BMW’s Miniature Minis Helping Out with Olympic Events

Reporting by Rain Noe & Perrin Drumm

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Very clever, BMW.

If you’ve seen the small cars whizzing across the lawn at the Olympic stadium for track and field events and have been wondering whether remote-controlled car racing was added as a new Olympic sport this summer, rest assured that’s not the case. You’ve spotted one of BMW Group’s MINI Mini’s, a 1/4-scale version of the street-ready MINI designed to transport sports equipment across the field. The speedy little guys are built with a 10-horsepower throttled electric engine and can carry up to 17.5 pounds, or two javelins (in the ‘sunroofs’), a hammer, discus or shot. It measures just over 3.5 feet long, weighs 55 pounds and has a battery-powered radio control that gives it a 100-meter range and can hold a charge for 35 minutes and fully recharge in 80.

It has all sorts of other bells and whistles, too, none of which I’m entirely sure it needs. Dual vented disc brakes? Heavy-duty shock absorbers (have you seen how smooth and flat that field is)? Fully functional door handles? Headlights? Windshield wipers? If the phrase ‘marketing gimmick’ comes to mind, you’re on the right trail, though it might also be called a brilliant marketing strategy.

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The German auto giant is an Olympics Official Automotive Partner, meaning fleets of Bimmers and Minis are busily ferrying athletes to and from various venues. But while BMW is allowed to mention their OAP status in various ad spots, what they’re not allowed to do is sully the actual venues with their own advertising; IOC rules prevent “commercial installations and advertising signs… in the stadia.” (Omega, however, has somehow been allowed to have their logo on the timing clocks.)

So why are they allowed? Because as BMW has demonstrated to the London Olympics officials, the cute little things save time during the games as they tirelessly, speedily ferry gear back and forth. The three Minis in service cover some 18,000 meters a day between them, working in four-hour shifts each. At a strictly ad-free Olympics, BMW has figured out how to promote its MINI brand in a way that’s hard to object to. Small cars are fun and hey, they’re actually serving a purpose here, right?

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