ERA MINI TURBO
Time for some controversy here: I’ve always reckoned the best classic Mini wasn’t, in fact, a Mini at all, but its supposed successor, the Metro. Although it didn’t appear until 1980, the Metro offered all the advantages of the Issigonis original – the unrivaled packaging, the driving fun, and the low running costs–but fewer of the compromises. The interior offered even more passenger space, the steering wheel was at a slightly less awkward angle and the crowning glory was the hatchback practicality. BL had tried and failed to update the Mini in a similar way as early as the ’60s when the hatchback 9Xprototypeshadbeenshown, so there's justification for claiming the Metro to be the ultimate incarnation of Issigonis’s original idea.
But as the rest of the team have made very clear to me, the Metro is a Metro and not a Mini, so the achievements of the ‘Thinking man’s Mini’ as I like to call it are largely irrelevant.
This means I need to choose a second candidate for my favorite Mini and with the modern John Cooper Works having been nabbed, I’m back in the classic Minicamp. I must admit to a certain fondness for the pram-like Mini convertible simply because it’s such an unlikely creation but ultimately it’s an equally outlandish Mini which gets my vote: the ERA Mini Turbo.
Something of a Holy Grail for Mini fans, the car was genuinely a creation of the English Racing Automobiles company, which by then had been renamed Engineering Research & Application, operating primarily as an engineering consultancy.
This story is from the November 13, 2019 edition of Classic Car Buyer.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the November 13, 2019 edition of Classic Car Buyer.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Staff Classics
REPORTING ON: Alfa Romeo GTV
Rootes Group - The Golden Years
The Rootes Group’s finest years commenced immediately after the end of the Second World War with the launch of a handful of brand-new models and lasted until the company was absorbed into the Chrysler empire in the middle of the following decade
MG ZT
The MG ZT was more than a Rover 75 in sports shoes. Much, much more. It was a performance saloon par excellence and today makes for a superb classic sporting bargain
MG Display Controversy
A classic vehicle insurer met with a mixed response at the Classic Motor Show when its display stand depicted a 1998 MGF apparently crushed by a WW2 Hellcat tank. But was this a sacrilegious act against a classic car, or an inspired promotional display?
Extra Ordinary
Exotics are usually the go-to classic investments, but a recent trend in everyday cars means more common street sights could be the way to go
Alternative Go
As the internal combustion engine’s fate seems in question, we look back at its past challengers
Death Of The Sports Car?
Another manufacturer belies its heritage to switch to SUVs
Cool Coupes
Every manufacturer was in on the ’90s coupe trend, stylish two-doors in abundance. But nearly three decades on, which are worth investing in?
Classic Scenes
Writing this as news reports bring us images of Sheffield residents trapped overnight in shopping centers by floods, we were struck by this image from October 1987.
500 Not Out
We identify some modern classics in danger of extinction... and the older cars which massively outnumber them