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The Mini is a small
car that was made by the
British Motor Corporation
(BMC) and its successors from
1959 until 2000. The original is
considered a British icon of the
1960s,[3][4][5]
and its space-saving
front-wheel-drive layout (that
allowed 80% of the area of the
car's
floorpan to be used for
passengers and luggage)
influenced a generation of
car-makers.[6]
The vehicle is in some ways
considered the British
equivalent to its German
contemporary, the
Volkswagen Beetle, which
enjoyed similar popularity in
North America. In 1999 the Mini
was voted the second most
influential
car of the 20th Century,
behind the
Ford Model T.[citation
needed]
This distinctive two-door car was designed for BMC by
Sir Alec Issigonis.[7][8]
It was manufactured at the
Longbridge and
Cowley plants in England, the Victoria Park /
Zetland
British Motor Corporation (Australia) factory in
Sydney, Australia, and later also in Spain (Authi),
Belgium, Chile, Italy (Innocenti),
Portugal, South Africa, Uruguay, Venezuela and
Yugoslavia. The Mini
Mark I had three major UK updates: the Mark II, the
Clubman and the Mark III. Within these was a series of
variations including an
estate car, a
pickup truck, a
van and the
Mini Moke—a
jeep-like buggy. The Mini Cooper and Cooper "S" were
sportier versions that were successful as
rally cars, winning the
Monte Carlo Rally four times from 1964 through to
1967, although in 1966 the Mini was disqualified after
the finish, along with six other British entrants, which
included the first four cars to finish, under a
questionable ruling that the cars had used an illegal
combination of headlamps and spotlights.[9]
Initially Minis were marketed under the
Austin and
Morris names, as the Austin Seven and Morris Mini
Minor, until Mini became a
marque in its own right in 1969.[10][11]
The Mini was again marketed under the Austin name in the
1980s.
Above courtesy of
Wikipeda
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Mini
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