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    mardi 13 novembre 2012

    Randy de Puniet Suzuki MotoGP test rider?



















    During the Brno GP and at the height of silly season, Ben Spies admitted that he was talking to Suzuki who was rumored to be planning a couple of wildcard entries and then make a full return in MotoGP in 2014, however Suzuki’s MotoGP project leader Satoru Terada shot down the possibility of wildcard races and futher speculation died out.
    Suzuki was also told by Dorna that they wouldn’t be allowed to return for just a season and they needed to at least commit to MotoGP for at least three years - until 2016, which probably further cooled down the Japanese manufacturer’s eventual plans for a comeback.
    The latest news regarding Suzuki, however and weirdly enough comes PTR World Supersport team manager Simon Buckmaster, who trying to explain why Jules Cluzel is going to be riding for Crescent Suzuki in World Superbikes wrote on the PTR website: “Jules was influenced by his manager who just so happens is also the new Suzuki MotoGP test rider Randy de Puniet’s manager [Eric Mahe is the name of the manager].
    De Puniet as everyone knows is will still be riding for Aspar Power Electronics MotoGP team in 2013 and he is currently on track with his ART machine for the Valencia tests, and the only time the French rider rode a Suzuki GSV-R was during the afternoon session of the first day of testing the 2011 post season test always at Valencia, and just two weeks later Suzuki officially announced their pull out from the series.
    Source | crash.net

    Tour de Belgique : plus de 70 équipages au départ ce vendredi


    L’initiative revient à DG Sport, la structure de Christian Jupsin, sous la houlette de Robert Vandevorst, spécialiste ès rallyes de régularité pour voitures historiques. Et dès l’édition de sa renaissance, le Tour de Belgique fait mouche. Ce prochain vendredi, au départ de Zolder pour le prologue, puis de Chaudfontaine pour l’envol officiel, ils seront plus de 70 équipages à bord de voitures antérieures à 1975. Et comme les meilleurs spécialistes de la « régul’ » seront de la partie, on peut d’ores et déjà parler de beau succès comme l'explique Robert Vandevorst : « Je pense qu’on va pouvoir combler dignement la lacune du Tour de Belgique 1973. L’épreuve n’avait pu avoir lieu pour cause de crise du pétrole, et en dépit des temps économiquement perturbés que nous vivons actuellement, cette 29ème édition sera un grand cru, et surtout une belle commémoration. D’autant que les concurrents ont joué le jeu, en alignant des autos vraiment anciennes. »
    Coup d'envoi à Zolder
    C’est vendredi, sur le coup de 11 heures, que débuteront les opérations de contrôle technique et administratif dans le paddock du circuit de Zolder. Avant un prologue sous la forme d’une première épreuve de régularité sur l’anneau limbourgeois, bien sûr. Après quoi, la caravane rejoindra Chaudfontaine, où sera donné le départ officiel du Tour de Belgique 2012, où trois autres tests de régularité seront proposés, dont un tracé légendaire dont on reparlera d’ailleurs dans le futur.
    Le samedi, c’est la notion d’endurance qui primera, avec une longue étape qui passera par Spa-Francorchamps, Jehonville, Gedinne, mais aussi Mariembourg. « On peut parler d’une journée où la notion d’endurance primera. Le road-book, qui reposera sur du fléché-métré, ne comportera aucune astuce visant à piéger les concurrents, mais ceux-ci ne devront jamais relâcher leur attention, au risque de ‘ballonner’. Sportivement, cette journée consistera en une succession de petits tronçons, et le Tour de Belgique sera fidèle au parcours prévu pour son édition de 1973, la partie de la Semois en moins. La caravane logera samedi soir à Dinant, avant de reprendre la route dimanche, en direction de Chaudfontaine, où l’arrivée sera jugée sur le coup de 16h30. »
    Les CH dans les cafés
    Et cette seconde étape fera la part belle à ceux qui pourront cumuler concentration, rythme et pilotage. Quelque 7 Regularity Tests figureront au programme, et pour certains, tenir la moyenne de 50 km/h promet de ne pas être chose aisée. C’est donc un équipage homogène qui s’imposera au bout de cette commémoration attendue par beaucoup. « Nous avons tenu à conserver bien des particularités du Tour de Belgique d’antan. C’est ainsi que les CH auront principalement lieu dans… des cafés ! Ce sera notamment le cas à La Roche-en-Ardenne, où le Café du Bronze accueillait déjà un CH avant 1973. Toujours plus étonnant, le propriétaire du café est resté le même. Le passage du Tour de Belgique en 1973 devait être sa première activité, mais comme l’épreuve a été annulée, c’est tombé à l’eau. 39 ans plus tard, ce cafetier va pouvoir remettre le couvert. Belle histoire… »
    Précisons également que, si le système Tripy sera utilisé pour le chronométrage, certaines prises de temps seront toujours réalisées par… des hommes et des femmes, gage de sécurité et de convivialité.
    La Panhard Dyna X 1952… et les autres
    Les concurrents de ce 29ème Tour de Belgique Historique s’élanceront dans l’ordre d’ancienneté de leurs automobiles. C’est dès lors l’originale Panhard Dyna X 1952 d’André et Olivier Renaud qui ouvrira la route, forte de sa mécanique de… 850cc ! Cette populaire française sera bien sûr l’une des attractions de l’épreuve, au même titre que la Matra Djet 5S 1967 de Michel Andernack et Yves Dambrain, qui retrouvera pour l’occasion sa décoration d’époque. Une liste de joyaux à laquelle on peut ajouter la Lotus Europa 1973 de Berft-Degueldre, la Mini Marcos de Kawan-Peeters, la Ford Mustang des Français Michaut-Michaut, la Triumph TR2 Francorchamps – construite dans les usines Impéria à Nessonvaux – d’Alain Nagelmackers et Patrick Lienne (qui comptent d’ailleurs parmi les favoris), la Ginetta G15 de Scuvée-Daxhelet, la Porsche 911 SWB (un vrai châssis court…) R Tribute 1968 de Van Vooren-Vandeputte, etc.  Une bien belle caravane…
    Tous les concurrents étant versés dans la même catégorie, la liste des favoris est tout aussi impressionnante, rassemblant les noms incontournables de la discipline. Dimanche, lorsque l’obscurité gagnera Chaudfontaine, les lauréats seront sans doute à trouver parmi le noyau dur suivant : Aerts-Chapa (BMW 2002 Tii Touring 1973), Bodson-Bourguignon (Opel Kadett 1975), Braillard-Lux (Porsche 911 T 1965), Closjans-Gilsoul (Porsche 356), Collard-Collard (Hillman Imp 1970), Corthals-Paquay (Fiat 850 Sport 1970), de Sordi-Lemaire (Opel Kadett GT/E 1978), Deflandre-Rorife (Alfa Romeo Giulia 1972), Delhez-Gully (Ford Cortina Lotus 1965), Dominiczak-Dominicazak (Triumph Dolomite Sprint), Dufrasne-Simon (Volvo Amazon 1965), Jacquet-Albert (Toyota Celica GT 1972), Kevers-Halleux (Mini Innocenti 1975), Lopes-Van Oosten (Porsche 911 Carrera 1974), Magalhaes-Erculisse (Alra Romeo GTV 1973), Piraux-Monard (Renault 5 Alpine 1979), Reuter-Bernard (Porsche 914/6 1970), Royen-Van Heukelom (Porsche 356 1959), Simonis-Damseaux (Ford Escort Mexico 1970), Verhelle-Thirionet (Ford Cortina GT 1965), etc.
    Une liste avantageusement complété par quelques personnalités incontournables, à l’image d’Eric van de Poele et Philippe Quatennens (Monsieur Fleet TV), qui tenteront de s’illustrer avec une Porsche 911 1965, de Benoît Galand (Moteurs, RTL) et Paul Collignon, qui feront cause commune sur une BMW 2002 Ti, de Baudouin Lempereur, roi du Bianchi avec Eric Driesen sur Alfa Romeo GT-V), du jeune Néerlandophone Rubens Maes (avec l’excellent Filip Deplancke sur Porsche 911 T), de Michel Van den Broeck (responsable de la société Lease Plan), accompagné de Pietro Avanzini, ou encore de Claudy Content, copilote de Georges Tomsen sur Opel Kadett GT/E 1974, qui fut le premier vainqueur du Rallye du Condroz !
    Rendez-vous dès ce vendredi 16 novembre à Zolder ou à Chaudfontaine, pour goûter à l’atmosphère forcément conviviale de ce Tour de Belgique Historique qui en appelle bien d’autres, histoire que la légende continue… (COM)

    RACING JAGUARS IN THE ROAR


    A major part of JD Classics’ passion is invested in historic racing: not just supporting customer cars but fielding their own fleet of historic racers and even organising race series themselves. As with their road-going maintenance and restoration services that I took a look at in the previous story, the range of racing cars they manage is wide and eclectic – though naturally with a glorious Big Cat bias. After dragging myself away from the main workshop, it was time to head for the Historic Racing Service area.
    The race-car shop sits just off to the side of the larger road-car workshop and is similarly well equipped. Two spot-lit work bays line up next to a pair of Ravaglioli two-post lifts and a scissor lift. All the cars here had interesting stories to tell: these were racers that bridged 70 years of automotive history and personalities.
    The walls were covered in memorabilia from the team’s competitive past and present, with multiple Goodwood Revival identity signs prominently displayed – and enough victory wreaths to show that their cars are very much used to finishing up front…
    Although the in-house manufacturing units at JD Classics can take care of the big parts, there is a whole range of ancillary components that are kept to hand in rows of trays for easy access: nuts, bolts, brackets and clips by the hundred.
    Each car also has its own special parts cabinet that travels with it to tracks, containing tools and components required to keep the cars running.
    Alongside the modern gear there were some amazing-looking vintage bits of kit, like this Sun 504 Distributor Tester used for building and testing magnetos. But on to the racing cars themselves…
    Starting at the far end of the workshop it looked like a Group C car was undergoing a rebuild, with its rear deck off and big V12 on show. But this was no ordinary Jaguar sportscar – and in fact no Group C: it was an XRJ15 from the most expensive banger racing series ever run!
    The XKR15 was Jaguar development partner Tom Walkinshaw Racing’s foray into the extreme road-car market: it was based on the Le Mans-winning XJR9 chassis and mechanicals with some rather minor concessions to comfort and ride. This car was about the delivery of pure performance: a proper driver’s supercar. The concept was something that Jaguar had a history of, having followed a similar programme with the classic C- and D-Types of the ’50s, allowing customers to own and drive cars close to their race-wining sisters. The issue in the early ’90s was that Jaguar had already started their own parallel development of the XJ220 (also utilising TWR’s know-how), but with the ‘official’ Jaguar coming off worse in the handling stakes – and most shockingly of all using a V6 engine – the XJR15 was adopted by the factory as a second Jaguar supercar almost as they launched their own XJ220.
    Just over 50 XJR15s were conceived and built by TWR, with around half used in the Formula 1-supporting Jaguar Sport Intercontinental Challenge of 1991. Just three races took place, at Monaco, Silverstone and Spa, each with 16 cars piloted by a combination of contemporary sportscar and F1 guest drivers – always spectacular but sometimes with expensive, panel-destroying results.
    Amazingly, despite this on-track action virtually all of the cars survive to this day, with most kept in race trim. The scrutineering sticker for this car shows its entry into the Silverstone race: this looks like the car driven by Ian Flux.
    In the (mid) rear is the monstrous 24-valve, six-litre V12, the bottom end from the Group C unit and the top from Group A, mounted as a stressed member. Throttle control is fly-by-wire, which was advanced for the time. The body was styled by Peter Stevens, who would go on to work on the iconic McLaren F1 project; it predates the F1 in being the first supercar to utilise carbon fibre and Kevlar composites for the monocoque and body.
    The suspension comprised non-adjustable Bilstein shocks, with wishbones at the front working through pushrods to dampers horizontally mounted across the nose.
    At the back, fully Group C-style spring coils mounted as part of the wheel uprights helped clear the underbody venturi tunnels to create the XJR15′s flat-bottomed ground effect. The ride height was upped in road-going trim and the suspension softened, though these could be easily adapted back to racing levels, especially with the addition of a big rear wing.
    Realistically the XJR15 was always a racing car thinly disguised for the road: the two seats were narrow, positioned towards the centre of the car and difficult to get into, and the internal noise so extreme that head-sets were issued with the car. It’s actually the second time that JD Classics have owned this car: they sold it as a race-car about 10 years ago; the new owner converted it to road-car spec. It’s now back in for a race-car reconversion.
    What a contrast to the next bay: the same colour but separated by 40 years, a pristine C-Type Jaguar.
    On the lift was another C-Type with an illustrious history: a car that racing legend Juan Manuel Fangio owned in period. We’ll be getting up close with this car – and a complete range of alphabetical Jags – next week.
    To demonstrate that Jaguars are not the only animals in JD Classics menagerie, here we have a GT40: an unmistakeable shape even shorn of its bodywork. As with so many of JD Classics’ car, this GT40 has an interesting past: it’s been a MkI, a MkIV and a MkI again over its lifetime!
    This was the last MkI off the production line: it actually has no period race history as it was used as a prototype for the MkIV road car project. It was converted in the UK by Ford Advanced Vehicles to road spec, with the gear change moved centrally and the four-headlight nose added, and then shipped to the States – where somehow another GT40 was dropped on top of it whilst being unloaded… The GT40 went to Kar Kraft where it sat for some time until finally being repaired and rebuilt.
    It eventually returned to the UK, still in road car spec, where John Wyer Automotive converted it back to being a full MkI racer in the late ’70s.
    It’s now a frequent visitor to European race-tracks, though earlier this year it was damaged at Silverstone in a start-line incident. Sandwiched between two cars the GT40 sustained a big hit, with chassis damage and broken suspension – hence it undergoing some TLC before being released back to the wild.
    Like the XJR15, the GT40 was obviously not an easy car to get in and out of: you have to slide across the wide fuel cells in the sills to get into the driving seat. It’s not often that you get to compare the under-the-body details of these racers from different periods, where you can directly reference the application of ever-improving technology and materials: everything on the GT40 looks precision engineered but just that little bit larger and industrial than the more modern streamlined tech on the XJR15, for instance.
    Continuing the Blue Oval theme, a 1975 RS3100 Capri was parked up: it is freshly restored and races in JD Classics’ own Challenge series and other historic events in the UK. The Motor Racing Legends Challenge series covers Group 1, 2 and Group A Touring Cars that raced in the British and European Championships during the ’70s and ’80s. There’s ever-growing popularity for this period of tourer – and it’s easy to see why.
    This Capri was built by Broadspeed in the UK but then raced in Sweden for a year before going to Ford in Cologne, where it was rebuilt to full Cologne Capri spec – hence the livery. Outings were rare for a couple of decades, before the car was restored and raced by new owner Vince Woodman (a BTCC race winner in the ’70s and ’80s). JD Classics then subsequently bought it and have added it to their stable of saloon cars.
    Broadspeed were famous for their British Leyland, Ford and Jaguar tuning in the ’60s and ’70s: their cars were very successful in their own right, and stickers on the Capri commemorate the passing of Broadspeed founder Ralph Broad in 2010.
    The wide-body aero pack and ducktail spoiler help compensate for the power of what was under the bonnet: a 3.4-litre Cosworth GAA V6 developing over 460bhp. Mighty.
    Back to Tom Walkinshaw Racing, and one of their famous XJS Group A touring cars.
    This XJS is from 1984: it’s chassis 05 of just seven manufactured by TWR, one of three factory cars and the final car to race.
    Its huge, race-specification 5.3-litre 485bhp V12 with side-exit exhaust system sounds as good as it goes: it even won the Most Spirited Getaway Award at this year’s Goodwood Festival Of Speed. Water-cooled brakes help it with the stopping part that has to come soon after.
    In period it was raced by many famous drivers, including Walkinshaw himself, Armin Hahne and Martin Brundle, though Win Percy was the main driver. The XJS has also seen action on some of the classic tracks of the world, including the original long Brno and Bathurst. It was restored by TWR in ’89 after being retired from competition, but returned to the track in 2004. It’s been fitted with hand controls for Win so he can continue to drive it up the hill at Goodwood, following a serious accident for the driver in 2003, and the XJS has already been invited back to the Festival in 2013.
    The oldest car in for work was this 1924 Vanden Plas-bodied Bentley Three-Litre: this was an original press car used to show off Bentley craftsmanship at the motor shows of the time.
    Upstairs in the engine shop I’d spotted an inline-six Nissan engine, and tucked at the back of the race prep shop, up on a lift, was the likely matching owner. Not one but two famous S30s were here: Big Sam and Super Samuri.
    The man behind both cars was Spike Anderson – Ralph Broad’s cylinder head man in period, who had left Broadspeed to set up on his own and became the UK’s Z-car specialist of the ’70s: Samuri. Super Samuri was his original 240Z road-car, which was used as a racing stand-in whist Big Sam was being repaired after a huge shunt at Brands Hatch.
    Big Sam raced in the mid-’70s Modsports series: a championship for highly-developed saloons that comprised some of the most outrageous tuned racers ever. The 240Z was raced by Win Percy early in his career.
    The lifts at the back also hid a couple of other surprises: another GT40 tub (a JWA car certified by GT40 specialist Ronnie Spain, which is to be built up as a MkIV road car), the bodywork for the XJR15…
    …and this 1960 Lotus Elite Series 1, which had been discovered recently in this condition after 40 years of sitting in storage and is awaiting restoration. This was a Redrose Garage/Peter Jopp car, raced all round the UK in period and was possibly used as a test car for Le Mans. It’s fitted with a Stage 3 kit, which means high performance parts all over: Webers, tubular manifold, alloy brake callipers, SU fuel pump, ZF gearbox – which was the Le Mans spec. JD Classics’ team of investigators is in the process of confirming its provenance.
    Underneath the Lotus was this beast of a car: an Ecurie Ecosse Lister ‘Knobbly’ Jaguar from 1958. This is another car that gives the lie to the idea that old racers are boring: nothing looking like this, weighing just 820kg and with a 5.4-litre 354bhp Chevy V8 competition engine in could ever be described as boring. Fast. Frightening. Awesome. Three words that are far more apt.
    There was just so much stuff in the race-prep storage area that cars and components were slotted in wherever they could be. I almost missed the significance of this nose because of the sheer amount of parts to poke around.
    It was only when stepping back that it became clear that this was all part of one car: the nose, cycle wings on the right and the main chassis make it more obvious just what car it was – and will be again at some stage. It’s a Series 1 Lotus Seven: one of the first run of Sevens, that was dismantled into kit form (as many were supplied originally in fact) and like the Elite is now awaiting a new owner and restoration.
    There’s certainly some work ahead for this Seven…
    Further back was a rather more pristine unit: an XK straight-six awaiting a trip to the engine workshop for some adjustment…
    …and another classic car under a dust cover: an E-Type Lightweight. It’s all very well seeing classic racers on static display, but seeing them at full-chat on a racing circuit is that much better – and that’s exactly what JD Classics ensure happens to their squadron of historics. And for that, we have to thank them. The only problem is the realisation about just how far away the 2013 racing season is!
     by Jonathan Moore from Speedhunters Crew

    MotoGP Day 1 Valencia 2012 test - a washout

















    Today’s first day of post-season testing at Valencia was almost a total washout and looking at the below results and comparing the gap differences would be useless, because of the rain and the changing track conditions.
    The conditions were dry for the first few minutes when the pitlane opened at 10:am and Alvaro Bautista showing off his new sponsor Go & Fun livery was able to get in five laps and post the best time of the day in 1.35.926 but he then skeddadled back to his garage when it started drizzling and stopped for the rest of the day leaving the new parts that HRC brought for him until tomorrow and he’s testing Ohlins suspensions instead of the usual Showa.

    2012 Rookie of the year Stefan Bradl was the second fastest and he too stopped riding after just five laps with his 2012 bike, but he also has the 2013 version to test.
    The Valencia test also saw the return of Valentino Rossi to Yamaha. While reigning World Champion Jorge Lorenzo sat out the entire day, his new team mate did three different runs in the wet totalling 28 laps, progressively lowering his lap times until he stopping the clock in 1’43″736 on his penultimate lap. Yamaha has decided to pack up and move to Aragon to continue testing hoping to find better weather and they’ll also be sharing the track with World Superbike teams Kawasaki, Ducati Alstare, BMW Italia and Pata Honda who had previously booked the circuit for their tests.
    Everyone was waiting for Moto2 sensation Marc Marquez to also debut, but the reigning Moto2 World Champion showed up with splendid white and red leathers, but he didn’t turn a wheel and neither did Valencia race winner Dani Pedrosa. Repsol Honda is staying at Valencia tomorrow, but Marquez will get an extra three days of testing at Sepang later this month.
    Andrea Dovizioso also made his highly anticipated debut on the Ducati he posted his fastest lap on slicks at the start of the day and that put him in the top three, but in the wet and with 41 laps to his name and he was faster than his weekend lap time on the Yamaha M1.
    Ducati’s Nicky Hayden waited for the afternoon session to work on suspensions and a new chassis and he was fifth fastest and actually the fastest rider in the wet. Andrea Iannone also debuted today with Pramac Ducati doing 40 laps and he was 13th fastest in the wet, while Michele Pirro began his new job as Ducati’s test rider and he was 7th on the timesheets.
    Karel Abraham has switched from a Ducati satellite bike to a CRT ART, Colin Edwards and Claudio Corti did some comparison testing between the current BMW Suter and the Kawasaki -FTR machines that they intend to use in the upcoming season.
    MotoGP Valencia Test Day 1 results:
    01- Alvaro Bautista – Go & Fun Honda Gresini – Honda RC213V – 1’35.936
    02- Stefan Bradl – LCR Honda MotoGP – Honda RC213V – + 0.262
    03- Andrea Dovizioso – Ducati Team – Ducati Desmosedici GP12 – + 3.932
    04- Hiroshi Aoyama – Avintia Blusens – BQR FTR – + 6.303
    05- Nicky Hayden – Ducati Team – Ducati Desmosedici GP12 – + 6.635
    06- Valentino Rossi – Yamaha Factory Racing – Yamaha YZR M1 – + 7.800
    07- Michele Pirro – Pramac Racing Team – Ducati Desmosedici GP12 – + 8.361
    08- Claudio Corti – NGM Mobile Forward Racing – FTR Kawasaki – + 9.878
    09- Randy De Puniet – Power Electronics Aspar – ART GP12 – + 10.109
    10- Aleix Espargaro – Power Electronics Aspar – ART GP12 – + 10.124
    11- Colin Edwards – NGM Mobile Forward Racing – FTR Kawasaki – + 10.490
    12- Karel Abraham – Cardion AB Motoracing – ART GP12 – + 11.056
    13- Andrea Iannone – Pramac Racing Team – Ducati Desmosedici GP12 – + 11.836
    14- Hector Barbera – Avintia Blusens – BQR FTR – + 13.521
    from TWOWHEELSBLOG

    WRENCHMONKEES YAMAHA XJR1300


    I’ve always liked the Yamaha XJR1300. It’s an uncomplicated bruiser of a bike, an unassuming retro-style naked powered by a air-cooled motor with a lineage over a quarter of a century long.
    Yamaha knows that if it ain’t broke, you don’t fix it. But the XJR1300 is also ripe for a makeover, so the Japanese factory called in the Wrenchmonkees. The result is MonkeeFist, the first in a series of “Yard Built Specials” commissioned by Yamaha from leading custom builders.