cheerfully individual cars can now be had for under £1000 with an MoT, although they will likely have covered six-figure distances. 

But they seem to be pretty durable too, making a 100k-plus odometer reading something to be less fearful of than it once was. That said, noisy gearboxes are a potentially expensive hazard. One reason why these Minis wear well is that they are not your average supermini. This was the first premium supermini (Lancia’s Ypsilon is a city car, in case you’re about to finger-punch a keyboard), and the quality ran more than skin-deep. 

Although BMW’s 2000 sale of Rover prompted a Viking-expunging rewrite of corporate history, development of the R50 Mini was largely a Rover-led project, to a BMW brief and with full-fat BMW funding. That allowed quality to penetrate to the core, from the super-stiff bodyshell to suspension that included BMW’s advanced Z-axle.

The Chrysler-sourced Tritec engine was less impressive, but it’s gratifyingly tough. More obviously striking was an interior furnished to standards far higher than you’d find aboard a Ford Fiesta or Renault Clio. And in rather startling style, too. The dashboard was dominated by an enormous speedometer that didn’t so much pay homage to the original ’59 Mini as prostrate itself before its memory in spasms of self-flagellation. 

There were many more references besides, from the shape of the interior light to the toggle switches to the flashing light at the tip of the indicator stalk. The exterior was still more recognisably Mini, even if this reimagined economy car had swollen substantially without offering a lot more space inside. 

The floating roof, the wheel-at-each corner stance, the short overhangs, vertical taillights, big headlights and trapezoidal grille all referenced the original, as did the faux chrome bumperettes and the cutline of the expensive clamshell bonnet.

And its just-so proportions are only highlighted by the ant-eater nose of an overhang disfiguring the current version, fine drive though that car is. All these things, and all those Chili, Salt and Pepper option varieties, made the R50 Mini hugely desirable then, and make it so now. It’s a car so much more interesting than a used Vauxhall Corsa or Volkswagen Polo. Expect it to outlive them.

This column first appeared as an email to subscribers in 2017.

Ford's EV Sales Plunge: A 40% Drop Sparks Urgent Need for Strategy Shift

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Despite the substantial drop in EV sales, Ford's overall deliveries have increased this year
Ride the Dream: Own a Real MotoGP Race Bike Today

Ride the Dream: Own a Real MotoGP Race Bike Today

Back in my day, if someone told you that you could go out and buy an actual road-legal version of a MotoGP race bike, the response was, "Hell yeah, brother."
BTCC 2026 Calendar Unveiled: Key Dates Shifted for World Cup Excitement

BTCC 2026 Calendar Unveiled: Key Dates Shifted for World Cup Excitement

BTCC 2026 calendar
BTCC will stage races over 10 weekends in 2026
Britain's top motorsport championship keeps same events but dates get shuffled due to World Cup

Next year’s Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship will retain the same 10 events next year but it will undergo a minor reshuffle because of football's FIFA World Cup.

The 2026 calendar for Britain’s leading motorsport championship has been revealed less than a week after the season-opening event for the 2025 season, held at Donington Park.

The Derbyshire circuit will again host the first round of the season in 2026, followed by trips to Brands Hatch and Snetterton.

The calendar will then undergo a minor shuffle, with the BTCC’s traditional summer break being brought forward from July to June. This is to account for UK television partner ITV4’s commitment to screening FIFA World Cup games during that period.

As a result, Oulton Park retains its traditional June date but becomes the fourth event of the season, with the visit to the high-speed Thruxton circuit moving to late July.

The Autocar-backed championship then visits Knockhill, the Donington Park Grand Prix circuit, Croft and Silverstone before again concluding on the Brands Hatch Grand Prix circuit on 10/11 October.

BTCC boss Alan Gow said: “It is a very busy summer in the sporting calendar, particularly with the football World Cup, which presents ITV with some clashing commitments. However, it also gave us an opportunity to make some tweaks to the schedule, which includes the shift in dates to the likes of Thruxton and Croft.

“Once again, releasing the calendar to our teams, support races, stakeholders and the public this early is advantageous for all in forward-planning, whilst it also benefits the rest of the motorsport pyramid in the UK as they can also schedule their events with these dates in mind.”

2026 British Touring Car Championship calendar

18-19 April Donington Park National

9-10 May Brands Hatch Indy

23-24 May Snetterton

6-7 June Oulton Park

25-26 July Thruxton

8-9 August Knockhill

22-23 August Donington Park Grand Prix

5-6 September Croft

26-27 September Silverstone

10/11 October Brands Hatch Grand Prix 

Singer's Bold Reinvention of the Iconic 911 Carrera SSE

Singer’s Bold Reinvention of the Iconic 911 Carrera SSE

Porsche 911 Carrera Coupe Reimagined by Singer pays tribute to the widebody Carrera Super Sport of the 1980s
Rivian's Smart Move: Stockpiling Batteries Amid Rising Auto Prices

Rivian’s Smart Move: Stockpiling Batteries Amid Rising Auto Prices

As automakers face spiraling prices in the U.S., Rivian is looking pretty savvy right about now.