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English  | Profiles from the July, 2007 Issue
1964 Mini Cooper 1275S Works Rally
DJB 93B can be used in anger on modern historic events. It has already been re-shelled, so another won’t devalue it
by Paul Frost

In 1956, the Suez Crisis caused the folks at Austin to invite Alec Issigonis (later Sir Alec) to design a new car to combat what they saw as looming fuel rationing. When he had finished, the engine was the only part of the car that was not completely new. The compact four-seater famously mounted the enlarged A30 engine transversely, driving the front wheels through a four-speed box located in the sump. Independent all-round hydrolastic suspension used ingenious rubber blocks in compression.

The first prototypes ran in October 1957 and the car was launched in August 1959 with several thousand being pre-built for dealer stock. While the Morris version was called the Mini Minor, the Austin was known as the Se7en, but the name never caught on and soon they were all known as Minis.

The top speed of the first 33-hp models was 70 mph, and the Mini’s excellent handling soon attracted tuning specialists. With BMC’s agreement, race builder John Cooper...

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