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1964 Austin Mini Cooper S Rally Car on 2040-cars

Year:1964 Mileage:11469
Location:

Ames, Iowa, United States

Ames, Iowa, United States

This is a great little Mini Cooper S rally car.  It can be used on the street, in road rally, in a vintage road race, or a rallycross.  This is the vehicle that can do it all.  The engine sounds like a race engine but is not too loud to be driven on the road.  I would say half as loud as a Harley.  The car starts up every time and has a battery cutoff switch mounted between the seats.  You will not find a better prepared period car.


Included is the Heritage Certificate, a two binders full of all of the email correspondence, receipts and hand written notes and diagrams about the restoration and history of the car.  As well as the plates it wore when in Georgia, Texas, and Iowa.  There is also a photo album documenting its time in Hong Kong showing the build of the engine and its transportation in crates and on trucks.  The only difference between this car and the works cars you are used to seeing is that this one is was painted green during the last restoration.


Full works style rallye dash 

Fully adjustable hi-lo suspension

Twin fuel gauges 

Fully adjustable Spax/KYB shock absorbers

All fuses mounted on navigator's dash 

Genuine Minilite 10-inch magnesium wheels

Half roll cage 

Lightweight period rallye seats

4-point competition harnesses 

Twin 5-gallon petrol tanks

Period Salisbury LSD with longer 3.1 final drive 

Straight-cut racing gear set

All fuel and brake lines routed inside cabin 

Steel rallye sump guard 

Period Moto-Lita wood-rim Cooper steering wheel

1275cc engine (1.275 liter or about 78 cubic inches) 

Twin 1.5" SU carburetors

Stage 4 ported and gas flowed cylinder head 

10.5:1 compression ratio

Kent 276 road race cam 

1.5 ratio forged rockers

Pertronix ignition 

13-row Mocal oil cooler

Additional water radiator 

Thermostatically-controlled electric auxiliary fan


1964 Constructed 21 August for "Home Market" sale (British Isles)

1964 Despatched to dealer Weybridge Automobiles Limited 24 August

1964-1986 Registered in the UK on October 10 as BAE701B – 22 years as a road car

1986 Exported to Hong Kong to Terry Berrecloth registered as DL8880

1986 Made into full competition road racer; campaigned in Macao by Terry Berrecloth

1988 Car sold to Ian R.C. Cullen registered as EK5173

1990 Removed from road use for restoration

1991-1994 Car shipped to UK for rebuild/restoration at Mini-Sport Ltd.

1996 Car accepted by Mr. Cullen and re-registered as BAE701B

Auto Services in Iowa

Southside Body Shop ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 819 S Main St, Maquoketa
Phone: (563) 652-4747

Schuling Hitch Company ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Trailer Hitches, Automobile Accessories
Address: 5067 NW 2nd St, Polk-City
Phone: (515) 218-1323

Pinnacle Auto Mart ★★★★★

Used Car Dealers
Address: 322 E 11th St, Cedar-Falls
Phone: (319) 232-2210

PDC Auto Clinic ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 704 S Marquette Rd, Marquette
Phone: (608) 326-1800

O`Reilly Auto Parts ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies
Address: 935 8th St, Boone
Phone: (515) 432-0046

Novus Glass ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Windshield Repair, Glass-Auto, Plate, Window, Etc
Address: Clarence
Phone: (319) 930-9727

Auto blog

2014 Mini John Cooper Works Countryman All4

Fri, 11 Apr 2014

The standard Mini Countryman is a bit of an odd duck against the backdrop of 'normal' small crossovers like the Mazda CX-5 and the Ford Escape, but I sort of get it. Apply the same winning Mini formula to a CUV, and you get a smaller-than-average entry in the segment, one that is far more entertaining to drive than the norm, more stylish inside and out and pretty expensive when cross-shopped. That list of qualities doesn't appeal to all crossover shoppers, sure, but it intrigues a big enough list that the Countryman has reason for being.
Now, add the expensive John Cooper Works package to the Countryman's already niche goodies list, and Mini starts to lose me. So, I'm getting the softer suspended, taller, generally less dynamically joyful version of the brand's core values, but now you're charging me at least $35,000 ($13k more expensive than the basic, front-drive Cooper Countryman and $7k more than the MSRP of the Cooper S All4 version)? What's that? You're going to make it look like a garish, tippy-toed tuner car in the process? Take my money.
Or, actually, let me keep it. I can swing with a lot of the weirdness that Mini has to offer, but this car pushed me past my limit.

Mini could go even bigger with next Countryman

Mon, 25 Nov 2013

We recently reported that the new family of Minis could balloon from eight models to ten or more, but it's not only the model line that's expected to grow: so too could the largest model itself. That, of course, would be the Countryman, which is already bigger than anything else ever to wear the Mini badge. But if you think the current Countryman is already big enough, the latest reports suggest that it could get even bigger. Apparently parent company BMW feels a larger Mini crossover would better compete with more mainstream models in the marketplace.
The Countryman, however, will only be one of the new variants to spin off of the new third-generation Mini. Expect the new Hardtop hatchback introduced in LA to be followed by a new Cabriolet, Roadster, and Paceman. A five-door version of the base hatchback will also join in addition to the new Clubman, which is tipped to get a split tailgate instead of the single hinged aperture on the current model. The jury's still out on the Mini Coupe, which has largely failed to impress, while a convertible crossover could be back in the mix along with the rumored plug-in hybrid version.

2015 Mini Hardtop 5-Door isn't for the country, man [w/video]

Thu, 02 Oct 2014

We've seen it in super high-res glory, and we can even build one on the automaker's website, but the Paris Motor Show marks the official coming out party for the new Mini Hardtop 4 Door (which is what it's called in the US, despite this Euro car having "5 Door" badging). It's a stretched version of the third-generation Mini Hardtop, but with an extra set of doors for rear seat passengers. Think of it as a more useful Clubman, but with a lower ride height and less rugged-ness than the Countryman. Got it? Good.
Engine options carry over from the normal Mini Hardtop range, with a 1.5-liter turbo-three and a 2.0-liter turbo-four offering 134 and 189 horsepower, respectively. The rest of the car is everything else you know and love from the Mini range, just with a more spacious rear bench. And as you'd expect, there's a nearly endless pallet of customization options.
The Hardtop 4 Door arrives at US dealerships just before the end of the year, commanding a roughly $1,000 premium over its three-door kin. Scope out our new live shots in the gallery above, and take in the extensive press blast, below.