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    mercredi 17 juillet 2013

    Sylvain Guintoli dislocates shoulder, but will try to race in Moscow


    Besides riding motocross bikes, cycling is also another sport that riders use to train, while motocross incidents are more common - even riding a bicycle, riders can sustain injuries, like when former World champion Troy Bayliss was thrown from his pushbike after hitting a manhole in Montecarlo, back in 2008.
    Just days before the Moscow round Sylvain Guintoil fell from his bicycle and dislocated his right shoulder and also sustained cartilage damage.
    According to the press release Guintoli will be at Moscow with his team and there the rider, his team and the doctors of the Clinica Mobile will assess his conditions decide whether or not he is fit to participate in the races.
    Guintoli lost the lead in the WSBK standings to Tom Sykes during the Imola round, when the Frenchman suffered a DNF in race 1 due to a technical issue on his Aprilia and in race 2 took a third place, while the Kawasaki rider took two victories.
    “Last Sunday I had a bicycle accident and dislocated my collarbone. After many thoughts, I took the decision to ride in Moscow. It is going to be a very hard challenge and a very painful weekend but my aim is to fight for the Championship,” said the Aprilia rider.
    from TWOWHEELSBLOG

    Hot Brits that stormed the silver screen


    Some actresses remain seductively British, despite sweeping to stardom in Hollywood and beyond. Here’s our pick of five such stars from 60 years of cinema.

    Keira Knightley – British understatement

    Kohl-ringed eyes and a sweet smile, rather than overt sexuality and classical beauty, saw this British actress rise to fame in the early years of the new millennium. Her role as Elizabeth Bennet in the 2005 production of Pride and Prejudice cemented her quintessential English-ness. 

    Catherine Zeta-Jones – From Wales with love

    Zeta-Jones is known as much for being Welsh, and for marrying Michael Douglas, as she is for her screen roles, full lips and hourglass figure. She first came to fame through the British TV series, The Darling Buds of May, and has since starred in films ranging from The Mask of Zorro to America’s Sweethearts. 

    Julie Christie – Sixties chic

    For a brief period, Julie Christie epitomised London life in the Swinging Sixties, with her hippie-ish good looks and long – often tousled – blond hair. But perhaps the hippie dream was more than a passing fad for the Oscar-winning actress who, at the end of the 1970s, moved from Hollywood back to the UK… to live on a farm in Wales. 

    Liz Taylor – Cool as they come

    Yes, Dame Elizabeth Taylor had American parents, but she was born in Hampstead Garden Surburb in 1932 – and a more English area is hard to find. In our opinion, the violet-eyed beauty was also one of the most quintessentially ‘British’ of all actresses. Just listen to her clear-cut voice: as hard as diamonds. 

    Audrey Hepburn – Elfin grace 

    Another British actress born abroad (in Belgium, in 1929), Hepburn was the daughter of a wealthy English banker and a Dutch baroness. Privately educated in London, Hepburn later attended ballet school in the same city – giving her the grace of movement that so much characterised, along with her elfin face, her on-screen image.
    from Classic Driver

    WRC : Hanninen and Bouffier: Hyundai’s test drivers / Hanninen et Bouffier, pilotes d’essais Hyundai


    After recruiting Finn Juho Hanninen, Hyundai Motorsport has now taken on Frenchman Bryan Bouffier, 34, to share the testing of the i20 WRC which will make its debut on the 2014 Rallye Monte-Carlo.
    Après le Finlandais Juho Hanninen, Hyundai Motorsport a confirmé le Français Bryan Bouffier (34 ans) comme pilote de développement de l’i20 WRC qui débutera officiellement au Rallye Monte-Carlo 2014.
    We had a long chat with Bryan after the Ypres Rallye, but he kept the secret like a true professional!
    After working as test driver at Peugeot Sport until December 2012, the Frenchman has been recruited by Hyundai Motorsport to develop the new i20 WRC, a job that will no doubt keep him very busy this summer.
    The son of a former amateur rally driver, he made his debut in the 1990s before winning the Volant Peugeot in 2002. His reward was a works drive for Peugeot Sport in the following year’s French Rally Championship.
    In 2007, he campaigned a 207 S2000 in Poland for the French make’s importer and won three straight Polish titles before returning home to claim the French title in 2010.
    In 2011, Bryan found funding for a limited IRC programme and won the Rallye Monte-Carlo thanks to a judicious tyre choice for the snowy Vercors Mountains stages. This year saw him win another classic event, the Tour de Corse, again in a Peugeot.
    Bryan’s entire career to date has been with PSA Peugeot-Citroën. He is fast and consistent, while his good feedback contributed to the development of the Peugeot 207 S2000 and Peugeot 208 R2. Michel Nandan, who today runs Hyundai Motorsport, worked with Bryan at Peugeot and has called on his services to work on the i20 WRC alongside Juho Hanninen.

    Au dernier Rallye d’Ypres, nous avions discuté longuement avec Bryan qui avait bien gardé le secret ! En vrai pro…
    Pilote d’essais chez Peugeot Sport jusqu’en décembre dernier, Bryan Bouffier a été recruté par Hyundai Motorsport pour développer la nouvelle i20 WRC et il devrait être très occupé cet été.
    Fils de Philippe, ancien rallyman amateur, Bryan a débuté au volant à la fin des années 90 avant de remporter le Volant Peugeot 2002, ce qui lui a valu d’être nommé pilote officiel Peugeot Sport l’année suivante en Championnat de France des Rallyes.
    En 2007, il s’est exilé en Pologne pour piloter la 207 S2000 engagée par l’importateur Peugeot. Bryan a décroché trois titres polonais consécutifs avant de revenir dans l’Hexagone en 2010 et d’être sacré Champion de France.
    En 2011, Bryan parvient à monter un mini-programme IRC et remporte le Rallye Monte-Carlo grâce à un excellent choix de pneumatiques sur les spéciales enneigées du Vercors. Cette année, il a remporté un autre monument du rallye, le Tour de Corse, toujours sur une Peugeot.
    Bryan a fait toute sa carrière dans le Groupe PSA Peugeot-Citroën. Rapide, régulier et d’un très bon « feedback », il a aussi contribué au développement de la Peugeot 207 S2000 ou encore de la Peugeot 208 R2. Michel Nandan, aujourd’hui patron de Hyundai Motorsport, qui avait connu Bryan chez Peugeot, a donc fait appel au Drômois pour développer l’i20 WRC aux côtés de Juho Hanninen.

    The Project X (Yamaha Yard Built XJR 1300) by Deus Ex Machina Italy Project









                             

    THE BMW 2002

    bmw-2002-polak-race-car-title
    -JULY 15, 2013-MIKE BURROUGHS
    There's nothing worse than wild inaccuracies, and there's no question that BMW fanatics are shaking their heads. I can hear it now: "The BMW 'New Class' began with the 1500 in 1961, and the 1602 didn't come out until 1966!" BMW's post-war brand owes everything to the success of the New Class 1500 sedan; its sales allowed the company to pay its shareholders due dividends for the first time since the early '40s. However, the 1500 is hardly the car the world remembers as a truly classic BMW. Instead, the 1500 was over-shadowed by its smaller, more nimble, and cheaper counterpart: The '02.
    The "02" series was intially introduced as the 1600-2, with the "2" denoting it as the coupe-based counterpart to the 1600 sedan of 1966. The market called for something less appointed and more affordable than the sedans BMW was rapidly growing a name for, and as such, BMW's design director, Wilhelm Hofmeister (of Hofmeister Kink fame, which began on the 1500) assigned the 02 project to two staff designers - Georg Bertra, and Manfred Rennen. The to-be coupe was based off of the 1500 platform, however, it was changed rather radically, featuring a shorter wheelbase and lighter weight. Most importantly, it possessed a unique style that, in time, could become iconic in the automotive world.
    When the 1600-2 (which later earned its own name as the 1602 in 1971) was unveiled at the Geneva Auto Show in  March of '66, it was fitted with, unsurprising to those familiar with BMW's model nomenclature, a 1.6-liter inline four cylinder M10. The power output was a mere 85 horsepower at 5700 RPM, and the torque output wasn't much higher - 96-lb-ft at 3,500 RPM. However, the car possessed a spirit not found in any BMW prior. The unibody construction was relatively standard at the time, however, the New Class (and therefore '02s) were the first BMWs to feature McPherson front struts. Out back, the cars featured independent semi-trailing arm rear suspension, which was very uncommon - yet was responsible for much of what made the '02 so fun to drive.
    By 1967, the fun had been realized. Publications left and right had praised the coupe, and even the 1500 sedans, for their nimble handling and their impressive quality. The $2,600 price tag, just $18,000 in today's dollars, put the car within reach of almost any automotive enthusiast. But of course, the people wanted more. Fortunately for them, it was in a time when auto manufacturers were happy to oblige. To follow, BMW had taken the M10 and upped the compression to 9.5:1 - and paired with dual Solex PHH side-draft carburetors, which pumped out an extra 20 horsepower. The resulting "02" was sold as the 1600TI.
    It wasn't, however, sold in the United States, which left BMW importer and Automotive Hall of Fame-er Maximilian Hoffman begging the big wigs at BMW for a "sporting" version of the '02 that he could sell stateside. Fortunately for him, as legend has it, Alex von Falkenhausen, designer of the M10, and Helmut Bönsch, BMW's Director of Product Planning, had both fitted 2.0-liter M10s to their 1602s for personal use. Once the two had discovered that they had both made the same changes to their personal cars, they joined forces and met with BMW's board to propose a 2-liter version of the 1602 - a "2002."

    The following year, in 1968, the 2002 was born. Two variants were offered - a single-carburetor-fed base-model that mustered up 100 horsepower, and the dual-carb high-compression "TI" that pumped out 120 horses - a staggering 45 more than when the New Class was introduced just a few years before. With only 2300 pounds of weight to lug around, the 2002 was a serious blast to whip through corners. Even better, by '71, the "execs" at BMW had approved a replacement for the "TI," including fuel injection which added yet another 10 horsepower to the ever-growing heart. By '73, the world had fallen in love with the 2002, and to ice the cake, BMW brought the first turbocharged production car to the European market - the 2002 Turbo. Just shy of 1700 of these fast-flying race-inspired machines were built, yet the lucky few that were to attain them found themselves behind the wheel with 170 ponies and 180 lb-ft of torque on tap.
    It's no surprise as to why the 2002 and its siblings are one of the most iconic cars BMW has ever built - and furthermore, one of the most iconic cars of the '60s and '70s. The 2002 can in many ways take the credit - all of it - for what BMW grew to become through the '70s, '80s, and '90s. But the 2002 did more than just inspire the 3-series lineage and generations of cars to come: the 2002 has inspired generations of people. From those who were there to see the car in its first few moments, to those who are just now seeing one for the first time, it's hard to deny that there's something enamoring about the quaintly cute coupe.
    The car has started beginnings for many - fathers across the board have stories of their first 2002, and the snowball effect that followed quickly. Mom's can remember the adorable German car they fell in love with in high-school. Today, even the young community is snatching up the remaining cars faster than imaginable. The prices for clean examples continue to rise as rust-free survivors become increasingly rare. Restored variants are reaching values that I'm confident BMW never saw coming, and it's all due to a special bit of driving spirit and heart that few other cars seem to possess.
    However, that only scratches the surface of the 2002's history, in which racing runs deep, and the brilliant minds at the likes of Alpina and AC Schnitzer took the "precious" little 02s and turned them into something only dreams are made of. High-strung racers pushed to the limits, with the bulged and widened fenders to prove it. Would we dare tease such a thing? You bet. There's far more to come, and this "pig-cheek" Alpina-fendered racer will have to tide you over until next time.

    from stanceworks

    John Lennon Ferrari 330GT 2+2 sold for £360k


    Ferrari 330GT 2+2
    The same auction that saw a rare 1954 World Championship winning Mercedes-Benz Silver Arrow W196 sell for close to £20million also saw a Ferrari 330GT 2+2 Berlinetta go under the hammer. The special 1965 Ferrari wasn’t just auctioned because of it’s age and rarity, the status of its former owner also raised the price and generated a lot of interest.
    Rather than taking to the road in his mother’s car or some beat-up old small car, after the ex-Beatle had passed his driving test he brought this Ferrari. The car was therefore the first one he owned and, although it’s an historic and important model, we were surprised to see it exceed the catalogue estimated value of between £180,000 and £220,000. According to rumour when word got out that John Lennon had passed his driving test luxury car dealerships turned up at his house uninvited with a range of exotic cars in the hope they could get the rock superstar to buy a car from them. He succumb to temptation when he saw this Berlinetta and spent £6,500 on it, choosing Azzuro blue and a matching interior.
    For more than 20,000 miles this was Lennon’s car of choice, but he eventually sold it in 1967. When it went under the hammer at Bonhams Goodwood Festival of Speed auction on July 12th its sale helped to establish a new record for the highest grossing motor car auction in Europe when more than £36 million was raised. Lennon’s wasn’t one of the highest sellers. The 1954 Mercedes W196 fetched £19.6 million and a Maserati 300S Sports-Racing Spider from 1955 took a £4million.
    Ferrari 330GT 2+2Ferrari 330GT 2+2Ferrari 330GT 2+2Ferrari 330GT 2+2
    More than 1,000 people were in attendance when the hammer fell and phone bidders from 32 countries were also involved in the historic auction.
    Ferrari 330GT 2+2Ferrari 330GT 2+2Ferrari 330GT 2+2Ferrari 330GT 2+2

    from eurocarblog

    MOTO MORINI 350 K2 BY AD HOC CAFE RACERS BARCELONA


    What a beautiful looking machine! This Moto Morini 350 K2 has been designed and built by Ad Hoc Cafe Racers from Barcelona, Spain. All the superfluous and unnecessary brackets have been removed from the frame to start with. The sub frame was then shortened and sent to be chromed. It’s a really nice change to see a chrome frame, most of the cafe racers I have featured in the last year have gone with black but this looks really cool. The engine has been stripped, cleaned up and painted, they have used a Europlast gas tank which looks fantastic. I love the square edges, it really gives the bike a unique and cool look. The seat was also from Europlast but had to be widened and shortened to fit the new frame.
    AD HOC had a bit of a mission trying to get wheels for this build and said “to get spoked wheels was quite an ordeal, it was not easy to find a dual disc front hub. Eventually we adapted one of a Honda Transalp.” The wheels really give the bike a vintage look and go well with the chromed frame. The colours on the bike are unusual bike I really like them, solid colors are stone gray and cream. I’ve not featured many Moto Morinibefore but I’m finding more and more as I trawl through the internet and really do like what can be done with them.
    Ad Hoc is the brain child of David and says “I grew up around bikes made in Spain, I have loved motorcycles since childhood and I like to shape my ideas, I have always looked at things differently and from an alternative view…” I really hope to see more of his work and I believe he has produced two new bikes which are on his website which will be well worth a look.
    Moto Morini 350 K2 by AD HOC Cafe Racers
    Moto Morini 350 K2 by AD HOC Cafe Racers
    Moto Morini 350 K2 by AD HOC Cafe Racers
    Moto Morini 350 K2 by AD HOC Cafe Racers
    SONY DSC
    SONY DSC

    from Moto Verso

    CUSTOM TRIUMPH MOTORCYCLES FROM MULE


    Custom Triumph motorcycle
    Triumph’s new Bonneville is fast becoming a go-to choice for custom-bike builders who want to start with a reliable current machine, rather than scour junkyards for clanky old donors. The resurrected retrobike has been around long enough now: used examples are affordable, the simple air/oil-cooled motor has its appeal and, of course, there’s thatnameplate on the gas tank. Triumphs start out cool and can easily be made even cooler.
    Three cases in point are the latest Triumphs from Mule Motorcycles, Richard Pollock’s little speed shop out of suburban San Diego. Hinckley Bonnevilles are taking up more and more of Pollock’s build time—he currently has six under construction—and he’s just launched a line of aftermarket products for the Brit twin.
    Custom Triumph motorcycle
    For cost considerations and ease of registration, all three of the Triumphs keep their stock frames rather than the proprietary unit Pollock uses for one-off coachbuilts. There’s still lots of room for individuality, however. The owner of the orange street-tracker (top and above) wanted upside-down forks so it wears a set of late-model Yamaha YZF-R6 tubes in A&A triple-clamps. And while the frame is original, that doesn’t mean it hasn’t been tweaked. Gone are the bolt-on front downtubes, replaced by Mule’s abbreviated versions that also serve as mounting point for the new vertically mounted 4 x 6-inch Earl’s competition oil-cooler. Also missing are the mounts for the passenger pegs/muffler hangers. These were lopped off, the wounds dressed and welded up, then the whole frame was sent out for fresh powdercoat.
    As the engine was out of the frame anyway, Pollock sent it to nearby Triumph Performance USA for the shop’s standard 904cc big-bore treatment. Together with cams, headwork, a pair of 39mm Keihin FCR flat-slide carbs and a remapped ignition module, plus a set of Mule 2-into-1 pipes, the result is an entertaining 85 bhp at the rear wheel. Back in place, the engine was treated to a polished Streetmaster primary cover, which has a slab-sided comp shop look and features hydraulic clutch actuation.
    Other items from the Mule catalog on display here include Race Tech shocks built to Pollock’s specs, spoked Sun alloy wheel assemblies and 19-inch Goldentyre CC rubber, Italian flat-track tires that are fully DOT-certified. The fiberglass solo tailsection with sculpted saddle by Sargent is another Mule kit. It requires minor frame surgery, about six inches removed from the rear subframe, and Pollock provides an endcap assembly to be welded in place, which also serves as a perch for the taillight and license-plate bracket.
    Custom Triumph motorcycle
    The man who commissioned the red-and-black T100 tracker (above and below) went with the standard Mule front end—with Pollock-designed billet triple-clamps that plug into the stock headset, and allow fitment of 43mm conventional forks from older Yamaha R6s, a favorite of flat-track racers. The customer also wanted a single caliper and a custom rotor carrier, but others will opt for the stock R6 twin-disc setup. Mule’s 1-inch track-bend handlebars in polished stainless-steel allow use of stock hand controls.
    Wheels in this case are cast Kawasaki hoops from the 1980s, sourced on eBay, sent off to Kosman Specialties for widening, then powdercoated a dark pewter. The end result looks like a pair of expensive and now-unobtainable magnesium Morris racing wheels, at a fraction of the cost.
    Custom Triumph motorcycle
    Same Triumph Performance 904 kit in this bike too, Pollock’s recommendation for any customers looking to intensify the stock Bonnie’s, shall we say, stately power output. It also runs Mule’s oil-cooler app. Because there are now no under-engine frame tubes, the mount boss for the stock sidestand is gone. Pollock’s fix is a neat TIG-welded chromoly stand kit that attaches under the left rear downtube.
    Money was saved by not hacking off the frame’s passenger peg loops, so the bike runs one of Pollock’s off-the-shelf stainless-steel exhaust systems, without the kicked-up dirtbike muffler as on the orange bike. The owner was also quite happy with the T100’s as-delivered chromed primary cover and cable clutch pull.
    Custom Triumph motorcycle
    The final of Pollock’s Triumph trio, a Thruxton café-racer (above and below), is a bit of a departure from the street-tracker theme, but in truth the two styles aren’t that far apart. Especially as the client, a Scottish IT guy, wanted the comfort and backroad leverage of low tubular handlebars, and doesn’t care for radically rearset footpegs. The bike runs the same engine mods and chassis upgrades as the previous bike, biggest difference being the wheel/tire package. Here Mule’s spoked hubs connect to 18-inch Sun alloys wrapped with more sporting street rubber. For a little binder bling, a red-anodized Ultra-Lite brake caliper attaches to the R6 fork’s left slider.
    Pollock kept the Thruxton seat and cowl, though the rear fender was cut back severely and a smaller taillight was fitted. Fans of the late, great Barry Sheene will recognize the paint scheme as an homage to the Heron Suzuki livery that “Baz” rode to two world GP roadracing championships in 1976 and ’77.
    Bike complete, the client flew in to log 1500 break-in miles around California before shipping the bike back to Scotland. The mileage included a track session at Laguna Seca Raceway, where both owner and builder are happy to report that the Mule Thruxton showed a wheel to none other than Indy 500 winner Danny Sullivan riding his Mert Lawwill Harley street-tracker!
    David Edwards reports that the latest issue of BikeCraft is on newsstands next week. Check out the magazine’s Facebook page for tidbits and updates.
    from BIKEEXIF

    Trial :Adam Raga wins and close the gap with Toni Bou / Adam Raga s’impose et relance le suspens


    Winner in Kramolin (Czech Republic) of its fourth Grand Prix this season, Adam Raga (Gas Gas) equals Tony Bou (Montesa Michelin) which is now leading the World Championship by two points. The next four races, in England and France, will decide the new champion in this intensive and unpredictable season.
    En signant à Kramolin (République Tchèque) son quatrième succès de la saison, Adam Raga (Gas Gas) fait jeu égal avec Toni Bou (Montesa Michelin) qui ne compte plus que deux points d’avance au championnat. Les quatre prochaines épreuves en Angleterre et en France seront décisives pour l’attribution du titre, et la saison est plus ouverte que jamais.


    Just a week after a tough Italian GP with difficult sections, the riders faced an easier, dry, dusty and low scoring event in Czech Republic. Once more Bou and Raga were tight during the first lap, until the reigning champion got an unusual five in section nine to end the lap five points behind Raga. Both did a strong second lap and scored a single mark, and enter the third and last lap far ahead of their rivals.
    Raga showed a moment of weakness when he failed in section three, which allowed Bou to come tight in the standings! But the reigning champion failed in the fifth section, and with a lot of determination Raga scored its fourth win to close the gap within two points of Bou in the championship. With a third position Albert Cabestany (Sherco Michelin) secured another Spanish podium, and comes third in the standings just one point ahead of Takahisa Fujinami (Montesa Michelin) who finished sixth this weekend.
    The next round will take place in two weeks time in Great Britain, with a two days program
    Alors que les zones étaient difficiles une semaine plus tôt en Italie, les pilotes ont affronté un parcours plus facile en République Tchèque ou la sécheresse et la poussière étaient de la partie. Le premier tour se terminait par un coup de théâtre avec un échec de Bou dans la neuvième zone alors qu’il était à égalité de points avec Raga !
    Comptant cinq points de retard à la fin du premier tour, Bou faisait jeu égal avec Raga dans le second tour, et les nerfs des deux hommes étaient mis à rude épreuve à l’attaque de la dernière série de douze zones. Une erreur de Raga dès la troisième zone permettait à Bou de revenir à égalité, mais c’est le leader du championnat qui craquait en subissant un échec dans la cinquième zone !
    Raga remportait son quatrième succès de l’année et revient à deux points de Bou au championnat, Albert Cabestany (Sherco Michelin) montant sur la troisième marche d’un podium 100% Espagnol et prenant la troisième place du championnat au détriment de Takahisa Fujinami (Montesa Michelin) sixième de ce GP.
    Prochaine épreuve dans deux semaines en Grande Bretagne, avec deux épreuves au programme.

    Classements : 1.Raga (ESP, Gas Gas) ; 2.Bou (ESP, Montesa Michelin) ; 3.Cabestany (ESP, Sherco Michelin) ; 4.Dabill (GBR, Beta) ; 5.Fajardo, (ESP, Beta) ; 6.Fujinami (JAP, Montesa Michelin) ; etc….
    Championnat : 1.Bou, 163 ; 2.Raga, 161 ; 3.Cabestany, 120 ; 4.Fujinami, 119 ; 5.Fajardo, 113 ; etc….

    ALPINE-CATERHAM VA BIENTÔT S'AGRANDIR À DIEPPE.



    La Communauté d'Agglomération Dieppe Maritime vient d'acquérir pour un euro symbolique un foncier de 23 255 m2 appartenant auparavant à la ville de Dieppe. Ce terrain jouxte le site actuel d'Alpine. Le maire de la ville se réjouit de cette vente comme il l'a fait savoir sur le site Internet de la commune de la Seine-Maritime : « Cette signature intervient quelques jours après que Renault et Caterham aient scellé leur accord pour relancer la marque Alpine à Dieppe, ce qui récompense le savoir-faire et l'attachement des salariés à leur usine, et constitue une très bonne nouvelle pour l'emploi et le développement économique dans le bassin dieppois ».Il est prévu d'y construire la nouvelle voiture de sport Alpine, la construction devant débuter en 2015. En attendant, Signatech-Alpine va défendre les couleurs de la marque en fin de semaine sur le Red Bull Ring où l'Alpine A450 tentera de décrocher sa première victoire en LMP2 dans le cadre de l'European Le Mans Series.

    Laurent Mercier (Endurance-Info)