R60 My CM4 crunched - off to the MINI hospital
My CM All4 was basically sideswiped while parked on the street. This was in May. Had all 3 panels damaged and a support brace. Amazingly the internals were not damaged, sot he CM definitely has good structural integrity. With lack of parts for the car it was about 6 weeks before I got my CM back. At least insurance let me go to a BMW Auto Body shop. All in all 11k in damages, but the car looks great again.
My CM All4 was basically sideswiped while parked on the street. This was in May. Had all 3 panels damaged and a support brace. Amazingly the internals were not damaged, sot he CM definitely has good structural integrity. With lack of parts for the car it was about 6 weeks before I got my CM back. At least insurance let me go to a BMW Auto Body shop. All in all 11k in damages, but the car looks great again.
If you've been watching the MINI JCW WRC being thrashed on back roads around the world, you can see how strong the basic Countryman structure is. In my case, I have photos of what's left after you take off the broken bits, and the car structure is obviously just as sturdy as it feels when driving. As I recall, one of the safety tests used was loading up the roof - they stopped at 5,000 pounds with no damage. Amazing.
If you've been watching the MINI JCW WRC being thrashed on back roads around the world, you can see how strong the basic Countryman structure is. In my case, I have photos of what's left after you take off the broken bits, and the car structure is obviously just as sturdy as it feels when driving. As I recall, one of the safety tests used was loading up the roof - they stopped at 5,000 pounds with no damage. Amazing.
Other features cited in the safety pick was the maneuverability and traction control.
I should mention that I got trapped in an intersection yesterday (I wasn't box blocking - it was one of those intersections where two lanes turn left, and the guy in front of me slammed on the brakes and got stuck trying to go in to the right lane). A couple of seconds later, when the light turned, a trucker waiting on the cross street hit the gas hard and was looking right over my car. I laid in on the horn and he noticed me, but I almost got a semi right in the driver door.
Good to know they hold up so well. *gulp*
UPDATE:
I've tried to summarize the repair process so far:
Day 1 - crash - MINI Roadside Assistance tows the MINI Cooper S Countryman ALL4 to Niello MINI in Sacramento, CA.
Day 2 - MINI towed to Niello Collision in Sacramento, CA.
Day 3 - Initial repair estimate of $7,696 from Niello, repair to be completed in two weeks (Day 15)
Day 12 - MINI torn down - additional damage found.
Day 13 - New repair estimate over $12,000 and two more weeks needed for repair
Day 14 Ordering parts authorized, repair to be completed Day 30
Day 17 $12,018, all parts ordered (expected Day 18), repair to be completed Day 34
...
Day 32 Niello reported some needed parts were coming out of Germany, expected Day 41, repair to be completed Day 44
Day 38 Niello reported waiting on one part coming out of Germany, no ETA.
Day 40 Neillo reported 3 parts due Day 41, 1 part due Day 44, 1 (last) part has no ETA
Day 41 Niello reported last part due Day 47, repair to be completed Day 48. Insurance rental car runs out Day 41, Niello volunteers to pay for rental car until repair completion
I've tried to summarize the repair process so far:
Day 1 - crash - MINI Roadside Assistance tows the MINI Cooper S Countryman ALL4 to Niello MINI in Sacramento, CA.
Day 2 - MINI towed to Niello Collision in Sacramento, CA.
Day 3 - Initial repair estimate of $7,696 from Niello, repair to be completed in two weeks (Day 15)
Day 12 - MINI torn down - additional damage found.
Day 13 - New repair estimate over $12,000 and two more weeks needed for repair
Day 14 Ordering parts authorized, repair to be completed Day 30
Day 17 $12,018, all parts ordered (expected Day 18), repair to be completed Day 34
...
Day 32 Niello reported some needed parts were coming out of Germany, expected Day 41, repair to be completed Day 44
Day 38 Niello reported waiting on one part coming out of Germany, no ETA.
Day 40 Neillo reported 3 parts due Day 41, 1 part due Day 44, 1 (last) part has no ETA
Day 41 Niello reported last part due Day 47, repair to be completed Day 48. Insurance rental car runs out Day 41, Niello volunteers to pay for rental car until repair completion
UPDATE:
I've tried to summarize the repair process so far:
Day 1 - crash - MINI Roadside Assistance tows the MINI Cooper S Countryman ALL4 to Niello MINI in Sacramento, CA.
Day 2 - MINI towed to Niello Collision in Sacramento, CA.
Day 3 - Initial repair estimate of $7,696 from Niello, repair to be completed in two weeks (Day 15)
Day 12 - MINI torn down - additional damage found.
Day 13 - New repair estimate over $12,000 and two more weeks needed for repair
Day 14 Ordering parts authorized, repair to be completed Day 30
Day 17 $12,018, all parts ordered (expected Day 18), repair to be completed Day 34
...
Day 32 Niello reported some needed parts were coming out of Germany, expected Day 41, repair to be completed Day 44
Day 38 Niello reported waiting on one part coming out of Germany, no ETA.
Day 40 Neillo reported 3 parts due Day 41, 1 part due Day 44, 1 (last) part has no ETA
Day 41 Niello reported last part due Day 47, repair to be completed Day 47. Insurance rental car runs out Day 41, Niello volunteers to pay for rental car until repair completion
I've tried to summarize the repair process so far:
Day 1 - crash - MINI Roadside Assistance tows the MINI Cooper S Countryman ALL4 to Niello MINI in Sacramento, CA.
Day 2 - MINI towed to Niello Collision in Sacramento, CA.
Day 3 - Initial repair estimate of $7,696 from Niello, repair to be completed in two weeks (Day 15)
Day 12 - MINI torn down - additional damage found.
Day 13 - New repair estimate over $12,000 and two more weeks needed for repair
Day 14 Ordering parts authorized, repair to be completed Day 30
Day 17 $12,018, all parts ordered (expected Day 18), repair to be completed Day 34
...
Day 32 Niello reported some needed parts were coming out of Germany, expected Day 41, repair to be completed Day 44
Day 38 Niello reported waiting on one part coming out of Germany, no ETA.
Day 40 Neillo reported 3 parts due Day 41, 1 part due Day 44, 1 (last) part has no ETA
Day 41 Niello reported last part due Day 47, repair to be completed Day 47. Insurance rental car runs out Day 41, Niello volunteers to pay for rental car until repair completion
We took the train from the SF Bay Area to Sacramento to pick him up. An additional note was a surprise increase of $1,379 in the repair cost. It seems they hadn't noticed that the right adaptive xenon headlight system was missing from the car until the final fitting (it was thrown clear across the road). Amazing.
Final score: 47 days, $13,398 and everything seems to be back as it was - except:
Looking over the car I found three chrome trim strips that have failed - ends shrunk, sides loose, end loose. Next stop at my dealer to join the party - what will their story on fixes be?
Hopefully this will be a useful narrative if others get in a similar fix. The final cost seems dangerously close to declaring the car totaled, but the way events proceeded that didn't happen. I don't know if that's a good thing. I do know that the CM4 is an incredibly strong vehicle and I'm not worried about the result from a driving standpoint.
I too am relieved you have your little buddy back. I'd like to hear your assessment of the workmanship quality. More to the point, how does Fenton handle? Any pulling to the side, vibration, or creeks that weren't there before this happened? Do the doors match up properly? How about the paint...does it match and is it without feathering where it was blended in with the undamaged area?
Personally I would have made a plee to get the car written off, this accident is going to kill your resale value.
You can't compare the standard road car to a bodyshell built for rallying, the WRC CM is seam welded, braced, fitted with a roll cage, everything is beefed up, to the point where they only look the same.
Personally I would have made a plee to get the car written off, this accident is going to kill your resale value.
Personally I would have made a plee to get the car written off, this accident is going to kill your resale value.
hell my last accident they paid to fix it, ended up at 87% of the value.
Works different in Norway then, I refused to have my 6 month old Mercedes fixed after being rear-ended, it wasn't even close to totalled, my company fought for me, it was the other guys fault so his company paid out.
I too am relieved you have your little buddy back. I'd like to hear your assessment of the workmanship quality. More to the point, how does Fenton handle? Any pulling to the side, vibration, or creeks that weren't there before this happened? Do the doors match up properly? How about the paint...does it match and is it without feathering where it was blended in with the undamaged area?
Nothing out of the ordinary in handling, everything in alignment, paint is indistinguishable from new, no blending issues.
I'm left with a little bit noisier engine - I think I'll check for an exhaust leak.
You can't compare the standard road car to a bodyshell built for rallying, the WRC CM is seam welded, braced, fitted with a roll cage, everything is beefed up, to the point where they only look the same.
Personally I would have made a plee to get the car written off, this accident is going to kill your resale value.
Personally I would have made a plee to get the car written off, this accident is going to kill your resale value.
Admittedly they insert a roll cage and provide for an alternative suspension attachment at the rear, in the front they're very close - both very strong.
My observations from being inside when part was torn off pretty much confirm it - no real structural members were modified by the crash.
Well, Fenton's got his new livery - white top and white bonnet stripes. He's also getting mud flaps (I'm hoping to cut down on the brake/tire dust on the sides), hatch opening bumper protection, and skid plate under the engine.



