The beauty of the Mini is that it can be modified to suit whatever the owner wants. Parts and accessories are plentiful and examples of what others have done to their cars abound so the sky's the limit.
In my case I acquired a 1970 MK II Cooper S as a retirement present to myself, discovering afterwards that it started life as a NSW Police pursuit vehicle but had been repainted and had minor modifications done by previous owners. That set me on a path to research what made these particular cars different to what the public could buy. That car now resides on display at the NSW Police Academy in Goulburn.
When a very original and unmolested example of an ex-NSW Police Cooper S with original engine and strong provenance came up for sale I pounced. The owner had purchased it at the NSW Government fleet auction, had kept the original sale receipts and did virtually nothing to it other than maintenance over the twenty years it was on the road until it was parked up in 1991 with a bung clutch. It came with the original Police accessories - steel sump guard, mesh sun visor and perpsex wind deflector.
I felt it was almost my duty to preserve the car as a reference for those wanting originality in their own vehicle, and especially regarding the changes done by BMC to meet the Police contract at the time - Special Production Order 41. A long search resulted in the acquisition of items removed before the auction - siren, blue flashing light (beacon), two-way radio, calibrated speedometer, driving lights, hand-held POLICE sign and spotlight, and fire extinguisher.
I applaud those who modify their Mini to suit themselves. In my case originality was the driver for all that I did to the car.
Pics below while on display at 2019 Motorclassica at Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne.
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