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    lundi 26 mai 2014

    Triumph Scrambler – Dagger Cycles


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    I’ve always liked the idea of custom bikes having a soundtrack. So much so, we used to always ask the builders who were featured on the site the same question – ‘if your bike was a song, which one would it be?’ Naturally, most of the answers were somehow related to Rock ‘n’ Roll. And as if by a beautiful stroke of serendipity, today’s feature bike is not only a baby of rock, she’s the spawn of the rockiest rock there is –punk rock. Being big fans of the bloody sprawling mess that is punk, we were naturally all ears… and eyes, too. And what a sight to behold; here’s Dagger Cycles latest and greatest hit, a blacker-than-black Triumph Scrambler with an attitude that makes Sid Vicious look like Sid James.
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    Dagger’s main blade is Roberto ‘Roby’ Polizzi, from the Northern Italian city of Biella. ”From what I can recall, I’ve always been in the two-wheeled world since I was a little child. I worked in a motorbike spare parts shop in the past and now in a motorcycle garage with my new project Dagger Cycles. The name comes from the two daggers I got tattooed on my arms; I also chose that name because it almost sounds like we’re ‘stabbing’ the stock bikes with modifications. Which is cool.”
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    Roberto’s current theory is that customising a bike is more or less like listening to punk music. “You can have it hardcore and screaming loud or easy listening and simple. It’s always punk, it’s always a middle finger against pop, but the chords, the voice, the riffs are completely different.”
    Dagger Cycles’ first creation was the “Little Misfit,” a sort of post-atomic insect borne from the ashes of a Yamaha TT350. That, says Roberto, was crazy hardcore. Now Roberto seems to have built something completely different. Granted, it’s not a full custom build. We’d like to think of it as more of a re-imagining of the original design, but with much more attitude. Bad attitude.
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    “Herbert, the bike’s owner, wanted something with more mischief, but without cutting the frame in two. The main parts are in the same place in which they were assembled on the line in Hinckley: just some of the details have changed and, tah-dah, the Scrambler looks very nasty.”
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    The specifics? The tank was brushed and decorated with a new, bigger logo and finished with coloured, transparent paint. The owner wanted it to ‘look shorter,’ so Roberto modified the rear fender and the seat without removing the bike’s ability to carry a passenger or having to chop the frame.
    They then added a lot of little particulars made by Dagger Cycles themselves: a drilled side panel, the indicators, the MX handlebars and the new dashboard. The exhaust was an Arrow one and was literally cooked on a spit to achieve the patina you see here. Yummy. The new rubber is a new pair of Continental off-roaders, flagging that the bike’s more than a little ways away from original. As Roberto says, “why listen to One Direction when you can have Rancid?”
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    The list of other Dagger additions is long. They fabled up bar-end mirrors, indicators, a seat, exhaust covers and side panels amongst many, many other bespoke pieces. The speedo is from Acewell, and the ‘bars are Ergal MX’s that have been black powder coated. The front and rear lights are Bates replicas. There’s a few after-market Triumph additions too, and it’s all held up with Gazi adjustable rear shocks.
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    Paolino (L) is Dagger Cycles’ official photographer, Roberto (R) is their Chief Stabber
    All up, it’s one hell of a Triumph build and we’re more than a little excited to see what their next album build produces. We’re fairly sure you’ll agree that this is one shop who’s amps definitely go all the way up to eleven.
    [via Gianrico Nai]
    via PIPEBURN

    BRT Normande #2, la vallée de l'Eure pour 2014

    L’esprit trail du voyage à moto des années 70/80, au travers d’une rando dans la vallée de l'Eure




    Au guidon de votre trail* préféré. (Seul ou avec passager.) 200 km et bien plus de virages encore, (les tétines n’ont qu’à bien se tenir, ) découvrez des petites routes et quelques grands chemins peu fréquentés serpentant le long de nombreux cours d’eau et traversant de pittoresques villages Normand aux nombreux café-terrasses accueillants. ...   

    9h00, départ de la Roche Guyon, en direction du Nord/Ouest, à la recherche d'un pont pour traverser la Seine,  petites routes, chemins et traversées de forêts pour arriver sur les rives de l'Eure.

    Halte sympa le midi.

    Retour vers 17h00 à travers les paysages de Normandie, et les falaises des rives de la seine.




    PRATIQUE:

    Quand: Dimanche 21 septembre 2014

    *Quelle moto: Tous les Trails et Scrambler des années 70/80,  les petites cylindrées et les motos plus anciennes prêtent à rouler dans quelques chemins sont les bienvenues.

    Départ: La Roche Guyon, village très sympa en bord de Seine à 60 kms à l'ouest de Paris. Les GPS connaissent.

    Arrivée: On fait simple, nous revenons au point de départ (la Roche Guyon pour ceux qui ne suivraient pas).

    Comment: Parcours au RoadBook pour un rythme adapté à chaque pilote.

    Chiffres: une boucle d'environ 200 kms sur une journée, (autonomie de 70 / 80 kms minimum.)

    Pourquoi: Pour se retrouver et rouler cool, sans chrono, au guidon de nos sympathiques trails.

    Qui: Le Rétro Enduro Club de France (RECF)

    Combien: 39 euros; café, croissants, road-book, déjeuner et pot d'arrivée compris. (Passager, 28 euros.)

    Inscription: [Prochainement]

    Contact & infos: tpouge at yahoo.fr


    via enduro80s

    What not to miss at the Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este 2014


    This coming weekend, the classic beauties of the automotive world meet once again at the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este. Classic Driver is already there – and can now bring you the forthcoming highlights of the event…
    For the last 14 years, the international automotive collectors’ community has enjoyed the patronage of BMW for its fabulous beauty contest in the gardens of the Grand Hotel Villa d'Este on Lake Como. The Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este is – along with Pebble Beach, the Goodwood Revival and the Le Mans Classic – one of the major highlights of the classic calendar. And as always, you can look forward to an exceptional programme.

    The Great Gatsby on Lake Como

    The Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este 2014 is all about 'The Great Gatsby': on Friday evening, the venerable estates of Villa d'Este and Villa Erba will become glamorous open-air cinemas, starring Leonardo Di Caprio on the silver screen. And on Saturday, Gatsby is back again – this time in the form of a dedicated concours category, where you can look forward to Art Deco cars from Hispano-Suiza, Duesenberg, Rolls-Royce and Packard.

    Maserati and Rolls-Royce in focus

    On Maserati's 100th birthday, the marque enjoys an entire class to itself, with six important models on display, including a 1929 Maserati V4 Sport with Zagato bodywork and a 1957 Maserati 150 GT prototype. Rolls-Royce, too, with its 110-year history, is another venerable marque represented by six important models from its history – with cars from 1908 through to 1963 – displaying the elegant handiwork of bodyshop legends Barker, Gurney Nutting, Park Ward, Harold Radford and Mulliner. In addition, Saturday will see the debut of the new Waterspeed Collection from Rolls-Royce.

    Gone with the Wind

    The delights continue, with ‘Gone with the Wind’ an apt way to name a class that sees curvaceous 1930s legends from the likes of MercedesLancia and Bugatti, and ‘Villa d’Este Style’ describing the cream of Alfa RomeoFerrari and Cisitalia from the 1940s and 1950s. ‘From St. Tropez to Portofino’ combines the best elements of 1950s roadsters and convertibles, while such varied style icons of the circuit as the Ferrari 250 GT Tour de France and Fiat 8V come under the label of ‘Gentleman Drivers’. Meanwhile, hardcore racing machines of the calibre of Jaguar D-type and Porsche 904 GTS can be found in the ‘Da Corsa’ class.

    Elegance on two wheels

    Even the two-wheelers have their own dedicated class – this being the fourth time that the Concorso di Motocicletti has brought top historic racing machines together. Among the participants can be found the oldest known BMW R32.

    Future classics

    But the very special allure of the Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este is in the mix of great classics andfuturistic design studies. This year, six concept cars have been announced, including the spectacular Maserati Alfieri, the acclaimed Volvo Concept Estate, and the Aston Martin DBS Zagato Centennial. We’re also looking forward to two surprising concept studies from BMW Motorrad andMini
    Classic Driver reports live from the Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este 2014 – and is kindly supported by the Berenberg private bank. For the latest articles from Lake Como, click here.

    Porsche Carrera GT | Aerial Symphony

    With the help of Shifted Cinema, we took a 2005 Porsche Carrera GT out to the Washington countryside to get an elevated perspective on what some call the greatest supercar ever built.



    The cultural explosion of custom motorcycles

    The Bonneville Flyer #1. Photo by Keith Berrhotos.

    Despite a supposed quest for individuality, the custom motorcycle scene used to be decidedly niche, centred around home-grown choppers and café racers built by hardcore enthusiasts; but the last decade or so has seen an explosion of creativity among builders…
    The result is that instead of following a set of basic rules (raked-out forks and ape-hanger 'bars for choppers; aluminium tanks, clip-ons and rear sets for café racers), we’re seeing superb design combined with impeccable engineering to transform standard, often down-at-heel motorcycles into the sort of machines of which the customisers of old could only have dreamed. And, best of all, these bikes are made to be used, not just to be looked at.
    As a result, the streets are coming alive to the sight and sound of bobbers, choppers, street scramblers, dirt track replicas – and, of course, café racers – which are now regarded as the default choice of wheels for well-heeled cool cats and celebrity bikers ranging from hardcore overlander Charley Boorman to television dancer James Jordan.

    Art on two wheels

    And, while some still take their ideas from concept to reality using their own fair hands, many prefer to pay whatever it takes for an expert to do the same job. Hence there are more people than ever before who are ready, willing and able to build you a radical, one-off special starting with a bog-standard Triumph Bonneville, Kawasaki W650, Harley Sportster or BMW 'air head' – or in fact, any bike you like so long as you're not fussy about originality.
    Classic Driver has featured the stunning, Moto Guzzi-based creations of Hamburg-based engineer Axel Budde's Kaffeemaschine workshop on several occasions – but there are numerous other, equally talented builders around the world rejoicing in such names as WrenchmonkeesDeus Ex MachinaRocket SupremeRevival CyclesBandit9 and Ian Berry's celebrated Falcon Motorcycles.
    Each has turned 'special' building into an art form, usually by working closely with its clients to create the machine of their dreams in rideable, practical, covetable and utterly exclusive editions of one.

    Made to measure

    "The whole café racer scene began to boom because people started to want something that was neither a classic chopper nor a conventional, modern road bike nor an ultra-high-performance sports machine," says Nicholas Bech of Copenhagen-based Wrenchmonkees. Wrenchmonkees, established in 2008 by commercial photographer Nicholas Bech and his business partner Per Nielsen, will transform any 'donor' machine into something truly special for a fee of 10,000 euros upwards – and have now built and sold more than 60 bikes.
    "We have made motorcycles for everyone from students to high-end businessmen, doctors, lawyers and artists, some of whom had never actually owned a bike before, but had been drawn to the idea after seeing pictures of café racers on the Internet."

    Individuality in demand

    Indeed, the market is booming to such an extent that even major manufacturers are now approaching niche builders with requests to build café racers based on bikes in their current range. Yamaha, for example, commissioned Wrenchmonkees to produce a 35,000-euro customised version of its XJR1300 street bike, and BMW has collaborated with California's Roland Sands to create the café racer style 'RSD BMW Concept 90' to mark last year's 90th anniversary of BMW motorcycle production and the 40th of the R90S.
    "The big names can see that the café racer movement is getting huge and, understandably, they want to be part of it," says Bech.
    "Ironically, the only way they can join in is through underground builders like us."
    Photos by Sam Christmas, Joe Hitzelberger, Tuala, Keith Berrhotos, Goetz Goeppert, Noah Schutz and Kristina Fender. All photos taken from the new book 'The Ride - New Custom Motorcycles and Their Builders' by Chris Hunter and Robert Klanten, Ⓒ Gestalten Verlag 2014. 
    'The Ride - New Custom Motorcycles and Their Builders' by Chris Hunter and Robert Klanten is published by Gestalten. Further information can be found at gestalten.com.

    210 Trailer ENG

    A dreamer rides around the world, surviving only on the money he makes along the way, until he finds what he wasn't even looking for. A movie trailer for SOMEWHERE ELSE TOMORROW


    Al Rajhi, Salvatierra and Sonik are the new Pharaons


    After an intense week made of desert, high temperatures and hard tracks, the arrival to the Giza pyramids is really a moment of relief for the Pharaons Rally 2014 survivors. Emotions, some tears of joy, many souvenir photos with the fantastic Pyramids on the background.
    No particular surprises has shaken the general ranking, so Yazeed Al Rajhi, Juan Carlos Salvatierra and Rafal Sonik were crowned as new pharaons, in car, bike and quad categories. Nasser Al Attiyah tried in every way to attack Saudi, he overtook him at km 50, but Yazeed had only to control by distance Qatar pilot dust, and lost only three minutes on track.
    Surprise among cars arrived thanks to third podium position that until yesterday was firmly occupied by Polish Marek Dabrowski. Ex motorbike pilot broke his Toyota rear drive shaft reaching the final line with three hours delay and obviously lost the desired result, getting then seventh position. Third position went to Dutch Erik Van Loon/Wouter Rosegaar Mini, that arrived before World Cup leader Vladimir Vasilyev.
    Adham Mostafa/ Hakam Rabie were the best Egyptian team reaching the finish line.
    salvatierra_piramidsFew surprises even in bike category, where Juan Carlos Salvatierra won today the last stage of a rally he literally dominated. Nicolas Cardona, fourth in today stage, arrived after him with a delay of 44 minutes.
    Third podium position was decided during the last Rally km even in the motorbike category. Polish Rafal Sonik succeeded in overtaking Stefano Chiussi, third until yesterday, that because of the dislocated shoulder had to keep a lower rhythm. Italian is however Over 450 category winner. Fifth position for Venezuelan Rafael Eraso, in front of Stefano Turchi and Paolo Sabbatucci.
    Yazeed Al Rajhi: “It has been a great day and a really wonderful competition. My team helped me a lot, so as my copilot Timo, that made a great job. He always checks how I feel and is able to give me the right incitement. I don’t have a lot of experience in Cross Country Rally and for that reason I’m very proud for having fought against Dakar winner. It has been a week made of great satisfactions, like the one of having reached him yesterday. Today, it was hard to keep concentration, during the last 50 kilometers I was just thinking about giving gas in order to keep in view his dust. ”
    Nasser Al Attiyah: “Today, it was not possible to recover eight minutes in such a fast stage. Yazeed made a good challenge. Overall, it has been a very hard competition, with different difficulties. Next year I will come back with buggy! It has been a completely new rally to me, and it reminds me about Dakars in Africa, I am really happy to be here at Pharaons! I saw the Pyramids a lot of time, but being in front of them today is really special.”
    Erik Van Loon: “A very fast day, a bit dangerous sometimes, We lost some time but we saw that Dabrowski had some troubles. We had some small trouble at the beginning of the rally, but then things started to go better during the last two days. Third position was our aim.”
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    Juan Carlos Salvatierra: “It’s incredible to be the Pharaons winner and to think that my name is together with Coma, Despres, Barreda ones…Its the more beautiful satisfaction in my agonistic career. It has been a great experience to open the track every day. Now I’m much more confident with navigation. I’ve learned really a lot in this competition and today I’ve just tried not to make mistakes and not to fall down in order to reach these wonderful Pyramids.”
    Nicolas Cardona: “I’m happy, to get the second position In a Rally like Pharaons with all its history, gives me even more incentives to go on with competitions. I’ve learned a lot during this week and I’ve tried to win until the last day, but Salvatierra’s bike is faster. In fact I would like to change mine in order to be much more competitive.”
    Rafal Sonik: “A too fast stage, and quad is 20 km/h slower than bikes. I was worried about Stefano Chiussi to reach me, but it not happened. I was still looking behind me and I’ve tried to push as much as I could. Bu the end I was loosing oil from engine, so it was fine to reach the finish line. I’m happy to be here, I arrived second for two times among quads, now victory has finally arrived.”
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    Photos: Pep Segalés

    moto censurée !!!