That article seems to have been written years ago:
The GB News article passage I quoted claimed, "will begin in 2026." The F56 lasted from 2014 to 2023. How quickly can BMW develop a British-built K01 (my made-up designation) to replace the Chinese J01? What a can of worms the Spotlight plant turned out to be for BMW!MotoringFile has a corroborating article they published today:
MINI Confirms Electric Cooper & Aceman Production In The UK: But Questions Remain
The GB News article passage I quoted claimed, "will begin in 2026."
The F56 lasted from 2014 to 2023. How quickly can BMW develop a British-built K01 (my made-up designation) to replace the Chinese J01?
Yes, that's what I stumbled across first.MotoringFile has a corroborating article they published today:
MINI Confirms Electric Cooper & Aceman Production In The UK: But Questions Remain
The GB News article passage I quoted claimed, "will begin in 2026." The F56 lasted from 2014 to 2023. How quickly can BMW develop a British-built K01 (my made-up designation) to replace the Chinese J01? What a can of worms the Spotlight plant turned out to be for BMW!
Yesterday's Motoring File article makes me scratch my head (I added the underline):The timeline certainly does seem short.
OTOH, perhaps lessons learned in the development of the J01 (and Aceman) can still be applied, speeding things up significantly? The next hardtop might therefore be different enough to deserve a new chassis designation vs. simply being an LCI, yet might not be outwardly all that different after all.
Carry over the new exterior and interior design, slap it on a new skateboard platform, source everything to minimize tariffs, and Bob's your uncle!
Maybe not, they switch over for new year models in about 1-2 months. I'm sure the assembly line needs significant changes for a new EV platform, but maybe not a multi-year effort.The timeline certainly does seem short.
Maybe not, they switch over for new year models in about 1-2 months. I'm sure the assembly line needs significant changes for a new EV platform, but maybe not a multi-year effort.
Yesterday's Motoring File article makes me scratch my head (I added the underline):
Electric Cooper & Aceman Production Confirmed for the UK
MINI has also publicly reaffirmed its substantial £600 million investment to prepare the Oxford plant for production of two new electrified models—the MINI Cooper and MINI Aceman—starting in 2026.
On paper, this might seem to contradict our earlier reporting. But our sources remain firm in telling us that the J01 and J05, as we currently know them, will not be built in the UK. Instead, the Oxford-built electric Cooper and Aceman will undergo significant updates, with components sourced from new suppliers—enough to warrant new BMW codenames, despite retaining the same model names.
So the UK will be building LCI versions of these EVs?It appears to me that they are trying to skate on a small technicality. Previously, they reported that the J01 and J05 specifically won't be build in the UK, and that still appears to be true.
So the UK will be building LCI versions of these EVs?
They could find some solid-state Li-Ion batteries that would provide the J01's range but retain the F56 SE's weight. I'd buy that!Maybe they'll do an electric F66 instead of develop a whole new car.
Thanks for that link; I found this part very enlightening:Looks like it's a no for now: https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/business-manufacturing/breaking-mini-delays-ev-production-oxford