ACE CAFE RADIO

    dimanche 22 septembre 2013

    9FF GT9 CLUBSPORT: THE BRAIN MELTER


    I’m dimly aware of talking going on behind me. Any minute now something important’s going to be said and I’m going to miss it. I should really be paying more attention to what’s happening, but right now, my brain has stopped performing any kind of higher-level function. All normal thought processes have faded into the background. I can’t draw my gaze away from the sight in front of me.
    I’m in the premises of Porsche tuner 9ff in Dortmund, Germany. We’ve been in Germany for a number of days now and the visit here was always planned. Of course I’d heard of 9ff before, so I was prepared for some pretty cool machinery. I wasn’t prepared for this.
    It’s at this point that I should probably hold my hands up and admit that I’ve never been the biggest Porsche fan. It’s not that I’ve actively disliked the brand’s cars per se, but just that I’ve tended to always be a fan of the more wild and wonderful creations to have rolled out of the underbelly of the automotive world. I’ve always respected its prowess, and held an admiration for its clean and simple design. But Porsches have just never grabbed me in the same way that some of my favourite cars have.
    Well, consider me grabbed. Ensnared, bewitched, possessed, mesmerised, whatever you want to call it. This is the effect any great car has on a beholder. I literally can’t take my eyes off the GT9 CS.
    I’m not sure if it’s the stunning Gulf-inspired livery, the sheer amount of engineering that I know has gone into it, or the way the custom bodywork looks like it’s been draped over a normal Porsche in the way a predatory spider immobilises then descends over its prey to feed. I’m pretty sure it’s a combination of all these and more, but as I said before, all higher-level function is currently suspended.
    At last, I manage to tear my gaze away from the car and return it to Jan Fatthauer, our host for the day and owner of 9ff. He explains that the owner of the GT9 ClubSport previously owned a 9ff-tuned GT2 in the same colour combination running around 800hp. After two years of driving the GT2, he came back to 9ff saying that he wasn’t such a good driver so needed a faster car. So Jan took a GT9, which had previously been purpose-built for top-end speed, and made it into a track car.
    Sounds simple right? But what you have to appreciate here is just how different the standard GT9 is to a normal car anyway. Along the route to trying to achieve 400km/h (the original aim of the GT9), the entire car has shed its skin and replaced it with another – one designed to cut through the air with more ease.
    The CS then starts to reel back that flat-out shape and moulds it to something more suited for the track with RSR-inspired wider arches, arch louvres, a sleek rear wing, and cut-out running-board style skirts. The rear three quarter windows are replaced with intakes to feed the turbos.
    The one-piece carbon fibre bodywork is draped over a custom 9ff tubeframe chassis. The engine is now mid-mounted, while also lying as far down as possible to lower the centre of gravity. It’s actually hard work to see any engine inside at all when you peer through the rear window – if you can even reach it past the huge arches that is!
    The 3.6-litre boxer motor is, as you’d expect, extensively modified. There’s forged pistons, titanium conrods, and a lightened and balanced knife-edge crankshaft sitting in a modified crank case. Up top, custom 9ff camshafts, cylinder heads, fuelling system, intake/exhaust manifolds, twin VGT-750R turbos and a whole heap of other top-notch parts finish the job off to wonderful effect. The result is a colossal 750hp on tap to the rear wheels. If you’ve read my 9ff shop tour post, you’ll know that the company regularly outputs cars with much more power, but remember that this is designed as a track car.
    What is much easier to spot in the rear is the push-rod suspension set-up, courtesy of JRZ Suspension. At the front there’s a more standard McPherson set-up, and the shocks are three-way adjustable all round with 60mm double coilover racing springs. There’s also solid aluminium top mounts, special RSR arms and a four-way adjustable front and rear anti-roll bar, all helping to keep the CS glued to the tarmac.
    Inside, things look almost sane. The integrated roll cage with door bars is set off by sleek carbon fibre door panels. Both driver and passenger are held in place by custom 9ff/Recaro lightweight racing seats and harnesses, and the weight reducing continues through to the Makrolon acrylic glass windows.
    A modified 997 dash sits in place – flocked of course to eliminate glare. There’s even still a radio and satnav in place, although how much of either you’d be able to hear when this is fired up I’m not sure.
    The custom GT9 CS clocks are a small giveaway as to the true nature of the car.
    Still running a standard H-pattern, the gearbox lives behind the rear axle and 9ff has replaced the gears itself with a stronger set to prevent any possible issues. This is coupled with an extra-strong limited slip diff, stronger driveshafts, lightened flywheel and custom clutch capable of putting the huge amounts of power down to the rear wheels. To help reduce the shock on the drivetrain when changing gears, a 9ff ‘Power Shift’ system is installed that allows for flat shifting.
    Of course, with all that power, you need to be guaranteed to stop. A full set of ceramic brakes does the job of hauling the car up, with six-pot calipers at the front and four-pot calipers at the rear clamping down on two-piece brake discs with Pagid Sport brake pads. There’s also the option to deactivate the PSM (Porsche Stability Management system) should you feel brave.
    Of course, you can’t miss the sculpted carbon fibre rear wing that provides added downforce on the slippery shape of the CS. Nor the stunning 9ff special edition BBS CH wheels: 18×10.5-inch up front and a monstrous 19×13.5-inch at the rear.
    These are shod in sticky Michelin Cup tyres, with the rears sporting a massive 345 width. This car has a serious contact patch! Here you can notice the complete flat bottom with integrated rear diffuser as well: the CS means business.
    If the rear view reminds you of a GT1, that’s purely intentional. As Porsche made a 993 and 996 version of the GT1, but never a 997, this is 9ff’s modern-day take on what that version of the Stuttgart supercar might have looked like.
    Intakes on the side draw air in to feed the huge radiators. The exhausts currently sticking out of the side are a temporary measure – the car is in the middle of being TÜV tested so that it will be road legal. Yes, that’s right – the CS will not only be the ultimate track toy, but able to drive to and from the circuit as well. I think I’ve just fallen off my seat with excitement.
    There’s even room for your luggage. Sort of.
    Having spent what was probably by now an inappropriately long time drooling over the CS, it was time to let the 9ff guys wheel it back into the workshop. I’ve just about regained higher-level brain function by now and my mind has turned to trying to think of a single option I would prefer to have as a road-legal track car.
    Nope, I’m just about out of candidates. Whilst I have a passion for most cars, I’m also incredibly picky. There’s always one little niggle I don’t like or would change on just about every car I’ve laid eyes on. But I’m struggling here. Not only does it just looks so damn good from every angle, but every detail, every curvature, every vent, louvre and line seems perfect.
    My earlier brain lull is well and truly over. Now it’s gone into overdrive. Because there’s only one thing I can think of as we drive away. What would I have to do to get this car in my life?

    Words by Suzy Wallace
    Instagram: speedhunters_suzy
    Email: suzy@speedhunters.com
    Photos by Jonathan Moore
    Instagram: speedhunters_jonathan
    jonathan@speedhunters.com

    9ff GT9 CS
    Numbers
    Max power: 750hp @ 6800 rpm, max torque:  910Nm from 2,950rpm to 5,800rpm, max revs: 7,400rpm, max boost: 1.6 bar, weight: 1240kg
    Engine
    3.6-litre, six-cylinder boxer motor with twin-turbo chargers, 9ff modified crank case, double oil spray per piston, forged pistons, aluminium cylinder with Nikasil plating, 9ff/Pankl titanium con rods, 9ff RS crankshaft, 9ff cylinder heads with big valves and ports, 9ff camshafts for ‘VarioCamPlus’, big intake manifold, 9ff fuel system, 9ff s/s exhaust headers, VGT-750R turbo chargers water and oil cooled, VTG = variable turbine geometry ECU-controlled, two boost stages switch controlled, big aluminium intercoolers, intercoolers with additional van per side, 9ff s/s exhaust system with integrated sound-valve system, HJS 200cell motor sport metal catalytic converters OBDII/EURO 5, two 9ff air boxes with BMC air filters
    Driveline
    6-speed H-pattern gearbox behind the rear axle, special strong gear sets, ratios: 3,17  1,89  1,41  1,09  0,89  0,75   ( main: 3,44:1), extra strong LSD 40/60%, extra strong drive shafts, extra light aluminium flywheel, 9ff one-disc clutch with organic friction material, hydraulic clutch release bearing, 9ff ‘Power-Shift’ (Engine-Cut) System
    Suspension/Brakes
    Fully adjustable 9ff/JRZ suspension kit, aluminium shock absorbers with oil reservoir, three-way adjustable shocks, 60mm double coilover racing springs, solid aluminium top mounts, special RSR arms, McPherson front axle system, 5-arm Push-Rod rear axle, metal ball bearings, four-way adjustable front and rear anti roll bar, electro-hydraulic steering system, ceramic brake system, two-piece brake discs with aluminium bells, front 380x34mm with six-pot brake caliper, rear 350x28mm with four-pot brake caliper, 9ff/Pagid Sport brake pads, PSM/ABS four-channel hydraulic system, PSM to deactivate
    Wheels/Tyres
    9ff LM wheels type ’9ff-BBS-CS’, 18×10.5-inch with 285/35ZR18 Michelin Cup tyres (front), rear 19×13.5-inch with 345/30ZR19 Michelin Cup tyres (rear).
    Exterior
    Mid-engine construction, 9ff tube-frame structure, front frame with integrated crash structure, one-piece ultra lightweight carbon fibre body, RSR-design fenders front and rear, carbon fibre front hood, carbon fibre doors with integrated crash structure, front window made from double safety glass, side and rear window made from extra light Makrolon Plexiglas, 9ff air intakes/outlets made from carbon fibre, carbon fibre rear wing, four-piece total flat underbody with integrated splitter and rear diffuser
    Interior
    Integrated roll cage with safety cross bars on doors, 9ff/Recaro lightweight racing seats

    Pure engine sounds – Lancia Delta Evoluzione


    Raw, uncompromising, brutal, pure. These words and more spring to mind when asked to describe the era of rally from which cars such as the Lancia Delta Evoluziones were born.
    This clip takes us back to the glory days of these terrifying machines, with a primary focus on the wail of their extensively developed, turbocharged engines. It’s fitting then that this video lacks any intrusive music or overambitious editing, because it could only have served to detract from the sheer intensity of watching some of the greatest off-road racing machines of our time tear-flat out through a selection of their natural habitats.
    This video runs for a full fifteen minutes – because a lifetime spent listening to the sounds of classic rally still wouldn’t be long enough.

    Bonhams to offer Ecurie Ecosse Collection at flagship 1 December Bond St sale


    One of British motor racing’s most evocative liveries is the Flag Blue metallic with ‘sergeant stripes’ of Ecurie Ecosse. Arch-collector Dick Skipworth is now offering several team cars, plus the famous Commer transporter, at Bonhams' new event on 1st December at its totally rebuilt Bond St offices.
    The transporter was immortalised by Corgi Toys in the early 60s and is a regular sight at historic race meetings worldwide. The cars are headed by ‘MWS 303’, the short-nosed D-type Jaguar driven by Ron Flockhart, and also include a C-type, a Tojeiro-Jaguar, a Cooper T49 Monaco, a Tojeiro-Buick Coupé and, rather incongruously, a 1961 Austin-Healey ‘Sebring’ Sprite.
    No estimates have yet been given, although we are sure that in today’s heady collectors’ market this sale will hit the headlines for yet more record-breaking sums.
    Photos: Bonhams

    29/09 : Distinguished Gentleman's Ride 2013


    If you’re anything like me, you usually only wear a suit and tie to weddings, funerals and the odd court appearance  – it has been a while since the last one. So it’s great to add another occasion to the list. Yes, it's that time of year again when the most dapper motorcyclists from around the world dust off their suits, polish their shoes, trim the beard, clean granddad’s smoking pipe, splash on a liberal amount of Old Spice and google the words ‘how to tie a tie’.
    Last year there were 60 cities with over 2500 participants and it looks like there will be thousands more in 2013, with 115 cities in 33 countries joining the September 29th ride. This year the DGR will help a charitable cause, as gentlemen should, raising funds (already at $78,000) to support worldwide medical research into cancer. The focus for 2013 and 2014 will be Prostate Cancer research and awareness programs that focus on preventative measures.
    So if you ride a café racer, bobber, classic, flat tracker, classic scooter, side-cart, monkey bike or anything that stands out from the crowd make sure you check out the DGR website to find your closest ride or to register. We look forward to seeing the footage and photos from each city – make sure you use up those memory cards.
    So which city will you be joining in the Distinguished Gentleman's Ride?
    [Photos by Peter Greig]
     [Video from the 2012 DGR in Singapore]

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