If You’ve Been Wanting To Spend Over $150K On A Fancy Electric Original Mini Boy Do I Have Good News For You

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I love the idea of taking old iconic cars and updating them with modern EV drivetrains, Gattica-style, so that they may live on well into the forthcoming Electric Era. There’s a number of companies out there doing just that, and if these companies have one thing in common, it’s that what they end up making is never cheap. Converted air-cooled Volkswagens tend to go for around $85 to $100,000 or more, for example. Converting a combustion car to an EV is kind of an involved process, and components like batteries are pricey, which means that to make money, the only way to do it is to make your conversions fancy-trousers premium things, which you can then demand a lot of money for. That’s the approach taken by David Brown Automotive, which just announced their Mini eMastered, a really luxuriously finished and appointed Mini with an electric drivetrain and a range of about 110 miles that costs over $150,000. It’s terribly cool, but I really look forward to the day when EV-converted classics don’t demand six-digit prices. I mean, I can sit on vinyl. My ass doesn’t need hand-stitched vegan mushroom leather!

The name, eMastered, is a derivation of Mini Remastered, which is the line of extremely expensive and high-end original combustion-engined Mini restomods that the company has been selling for a number of years. The eMastered leverages all of the work the company has done to modernize and enfancify old Minis, including dashboards that incorporate a center-stack touchscreen, integrated A/C units, jewelry-like knobs and other switchgear, and lots of leather trim and seats and all that stuff.

Really, it all looks pretty fantastic, as you can see in the nearly reverential cinematography of their promo video, captioned by us.

I mean, I can think of far worse ways to spend $150,000 than on a really charming electric city car like this. Specs-wise, I think a lot of smart decisions were made; the weight of it all is only about 1,400 pounds, an absolute featherweight by EV standards, in large part thanks to the quite small 18.8 kWh battery pack. Just for comparison, the smallest pack you can get on a Nissan Leaf is 40 kWh (but an old BMW i3 came with a 22kWh pack). The small pack I think makes sense, because this is mostly going to be used as a city car. Even with that small pack 110 miles of range are possible, and given the context this car is designed to be used in, why haul around a crapton of battery you just don’t need? It’s a sensible approach.

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Another nice thing about a smaller battery is that it only takes about 3 hours to fully charge at 6.6 kW AC charging. That’s about a quarter of what most mainstream EVs take on a home charger.

That sensibly-sized battery is pumping electrons through a 96 horsepower Zonic 70 electric motor (for comparison, a 1968 Mini was making around 58 hp) which is good enough to get this little gem from zero to 60 mph in 8.5 seconds, which should be plenty, and it’ll eventually hit 92 mph if you keep that pedal down, whizzing off into the stylish sunset.

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Design-wise, this thing looks pretty much like a very nicely-sorted original Mini, just with a different grille mesh and some modern projector headlamps, the one element of the design that I don’t think really works. You see this on a lot of resto-mods, and I think we’ve given these sorts of headlights a fair chance and we can just call it. Isn’t there some way to make modern LED lights with fluted lenses? Or do they all have to look like this kind of Amazon aftermarket crap? I’m asking!

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These interiors are pretty great, and the attention to detail you can have when dealing with a small car is very evident here. Just look at that leather-slathered trunk there, with the stainless steel runners. I bet it smells fantastic in there. I want to put my whole head inside that trunk and just breathe.

The taillights I’m not too crazy about, though. I mean, they’re not bad, and I don’t mind the three-round-lamp look, but on a car this fancy, I’d like to see something more than three off-the-shelf lights set into a custom housing.

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Those knobs look satisfying to hold and turn, although I think those lower two probably could use some kind of label. And, with all those nice knobs, it’s kind of a letdown that an important control like the volume control is that fussy little rocker button on that Pioneer head unit instead of another nice chunky knob. I mean, which are you using more, volume control or… what is that, the rear window defroster? Come on, for $150K, David Brown can figure something out.

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There’s no question this is a lovely thing, and very appealing. But, like so many other lovely things in the automotive world today, I can’t help but think the high cost just makes it kind of irrelevant. It’s a lovely toy, but until there’s a good means for EV converting old cars for, say, half this price or less, then what’s the point?

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Maybe I’m getting jaded. Conceptually, this gets a lot right: smart battery size for the job, great look, great use case for an EV. There just should be versions of this for non-rich people.

 

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55 thoughts on “If You’ve Been Wanting To Spend Over $150K On A Fancy Electric Original Mini Boy Do I Have Good News For You

  1. Well, another great conversion by professionals. Unfortunately, it deepens the impression that EV conversions need to be (prohibitively) expensive.

    But if we skip fancy features and design details, it can be done with an investment that one could consider almost as reasonable.

    I converted my Volvo 850 for 18,000 Euro using Leaf and Tesla components. With about 80 miles of range it is just what I need for my commute in Swedish brick style.

  2. Okay, I got 30-50k. I want an old Toyota pickup, 70-100 mile range and it doesn’t need to be perfect or super fucking dope inside, just pretty nice and clean.

    The base truck might be 20-30. But could you do the rest for another 20-30? Whoever makes a cheap “plug and play” retro car pack that’s legit and gets a tv show to use it or something is going to make alot of money.

    I had an old toyota, and I had it in the shop alot to get it back to how it should be. One repair too many and I lost my love for that particular truck and sold it. Electric would have taken away 90% of my repairs.

  3. This only works if you can get a decent used EV battery platform that can match up to an old fun ICE Car and bolt it on. If you want a new battery platform or a new body from an old style 6 figures. EVs are already proving they won’t get as cheap as ICE Cars but they won’t last and a used market will never happen.

  4. I have a 1972 Fiat 500 that is actually smaller than an original Mini. I am rebuilding the head for a refresh but I would love to EV convert it. It is a popular swap in Europe because it actually makes the car much more driveable. Top speed and acceleration are way up and range is not an issue because you would rarely want to drive it more than 100 miles at a time anyway.

    If I fabricated everything myself, it would cost about $25k with a HyPer9 or similar motor, Tesla cells, charge controller, battery management, cables, etc. That is a lot of work and expense. When you are done you have a very unsafe vehicle that you would probably not want to commute in. Range is too small for doing tours and rallies so you are left with parades, car shows, errands, dinners out, and the occasional joy ride. Really hard to justify and it is unclear how much it would be worth after construction.

  5. I really like old minis and I really like electromods like this, but I cannot imagine driving an original Mini on modern streets when the average car is larger than what we landed in Normandy – I’m a safety-third kinda dude, but this thing’s outside my risk envelope.

  6. I want to put my whole head inside that trunk and just breathe.

    Filed under “If I ever need to kidnap Jason”. 😉

    Which, of course, I would only ever do for the best of reasons, like taking him to an undisclosed location to gaze upon some forbidden taillights. 😀

    (Did I include enough emojis to make it clear that I have no actual plans to kidnap Jason? Just in case: 🙂 )

  7. Took the words right out of my mouth, but I’ll put them out anyway: I can’t stand those retrofit projector lamps! They just don’t work, especially in something that gets so many details right. Honestly, most “updated” lighting looks dumb on older cars. Some of the worst are the led halos on older Jeeps and led “eye brows” incorporated into aftermarket lenses for older trucks. That stuff makes me cringe. It’s like an older person getting some very noticeable plastic surgery on their face – it just never looks right and doesn’t hold up.

  8. Mini eMastered

    Hate it

    a range of about 110 miles

    Yawn

    costs over $150,000

    Go pound sand

    zero to 60 mph in 8.5 seconds

    LMAO

    Honestly I’m starting to think the world would be better off without all these boutique companies taking classics and turning them into absurd restomods that cost as much as real estate. The cars would be better off in the hands of some guy and his Craftsman tool set in his garage.

    GTFO with this thing. Absolute waste of money and materials.

    1. Not sure this is considered “a Classic” as you can buy a whole new mini shell built off of the exact same molds mini made them from. if you’re doing this in small number you probably can manufacture your own VINs

    2.  turning them into absurd restomods that cost as much as real estate

      That’s exactly what gets me. You can buy a whole-ass HOUSE for the cost of this thing.

  9. This is like a $1M RV with fine wood and granite countertops. It is trying too hard to justify its cost.

    Assuming it costs $20k to fully restore and paint a Mini shell and these very run-of-the-mill EV components are $20k retail, that thing should be well under $100k. Even at that price it is nothing but a very pricey Instagram moment.

        1. There is pretty much nothing in that interior that came from BMC. It is a completely fresh/new car.

          I’m not calling $150k reasonable, but I would expect that these things aren’t cheap to produce. It is probably much easier from a manufacturing perspective to buy a bunch of heritage shells, suspension components, and interiors than it is to drag a bunch of rusty hulks into your shop and start patching panels together.

            1. My guess would be that they have some rusty hulks on hand for VIN donation purposes, but I’m speculating about all of this so take it with a boulder-sized chunk of salt. I can tell you that nothing in the promo images matches the interior of my mini, even the air vents are different.

              I just don’t see the payoff in welding rusty minis back together for this application. It would be way easier to start with a blank canvas.

  10. Gildred Racing (home of the Honda powered Super Cooper) advertises a classic mini EV conversion using Tesla electromechanicals that features 300hp and 150-mile range with a 31-37 kHz battery for $120K. You know, for the budget conscious folks.

  11. Good news! A coo, lightweight, potentially fun electric car to buzz around the city! It’s just what all Autopians have been saying they want in an electric car!

    Oh.

    It’s a hundred and fifty grand.

    Maybe it’s just news.

  12. Complains about the tail lights, includes 0 pictures of said tail lights in article… The videos won’t load for me at work so all I have is the pics and I can’t see that. Bummer. I will have to look later. Another complaint I have is the “engine start” button. First off, electric motors are not engines; secondly, that button looks identical to one that I used to sell at autozone literally almost 20 years ago. That’s almost as out of place as the pioneer deck there. Oh well.

  13. The headlights really really bug me on this. You’re exactly right about needing to make modern LEDs to replace old sealed beams that look better than cheap Amazon units. Singer has done that with their 911 restomods, which sure are $1M+, but for 150K I’d expect something slightly more appealing than a set of $50 Amazon headlights. Heck, for under $400 USD you can pick up a set of Holley RetroBrights like these

    1. Well said, these Halos have become so generic that cars like this and e-bikes that cost $500 have the exact same light. I’m not impressed, and really under whelmed at $150K

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