ACE CAFE RADIO

    lundi 20 mai 2013

    Tony Cairoli dedicates 58th victory to Marco Simoncelli


    Tony Cairoli Brazil MXGP
    from Twowheelsblog
    Six time World MX champion Tony Cairoli took a double victory yesterday to score his 58th career GP victory during round 7 at the Beto Carrero track in Brazil.
    The Red Bull KTM Factory rider raised his trophy to the sky that had a #58 on it and with one finger pointed to the sky, as he dedicated his victory to the late Marco Simoncelli, who tragically passed away at Sepang on October 23rd 2011.
    Cairoli was a friend of Simoncelli’s and they got to know each other after taking part in the motocross charity event ‘Una gara per Luca’ (to help a young MX rider who became paralyzed after a crash) that was organized by Marco Melandri, and the Sicilian rider also attended Simoncelli’s funeral.
    Cairoli will be present at the Mugello GP next month and will donate his 58th trophy to Simoncelli’s father Paolo, during the Italian MotoGP weekend.
    Tony Cairoli Brazil MXGPTony Cairoli Brazil MXGPTony Cairoli Brazil MXGPTony Cairoli Brazil MXGP

    THE BROWNIE SCRAMBLER – YAMAHA SCORPIO ’07


    Spesifikasi :
    • Body Custom by STUDIO MOTOR Custom Bike
    • Painting by KOMET Studio
    • Upside Down Suzuki GSX400
    • Swing Arm Custom
    • Shock Belakang YSS Z-Series
    • Velg TK Japan 18X3.00 Inch & 18X3.50 Inch
    • Ban Shinko SR428 130/80-18
    • Stang Barros
    • Karbu Keihin PWK28 Sudco
    • Filter Udara TDR
    • Knalpot Custom by Flash Muffler Custom
    STUDIO MOTOR Custom Bike

    1953 FERRARI 340/375 MM BERLINETTA ‘COMPETIZIONE’


    1953 Ferrari 340375 MM Berlinetta Competizione by Pinin Farina 12 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta Competizione
    This is a 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta ‘Competizione’ and it’s one of those wonderful ’50s era Ferraris that even non-sentient, single celled organisms find beautiful.
    This is a motor car that was built for racing, and race it did. It came second in the 1953 24 Hours of Le Mans (though was later disqualified due to brake fluid or some such nonsense), it’s been driven by a total of 3 Formula One champions in competition and was used by Umberto Maglioli in the Carrera Panamericana. Umberto averaged a speed of 138mph during this race and set the fastest public road stage record in history. Somewhat remarkably, this record still stands today.
    1953 Ferrari 340375 MM Berlinetta Competizione by Pinin Farina 5 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta Competizione
    The 1950s were a busy time for this chassis, it travelled from Europe to the Americas and back again, competing in races like the Spa 24 Hours, Pescara 12 Hours and the Circuit of Guadeloupe in the hands of Alberto Ascari, Dr. Farina and Mike Hawthorn.
    Most Ferrari historians consider this to be one of the most important Ferraris of the 1950s and thus one of the most important of the 20th century. The car’s body is a work of art and was styled by Pininfarina (actually by Pinin Farina, as this was before the name was officially joined in the ’60s).
    The good news for the millionaires in the audience is that it’s headed to the auction block at Villa Erba with RM Auctions on the 25th of May 2013. If you fancy owning the single most iconic Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta ‘Competizione’ in the world, you might want to book a seat.
    1953 Ferrari 340375 MM Berlinetta Competizione by Pinin Farina 6 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta Competizione
    1953 Ferrari 340375 MM Berlinetta Competizione by Pinin Farina 7 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta Competizione
    1953 Ferrari 340375 MM Berlinetta Competizione by Pinin Farina 8 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta Competizione
    1953 Ferrari 340375 MM Berlinetta Competizione by Pinin Farina 11 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta Competizione
    1953 Ferrari 340375 MM Berlinetta Competizione by Pinin Farina 1 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta Competizione
    1953 Ferrari 340375 MM Berlinetta Competizione by Pinin Farina 2 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta Competizione
    1953 Ferrari 340375 MM Berlinetta Competizione by Pinin Farina 4 1953 Ferrari 340/375 MM Berlinetta Competizione
    Additional information provided by Autoblog.
    Photo Credits: Tim Scott ©2013 Courtesy of RM Auctions
    from Silodrome

    24 Heures du Nürburgring


    88 laps and 15 hours might not sound right for a 24-hour race, but combine the Nordschliefe and the horrific conditions we’ve had this weekend and it’s a miracle that many were completed… The #9 Black Falcon Mecedes-Benz SLS AMG crossed the line at 5pm to take the three-pointed star’s first win at the Nürburgring 24 Hours not just in the modern GT3 era but also in the event’s 43 year history, after a titanic battle to the flag over the second half of the event.
    It was almost a Merc podium lock-out, but the #25 Marc VDS BMW Z4 absolutely hammered the final segment of the race: every time it went past me it looked totally on the edge, using every kerb, looking for every metre to make up ground. And it worked: #25 cut through two ROWE Racing SLSs and finished just two and half minutes behind the Black Falcon car as the flag dropped on the race.

    Nürburgring 24 Hours 2013: result
    1: #9 Black Falcon Mercedes-Benz AMG SLS 88 laps
    2: #25 Marc VDS BMW Z4 +2m39
    3: #22 ROWE Racing Mercedes-Benz AMG SLS +1 lap
    4: #23 ROWE Racing Mercedes-Benz AMG SLS +1 lap
    5: #1 Phoenix Audi R8 LMS ultra +1 lap















    à suivre ......

    24 H du Nürburgring : MERCEDES ET BLACK FALCON HÉROS DE L'ENFER VERT !



    Les 24 Heures du Nürburgring 2013 resteront comme une édition particulière puisque l'on pourrait renommer l'épreuve les 15 Heures du Nürburgring. Les pilotes ont été laissés au repos de 23 heures à 8h20 du matin pour cause de pluie et de brouillard. C'est finalement la Mercedes SLS AMG GT3/Black Falcon de Bernd Schneider, Jeoren Bleekemolen, Nicki Thiim et Sean Edwards qui s'est imposée après 88 tours. Mercedes remporte là son premier succès et succède à Audi. Le double tour d'horloge du massif de l'Eifel s'était jusqu'alors toujours refusé à la marque allemande, déjà victorieuse des 24 Heures de Dubai en janvier dernier, déjà avec Black Falcon et Bleekemolen/Edwards/Schneider. Il a fallu revoir toutes les stratégies lors du second départ dans les différentes équipes et à ce petit jeu la Mercedes #9 a été la plus en vue. Pourtant la concurrence n'a rien lâché, notamment le BMW Sports Trophy Team Marc VDS et sa BMW Z4 GT3 #25 qui n'échoue qu'à 2.39 mn de la victoire.

    Partagée par Martin/Piccini/Göransson/Buurman, la BMW belge a mis le feu aux poudres, Maxime Martin faisant le show à lui tout seul. On le pensait né dans le chaudron de Spa mais l'Eifel lui va aussi bien. Max a fait une nouvelle fois étalage de son talent en piste en tournant une vingtaine de secondes plus vite que ses adversaires dans des conditions de piste à ne pas mettre un pilote derrière un volant. Le pilote BMW Motorsport associé à l'équipe belge confirment tout le bien que BMW pense d'eux. En fin de course, Max Martin n'a pas hésité à aller au charbon pour combler son handicap face à deux autres Mercedes qui n'ont jamais revu la BMW Z4, le belge tournant en 8.22.088 mn. Après son double podium hier au GP de France Moto, le Marc VDS Racing Team a répondu présent et peut se satisfaire de cette deuxième place. Le podium est complété par une autre Mercedes SLS AMG, en l'occurrence la #22 du ROWE Racing de Graf/Jäger/Seyffarth/Bastian qui termine à un tour. Un splash & dash à 9 minutes de la fin de la voiture sœur partagée par Arnold/Roloff/Seyffarth/Jäger a relégué la #23 au pied du podium, les deux Mercedes étant roues dans roues à 30 minutes du terme.

    Il faut descendre à la 5ème place pour trouver la première Audi R8 LMS ultra, avec la #1 du G-Drive by Phoenix Racing de Rockenfeller/Fässler/Stippler/Stippler/Winkelhock. Le BMW Team Schubert a vu une seule de ses deux BMW Z4 GT3 franchir la ligne d'arrivée, à la 6ème place (Adorf/Hürtgen/Klingmann/Tomczyk). Pourtant, Dirk Adorf a bien failli tout perdre dans la matinée en allant tutoyer le rail. Dans le camp Porsche, les baroudeurs Dumas/Lieb/Bernhard/Luhr doivent se contenter de la 7ème place au volant de la Porsche 911 GT3-RSR/Manthey Racing. Olaf Manthey avait fait le pari d'aligner une RSR (SP7) pour son équipage vedette mais cela n'aura pas été suffisant. Partie en tête lors du restart, l'Aston Martin V12 Vantage GT3 officielle de Turner/Mücke/Simonsen/Lamy est rentrée dans le Top Ten après avoir mené la course un bon moment. Sur la Porsche 911 GT3-R/Haribo Racing Team, Manu Collard prend finalement la 12ème place en compagnie de Westy/Riegel/Stursberg, soit quatre places devant Patrick Pilet (Porsche 911 GT3-R).

    Manque de chance pour l'Audi R8 LMS ultra/Belgian Audi Club Team WRT de Mies/Vanthoor/Haase/Sandström qui pouvait prétendre à une place d'honneur mais Laurens Vanthoor est sorti de la piste durant la matinée en glissant sur de l'huile. Sanction identique pour la seconde BMW Z4 GT3/Marc VDS, Bas Leinders se faisant percuté bien malgré lui par un concurrent en perdition. Là aussi, Moser/Leinders/Göransson/Paltalla pouvaient jouer une belle place finale. Quant à la seconde BMW Z4 GT3/ Schubert de Farfus/Müller/Müller/Alzen, elle a vite abdiqué pour un problème récurrent de direction. La seule McLaren MP4-12C du plateau n'a guère été loin puisque la monture du Dörr Motorsport a très vite rendu les armes (moteur cassé).

    Les Italiens de Nova Race terminent à une très belle deuxième place de la catégorie SP10 GT4 avec leur Ginetta pilotée par Simpson/Fletcher/Scarpaccio/Cressoni. Chez Peugeot Automobiles, c'est l'euphorie puisque les 208 GTi ont vu l'arrivée mais elles ont surtout raflé les trois premières places de la classe SP 2T. Frankenhout/Radermecker/Niederhauser/Ricci peuvent être satisfaits de leur 32ème place finale, la #208 terminant 39ème et la #215 46ème. Belle prestation d'ensemble des hommes de Cyrus Ayari ! Quant à la BMW Z4 de la structure de Jean-Luc Le Digou, elle a pris la 121ème places aux mains de Eric et Guillaume Van de Vyver, Dominique Nury et Philippe Burel.

    Laurent Mercier (Endurance-Info)

    Yamaha RD400 - CHOPPRD


    Written by Jason Cormier. Jason is a freelance writer and accomplished shade-tree mechanic based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He is the editor of Odd-Bike.com, a selection of odd, exotic, unusual, and rare motorcycles from around the world.
    In a modest garage a few miles east of San Francisco, there is a man who builds motorcycles. This might not sound particularly exceptional, as there are men building bikes in many garages in many cities, and some of them are exceptional enough to get profiled on sites like this. Julian Farnam is a different sort of builder though, and he has built a different sort of bike. He is a consummate tinkerer, a man who puts together unique machines of his own design in his spare time. It's not his day job, but he is damn good at what he does – producing some of the most interesting and thoughtfully designed custom bikes you'll come across anywhere. The bike we are featuring today is one of Julian's odd creations, a raked and chopped Yamaha RD400 that applies one of Julian's favourite concepts – alternative front suspensions. More remarkable is that the CHOPPRD, as Julian has christened it, was built in his spare time over a 30 day period for a total budget that could not exceed $1000 – that includes the donor bike and all the parts and modifications that go with it.
    Julian has been building interesting customs since the early 90s, since he graduated from the prestigious Art Centre College of Design in Pasadena, California. One of his most spectacular builds was his FFE 350, a forkless-front-end chassis built around a Yamaha RZ350 engine. Today Julian works full time as a mechanical engineer for Dolby Laboratories in San Francisco and occasionally finds time to build frames for road racers & custom motorcycles.
    Where the FFE was a time consuming (nearly seven years) and highly-polished engineering project that could easily pass for a factory skunkworks prototype, the RD would be a much more rough and dirty build. In fact that's the whole point. Julian built the CHOPPRD for the San Francisco Dirtbag Challenge, a self-described "low-rent chopper buildoff!" that sets a maximum budget of $1000 and a maximum build time of 30 days. Completed machines must be capable of riding a 100 mile loop on the Dirtbag judgment day without breaking, seizing, exploding, or catching fire: aside from those basic guidelines, everything goes. 
    Julian was unable to participate in the 2011 build-off but vowed to return with something interesting for 2012. He spent months sketching and preparing for the build, filling notebooks with ideas and designs during his morning train commute and crafting models in CAD to ensure that everything would work once he set tools to metal. The rules of Dirtbag allow you to plan as much as you like in advance, and there are no set styles or themes, so Julian put lots of thought into developing a unique machine that he could build within the short window of time. The 30 day period is set by the Challenge organizers, so once the clock starts you have to get cracking – and with the complexity Julian envisioned for his contribution, he needed to have a clear idea on how to proceed to be able to meet the deadline – as this was a 'spare time project'.
    The basic concept was to take a classic bike and build a heavily raked leading-link front end from scratch, with a reinforced and lengthened swingarm at the rear. Julian has long been a fan of two-strokes, having grown up with them and spent the better part of his life riding them, particularly Yamaha RDs and RZs. His first "real" bike was an RD250 he purchased when he turned 16. So it was only natural that Julian would gravitate towards an RD400 as the basis of his project. Unfortunately finding a running donor for under $1000 was practically impossible, so he had to resort to some creativity, several donor bikes, and the raiding his ample spares bin for parts. He brought the costs down by trading and selling whatever he could, and accepting donations from helpful parties. This is how he managed to snag an otherwise quite valuable “Daytona” fuel tank - rusted to hell inside and dented on the outside, but complete enough to be of use. In the end Julian was left with a complete running bike well within the Dirtbag budget. He even managed to snag a spare RD400 in “near running condition” for $200, which he has saved for a future project. If only the rest of us were so resourceful.
    The bike is thus a true Bitsa machine – the spoked wheels and drum brakes are from an R5 RD350, the frame and engine from a 1977 RD400, the exhausts are modified RZ350 expansion chambers with Toomey cans, the tank is off a 1979 RD400F Daytona Special, and bits and pieces are from various years of RD 250, 350 and 400 donors accumulated by Julian over years of RD ownership.
    Julian began by slicing up the frame, extending the steering head, and raking out the headstock to a very un-RD like 45 degrees. The subframe was chopped off and rebuilt with a bobbed seat support and forward shock mounts, topped off by a seat from a GSX-R. The resulting contraption is over eight feet long, and requires a stretched out riding position due to the use of re-use of the passenger pegs at the rear and clip-on bars at the front. The frame and suspension geometry is chopper, but the riding position is cafe racer, which gives the CHOPPRD a long-and-low appearance that looks remarkably coherent despite the mixing of worlds.
    The front fork was built out of steel tubing with a leading-link design that gives the CHOPPRD its characteristic look. A leading link fork places the suspension pivot point behind the front axle on a linkage that feeds the forces up to a pair of coil over shocks that provide the suspension action. It's still a favourite design for dedicated sidecar hacks. The lack of geometry change as the wheel rises keeps your suspension setup consistent, as the wheel travels straight up and down, unlike a telescopic fork which can change the trail and wheelbase as the wheel moves up and back. Leading-link front ends also benefit from a lack of lateral flex, which is good when a sidecar rig is applying significant sideways load in corners. You also get natural anti-dive capabilities. As the pivot it aft of the front axle, the force of braking actually pushes the front up, not down like a telescopic fork. 
    All of this academic, of course - Julian designed his front end to look badass, not win races. His design takes elements of the classic Earles fork (think 1950-60s BMWs) and a springer front end (ala 1970s American chopper or antique Harley). Julian's design takes the large, reinforced swinging arm of the Earles' front end and combines it with the high-mounted external springs and parallel pushrods of a springer fork, giving it a unique appearance that is neither fish nor foul but is characteristically Farnam. 
    The upper fixed forks are clamped by a set of GSX-R 600 triples, while the springs are Mulholland rear shocks from the spares bin. Julian designed the front to accommodate a pair of Ohlins piggyback reservoir rear shocks off a Yamaha snowmobile, but didn't fit them due to the budget constraints of the Dirtbag Challenge. In fact the long, insect-like headlamp bracket was built to accommodate the extra width of the Ohlins’ piggyback reservoirs. The rear swingarm is fabricated from steel tubing and a pair of massive 1/3-inch thick water-cut steel plates. Julian chopped the stock rear swingarm in half and extended it, adding an underslung tube brace. Everything is over-engineered and massively constructed without looking overweight – Julian likes to err on the side of caution when designing his components. 
    Everything was cut, bent, welded and finished by Julian in his garage, the only exception being the water-cut plates on the swingarm. The rusty Daytona tank was carefully gutted and rebuilt, with some panel beating to straighten everything out without disturbing the nicely patina'd original paint. Julian maintained the rough elegance of the machine by leaving the steel components in their bare form, with a lightly brushed finish sealed by a coat of oil. Doesn’t rain or snow much in NorCal, apparently.
    Julian comments that riding the CHOPPRD is a challenge. The long wheelbase and stretched out riding position makes handling the machine a workout, and the raked leading-link front lacks trail which can make it unstable in slow manoeuvring. The parts-bin shocks are a bit soft, but he already has the Ohlins items on hand to fix that problem. He also notes that the anti-dive is actually too effective and the front bottoms, uh, up under hard braking, something he plans on rectifying in a future update. 
    The resulting machine is beautifully crafted but just rough enough to fit in with the crowd at the Dirtbag Challenge, without compromising Julian’s characteristically impressive attention to detail. Every element of the CHOPPRD is carefully planned and executed while still remaining within the spirit, timeline and budget of the Dirtbag event. While Julian is modest about his fabricating skills, it’s clear that he is a skilled metalworker and is able to achieve remarkable results considering the constraints. His skills are not limited by such ephemeral concepts as money and time. The CHOPPRD is one of his most impressive creations simply because he effectively slapped it together on a couple of weekends, and his effort was good enough to earn him a “Coolest Bike” award and an invite to exhibit the machine, alongside his FFE 350, at the 2013 The One Motorcycle Show in Portland, Oregon. Julian continues to tinker with various projects in his spare time, and contributes his frame-fabrication skills to other projects. We look forward to seeing his next highly polished contribution to the world of magnificently weird custom machines, especially his contributions to future Dirtbag Challenges. 
    viaPIPEBURN

    24 Heures du Nürburgring– Black Falcon résiste à la pluie


    La Mercedes SLS AMG n°9 du Black Falcon (Schneider-Bleekemolen-Edwards-Thiim) occupe désormais la tête des 24 Heures du Nürburgring à trois heures de l'arrivée. Les équipes ont dû composer avec le retour de la pluie, ce qui a modifié les positions en tête de l'épreuve. La BMW Z4 n°25 du Trophy Team Marc VDS (Martin-Piccini-Buurman-Göransson) pointe à moins d'une minute de la première place. Les Mercedes SLS AMG du Rowe Racing suivent la BMW, avec la n°23 de Arnold-Roloff-Seyffarth-Jäger en troisième position devant la n°22 de Graf-Jäger-Seyffarth-Bastian. L'Audi R8 LMS ultra n°1 du G-Drive Racing by Phoenix (Rockenfeller-Fässler-Stippler-Winkelhock) complète le top cinq.

    "Darla" by Jesse Rooke Customs










    Foto: rookecustoms.com via Racing Café