The below editorial is an excerpt from our full review.
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MINI Hatch Cooper S 'F56' / 'F55' (2014-2018)

S EXPRESS (some text hidden) --NONE--

By Jonathan Crouch

Introductionword count: 127

The third generation MINI Cooper S is a properly credible hot hatch in its 'F56' (3-Door) and 'F55' (5-Door) Hatch forms, which we first saw in 2014. With these cars, we realised that this model could be more than merely a very quick but fashionable urban trinket. Its bigger, harder-hitting 2.0-litre engine and a more talented chassis deliver plenty of fun as you power to 62mph in 6.8 seconds to the tune of a blissfully cheeky exhaust note. This design proved to be a more mature thing too, better built than any of its rivals and with more sophisticated underpinnings that are better suited to longer journeys. In short, this car came of age in this form. But how does it stack up as a used buy?

Modelsword count: 4

3dr/5dr Hatch (2.0 petrol)

Historyword count: 217

The MINI Cooper S has long been an exercise in artful compromise, looking to occupy that sweet spot between the warm-ish Cooper and the wild race-inspired John Cooper Works model. As a result, it's often been the best pick for those who aren't likely to subject their car to a race circuit and instead just want a MINI that's entertainingly quick without incurring huge running costs in the process. That didn't change too much with this third generation F56/F55-series model, but what lies beneath the skin did. Under the bonnet, you'll find a 2.0-litre turbocharged engine that may only have three cylinders but puts out a 192hp total that was 8hp up on what went before. More importantly perhaps, it's a bigger, better finished car than before, yet one that still seems well priced against comparably performing hot hatch rivals from this era like Peugeot's 208 GTI, Ford's Fiesta ST and the Renaultsport Clio 200. This car was launched in 2014 in 3-Door Hatch 'F56'-series form, then an 'F55'-series 5-Door Hatch version followed a year later. Both variants were thoroughly revised in mid-2108, but it's the earlier 2014-2018 models we look at here. This ought to be many people's ideal expression of go kart-inspired MINI-ness? Is it? And would you want a used one? Let's find out.

What You Getword count: 1189

So what's included for the money being asked for an 'F56 or F55-series Cooper S? Well, for this kind of cash, you'd expect the basics - things like 16-inch alloys, front fog lamps, air conditioning, Bluetooth and a DAB stereo. Beyond that, MINI threw in a lovely bonnet scoop, a set of chrome-finished exhaust pipes, a chrome-plated honeycomb radiator grille and a three-spoke sport leather steering wheel. Most original buyers paid extra for the 'CHILI' pack. That meant inclusion of the MINI Driving Modes system that enables you to select between 'MID', Sport' or 'Green' settings, depending on how efficient you want your journey to be. It's hard to think of another car on sale today whose sales are influenced quite as directly by the way it looks as this one. Given that aesthetically, the worst mistake any MINI can make is to lose its 'MINI-ness', the job of re-interpreting this car for a fresh generation of buyers must always be a thankless one. Was it successfully carried through here? Inevitably, not everyone thinks so. The need for things like a higher bonnet line to meet modern era pedestrian safety legislation is one of the reasons why it's certainly not as cute, either as the original Issigonis design or the earliest turn of the century Frank Stephenson-styled BMW version. But that said, there's quite enough brand DNA here to make this car as instantly recognisable as anything on the road. The reason why is that all the visual cues you'd expect to see have been perfectly preserved in the move to modernity: the circular headlights (offered with lovely optional LED rings), the clamshell bonnet, the upright windscreen, the blacked-out pillars that create the 'floating' roof and the continuous band of chrome at the base of the glasshouse. All of it's present and correct. As we said, this Cooper S version even has the potent bonnet scoop of its predecessors, though MINI will quietly admit that this styling flourish hasn't been functional since the old supercharged car bit the dust in 2006. Just think of it as a way of telling the flagship models apart from the rest at a glance. The MK3 'F56' 3-door Hatch model is a fair bit bigger than its MK2 ''R56' predecessor, a car which still had its roots in the Munich maker's original 2001 'R50' MINI. It's 44mm wider and 7mm taller than before: and 98mm longer too, though unfortunately most of that length gain has been swallowed up by the lengthier front overhang needed to meet the tougher pedestrian impact standards we mentioned earlier. Still a 28mm-longer wheelbase means that the passenger compartment is usefully bigger than before. Access to the rear is easier is certainly easier than it was previously and once you get there, you'll find that the cabin gained some much needed head and legroom in MK3 form. There's more room for shoulders too, though still not enough to make it feasible for MINI to fit more than a couple of seatbelts on the rear bench. No, despite the welcome reclining function for the backrest, you still wouldn't want to be stuck in the back for a long journey but yes, it is a big improvement and kids will be more than happy. One six-footer could here sit behind another with genuinely passable comfort. So in this form, at last, this MINI can be seen, for short trips at least, as a genuine four-seater, rather than a 2+2. That's a big change over what went before. If you want more, the slightly lengthened wheelbase of the 5-Door Hatch 'F55'-series model will be a better fit for you. As is the boot capacity, the aspect that, more than any other, MINI owners previously most moaned about. With both hatch variants, you get one of those clever moveable floors that can be set at two separate heights (though the downside to that is the lack of a proper spare wheel). Plus the room available increased over the previous generation design; even in the 3-Door, it's 211-litres. OK, so that's still not what you'd call huge and is still miles behind what you'd get in a more practically-shaped trendy rival like a perkier Volkswagen Beetle or a Citroen DS3 Performance, let alone say, a Fiesta ST. But the changes made here at least elevated this space beyond the 'Point And Laugh' category. It's certainly a lot bigger than you'd get in a rival Abarth 500 and not too far of the kind of room delivered by potential competitors like Alfa's MiTo Quadrifoglio and Nissan's Juke Nismo. In fact, there's actually more room than you'd get in either of those two models if you push forward the rear bench. Plus it helps that the angle of the backrest can be altered and that it splits 60:40, rather than 50:50: which makes it easier to get awkwardly-shaped items like pushchairs in. With everything flat, a surprisingly large 731-litre load capacity reveals itself in the 3-Door model. But you don't buy this car for its practicality. Or if you do, then you don't buy the three-door Hatch version anyway. No, what you probably want is a more mature interpretation of 'MINI-ness' - which this MK3 model perfectly delivers. It's easy to forget quite how flimsy a lot of the fittings on the early BMW MINIs were. Remember those indicator stalks that felt like snapping biros? Or the second generation car's feeble little plastic joystick that was used to enter sat nav instructions? Everything feels a good deal more substantial in this car, a good deal more grown up. To that end, you get much more supportive seats than the previous generation model offered, with a wider adjustment range and a base lengthened by 23mm for additional comfort and support. There's a proper rotary controller for the lights. Electric window switches re-located to the doors where everyone else puts them. More interior stowage space, with two gloveboxes, additional cup holders and space in the seatbacks and front passenger foot well for the storage of bottles and maps. Oh and a whole series of lovely touches. Like the way the start/stop tab features a heartbeat illumination which pulses before the engine is started. Or the LED perimeter lights of the central display that progressively light up the perimeter of the screen as you switch driving modes, engage the engine stop/start, cope with parking or count down to your next sat nav turn off. That huge display no longer functions as a speedo - less characterfully but more practically, the speedometer gauge for MK 3 models was re-located to a pod in front of the steering wheel where it's flanked with a crescent-moon rev counter and fuel gauge. All of this freed the central dash area up for much more infotainical trickery, marshalled via optional 6.5 or 8.8-inch multifunction colour displays that most original owners tried to find the extra for since the alternative was a cheapskate-looking four-line TFT read-out. Though crying out for touch screen functionality, the colour layouts are actually marshalled by a classy, effective iDrive-style controller down by the (thankfully conventional) handbrake. What To Look For

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Scoring (subset of scores)

Category: Sporting Cars

Performance
80%
Handling
70%
Comfort
50%
Space
60%
Styling, Build, Value, Equipment, Depreciation, Handling, Insurance and Total scores are available with our full data feed.

This is an excerpt from our full review.
To access the full content library please contact us on 0330 0020 227 or click here

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