BE AMONGST THE FIRST’ FACEBOOK CONTEST By MINI India

The MINI is the direct successor to Sir Alec Issigonis’ 1959 classic, which was produced until 1999. The new generation adds state-of-the-art technology, modern levels of safety, quality and reliability to traditional MINI values, such as optimum interior space within compact exterior dimensions. Driving fun was, of course, also a key criteria when developing the MINI product range: with its long wheelbase, short overhangs and low centre of gravity, with a MINI you always experience the unadulterated go-kart feel.
History by Year

2012
MINI COOPER COUPÉ 1st GEN.
2011
Dsquared² MINI
MINI ROCKETMAN CONCEPT
MINI COOPER COUPÉ 1st GEN.
MINI ROADSTER 1ST GEN.
MINI PACEMAN CONCEPT
2010
MINI COUNTRYMAN 1st GEN.
MINI LIFE BALL COLLECTION
2009
MINI 50 CAMDEN AND MINI 50 MAYFAIR
THE BLONDS FOR KATE PERRY MINI
MINI BEACHCOMBER CONCEPT
2008
AGENT PROVOCATEUR MINI
MINI JOHN COOPER WORKS 1ST GEN.
2007
MARIO TESTINO MINI
MINI CABRIO SIDEWALK
MINI COOPER CLUBMAN 1ST GEN.
2006
DIESEL MINI
2005
MINI CHECKMATE
MINI PARK LANE
MINI UNITED
VERSACE MINI
2004
MINI JOHN COOPER WORKS CHALLENGE
MINI COOPER CABRIO FIRST GENERATION
2003
MINI One D FIRST GENERATION
MISSONI MINI
2001
New MINI introduced (MINI Cooper)
World’s greatest car ever
1998
Another World Record.
Designer Mini Time Machine.
Designer Mini Kate Moss.
Designer Min Paul Smith.
1997
Concept MINI debuts.
1996
No. 1 Classic Car of All Time.
1995
The Car of the Century.
1994
BMW Buys Mini.
1992
Mini British Open Classic
1989
The Mini Turbo.
1985
5 Million Strong.
1984
The Mini 25.
1982
The Mini Mayfair.
1977
The Mini Special
1976
4 Million Strong
1975
Mini Clubman Estate
1972
Mini 1275 GT, Mini 1000 and Mini Clubman
1971
Mini Clubman Cooper S
1969
First Mini Badge.
The Italian Job.
Mini in Millions.
1967
3rd win at Monte Carlo is official.
In love with The Beatles 1967.
1965
Mini Automatic Transmission.
French revenge at Monte Carlo.
1964
Mini takes Monte Carlo.
The Mini Moke.
1963
Mini Cabriolet
1961
MINI Pick-up
John Cooper recognizes a racing demon.
Austin Mini Cooper / Morris Mini-Cooper
1960
Dawn of the Minivan.
Mini Countryman / Traveller
1959
The Classic Mini is launched.
Started in 1959
Squeezing more space.

MINI INDIA

“Finally we can share some pictures of the 1st MINI test drives in India!! Many thanks to the winners of our ‘Be amongst the first’ contest on Facebook, Janice, Siddharth and Gautam!! And of course to the MINI dealerships in Mumbai and Delhi! To book a test drive yourself, check out our website www.mini.in/select_dealer/index.jsp and get in touch with one of our dealerships directly! “

MINI INDIA
MINI INDIA

MINI INDIA

MINI INDIA

MINI INDIA

MINI INDIA



1972 Norsjo Shopper

1972 Norsjo Shopper

The Shopper Mopedbil was absolutely minimal transportation for a single passenger. The handlebar steering and rear-mounted engine were moped-derived.
This odd motorized three-wheel shopping vehicle with shopping basket on the tail was built in Forshaga, Sweden. Controls were on the handlebar and the canopy tilted sideways.
The vehicle was quite commonly seen in the sixties and seventies in Sweden, driven mostly by the elderly, but some teenagers took to it as well. The prototype was ready in 1962, and the little vehicle seems to have been produced well into the seventies. These days it is rarely seen on the streets.
It was also known as the Forshaga Shopper.



Manufacturer: Norsjo M.V.A. B., Forshaga, Sweden

Model: Shopper Motor: Fichtel & Sachs, 2-stroke Body: Fibreglass
Years Built: 197? No. Cylinders: 1 Chassis: Tube
No. Produced: not known Displacement: 47 cc Suspension Front: Coil
No. Surviving: few Horsepower: Suspension Rear: Coil
Length: 2 160 mm Gearbox: Automatic Steering: Handlebar and Cable
Width: 930 mm Starter: Electric Brakes: Cable
Weight: N/A Electrics: 12 v 3 Wheels: 4.00 x 8
Interior: 1 seat Ignition: Coil Top Speed: 60 kph

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Isetta- bmw microcar

1955 Iso Isetta With sales of his refrigerators (Isothermos) declining, Renzo Rivolta turned to making scooters in three versions: the Isoscooter, Isomoto and 3-wheeled Isocarro (no relation to the later truck). 
Competition from Vespa and Lambretta forced a change of plans, however. He gave M. Gobini carte-blanche to design a totally original vehicle. A cute, round shape, with side by side seating, it was a sensation at the 1953 Turin auto show. Licenses were quickly sold to Belgium, France, Spain, Brazil and Germany. Major differences to the familiar later BMW bubble window were the engine cover with vertical slots, headlamps positioned low on the front fenders (with parking lamps on top), flush fitting door handle, Dubonnet suspension, and two-stroke twin piston engine providing a distinctive sound. Manufactured by ISO Italy

Manufactured by ISO Italy

Model: Isetta Motor: Iso, 2-stroke Body: Steel
Years Built: December 1953 – 1958 No. Cylinders: 1 (Double Piston) Chassis: Tube
No. Produced: 6,000 Displacement: 236 cc Suspension Front: Dubonnet
No. Surviving: 10 Horsepower: 9.5 Suspension Rear: Leaf Spring
Length: 7′ 6″ Gearbox: 4 + rev. Steering: Worm
Width: 4′ 10″ Starter: Dynastart Brakes: Hydraulic
Weight: 6.75 cwt Electrics: 12 v 4 Wheels:
4.50-4.80 x 10″
Interior: Bench Ignition: Coil Top Speed: 45 mph




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MICRO CARS

Bubble car is a subjective term used for some small, economical automobiles, usually produced in the 1950s and 1960s

 Varieties


The Messerschmitt KR175 and KR200, and the FMR Tg500, had aircraft-style bubble canopies, giving rise to the term bubble car to refer to all these post-war microcars. Isettas and others also had a bubble-like appearance.

 Bubble cars became popular in Europe at that time as a demand for cheap personal motorised transportemerged and fuel prices were high due in part to the 1956 Suez Crisis. Most of them were three-wheelers, which in many places qualified them for inexpensive taxes and licensing as motorcycles.

 Most bubble cars were manufactered in Germany, including by the former German military aircraft manufacturers, Messerschmitt and Heinkel. Automobile and motorcycle manufacturer BMW manufactured the Italian Iso Rivolta Isetta under licence, using an engine from one of their own motorcycles. France also produced large numbers of similar tiny vehicles called voiturettes, but unlike the German makes, these were rarely sold abroad.

 The United Kingdom had licence-built right-hand drive versions of the Heinkel Kabine and the Isetta. The British version of the Isetta was built with only one rear wheel instead of the narrow-tracked pair of wheels in the normal Isetta design in order to take advantage of the three-wheel vehicle laws in the United Kingdom. There were also indigenous British three wheeled microcars, including the Trident from the Peel Engineering Company on theIsle of Man.

The introduction of the Austin Mini in 1959 is often credited with bringing about the demise of the bubble car. The Mini provided four adult seats and more practical long distance transport often at a lower cost.

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Microcar collection at Whiteman Park

Microcar collection at Whiteman Park


16th of May 2010 was National Motoring Heritage Day all over Australia. It was supposed to be a co-ordinated event involving auto club displays all around Australia. Shelly and I went up to the Whiteman Park Motor Museum where the Perth display was to be held but only the Vintage Motorcycle Club put on a show. By the time we arrived just after 12pm most of the motorcyclists were packing up and heading home so I snapped a couple of shots and had a bit of a chat, then it was off to the museum. Although its only been a couple of weeks since we last visited the museum, they have put on a new display of microcars. I am a big fan of microcars so here’s a couple of photos of the new display.

A Sinclair C5 personal transporter, the iconic Goggomobil Dart and a (Heinkel) Trojan Cabin.
 
Ernst Heinkel began building the Kabine Scooter in 1955 as an improvement on the rival BMW Isetta. They were originally powered by the same 175cc engine they used in their scooters, but soon upgraded the engine to 200cc. They proved quite popular in post-war Germany, but BMW successfully sued Heinkel for breach of copywrite so after only about 1000 had been manufactured in Germany, Heinkel offshored production to Ireland. They continued production there for a couple of years before selling the rights and tooling to the British company, Trojan. Trojan produced about 6000 units of the popular little car until Trojan wound up in 1963. All up about 26,000 Heinkel and Trojans were produced.

A rear view of the Trojan and Fiat Bambino. The tiny size of the Heinkel engine is clearly apparent even from the outside.


An Italian icon, the Fiat Bambino.


One of my favourite autos of all time, the Messerschmitt KR200.

Although not a familiar microcar in Australia, the German Fuldmobil was amongst the most widely copied. It was originally built by the German company Fulda with a pressed metal body and a 191cc Sachs engine in 1950. The metal body was later replaced with a streamlined fibreglass body. Engine size progressively increased and even a four wheeled version was released. Fulda licensed the design to many countries, who produced it under a variety of a names – King Fram in Sweden, Attica in Greece, Hans Vahaar in Chile, Bambi in India and Noble in England. This is an English Nobel 200. Here is a link to a blog documenting the restoration of a Noble 200. http://www.nobel200.com/

It looks like this car might have come from this ex-museum collection that was sold in 2008.
http://blog.hemmings.com/index.php/2008/10/07/save-these-microcars-cranwell-lincolnshire/

A legendary car in Australia, the Goggomobil Dart. Hans Glas was a German scooter and microcar manufacturer. Buckle Motors in Australia imported bare Goggo chassis and engines and installed a sporty fibreglass body. Interestingly these little sports cars are so low to the ground that they have no doors, driver and passenger simply step over the side walls into the car. About 1700 were built.

The English Bond company were making three wheeled microcars since the 1930’s. The 1972 Bond Bug was their last attempt at three wheelers before they folded up.

The 1986 Litestar Pulse looks more like a plane than a car. Here’s a link with some more information about these strange vehicles.
http://www.autocycles.org/
On a related theme, here’s a video from an early Top Gear of the Eco-car.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbdkZB9-Sd4
Here is a link to Minutia microcar blog. Sadly it’s no longer being updated but it still has lots of great photos.
http://minutia-microcarsminicars.blogspot.com/

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