That’s 35K until I hit (hopefully) 200K miles. Rough calculations and previous experience says it will take me a little less than a year to hit that mark. I’m actually going to try to hit it by AMVIV5 (which will be the end of March).
35K miles in 7 months. Looks like I have some motoring to do!
That is what the rear control arm from the drivers side of my MINI looked like. See where the bend starts? That exactly the same spot on the passenger side where the break occured.
Removing this one took a bit more work than removing the broken one. Although the bend doesn’t look that severe, it was probably off by close to an inch. It was wedged in pretty tight but, with my brother-in-laws help, we got it out.
Here is the difference between the two.
The revised control arm for the ’02-’06 MINI is the one on the bottom. It’s a solid, 1 piece design that is lighter than the original and felt quite a bit stronger.
The top is OEM for ’02 and very early ’03 MINIs (I believe). It’s actually constructed from 2 pieces of steel stamped together then drilled. It’s quite a bit heavier than the new one and those holes, as I have found, are a serious weak point in the unit.
As I mentioned before, the installation was very simple and straightforward. You’ll need an 18mm socket and box end wrench. Total time to replace both should be 30 minutes or less. They aren’t that expensive either from your dealers parts desk, coming in at about $150 each.
If you look under the back of you MINI and see that you have the older design control arms, you should definitely inspect them when you get the chance. If they are bent in any way, you should replace them as soon as possible, especially if you are getting funny wear on your rear tires or your MINI doesn’t quite handle or ride the way you remember it did when you first drove it home.
Now my MINI rides like it should. Handles like it should. Stops like it should. And has the original ride height too. More pictures will be coming to compare before and after later in the week.
You remember last week I had a list of things to check for you with the higher mileage MINIs. Today I will be adding a new item.

That, my friends, is what a broken lower control arm on an R50 looks like when you are stranded on the side of the road.

That is what said control arm looks like after it has been replaced with the newer design. Please note the lighter metal (where the break happened today) vs. the darker metal (where it was already broken).
Upon installation, the other side is also bent, but not broken, and a replacement has already been ordered.
This part should cost $150US or less from your dealer. Takes about 10 minutes to install with a jack, an 18mm socket and 18mm box wrench.
More on what happened later. I’m fine, and the car is ok. But y’all might enjoy the story of actually getting the part and getting it installed.
Not exactly MINI related. More, anti-MINI Related.
Hello Kitty Hummer Limo over on the Crave blog.
Oh, you know you want to click it. C’mon.
Just added a big pile of new header graphics.

Pages are currently broken unless you are using Firefox, so heck, I’ll stick them in, resized to fit, after the jump!
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