ACE CAFE RADIO

    vendredi 26 septembre 2014

    Top three pace for Repsol Honda pair

    Repsol Honda’s Marc Marquez and Dani Pedrosa each made a strong start to the weekend on Friday at the Grand Premio Movistar de Aragon.
    Dani-Pedrosa-Repsol-Honda-Team-ARA-FP2-577881

    Marquez, who rates Aragon as one of his favourite tracks, finished a chilly FP1 in third position, behind Andrea Iannone (Pramac Racing) and Aleix Espargaro (NGM Forward Racing). A time of 1’49.290s had Marquez just 0.295s behind pace setter Iannone on his updated Ducati.
    Pedrosa finished further down the order in fifth for the opening session.  FP2 two saw Pedrosa’s time improve by almost a whole second, down to a 1’48.734s. This put the experienced Repsol Honda rider third overall.
    Most of FP2 had Marquez comfortably leading by over half a second, however in the final stages Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) took advantage of a soft tyre to go top. Marquez remained second in the session, and overall, with a 1’48.328 set on his ninth lap.
    “Our first day here went well and I enjoyed riding in front of the home fans. I felt good on the bike and had a good pace, which is what we were focusing on the most today,” commented Marquez.
    He added “The track was quite slippery but I like it like this. However, tomorrow we will try to define which tyres to use and refine the setup, then see if we can get onto the front row for Sunday and have a great race.”
    Pedrosa commented, “We tried the soft and hard tyres and it is still difficult to say which is better on the rear, but the intermediate worked well for us on the front. We have to keep putting in laps at this circuit to improve our feeling, because this is a track where the tyres give plenty of grip at the start and then performance drops off, so you need to get used to finding pace with used tyres.”

    THE TRAIL OF THE TURTLES: THIRTY-FIVE YEARS OF LEARNING AND MISTAKES


    Few people have traveled the world like the Wescott’s. Take a look back, as Gary tells us what they’ve learned over their years on the road.
    by Gary WescottPhotography by Gary & Monika Wescott
    It was 1969. I had been on the road for maybe five months, traveling through Eastern Europe to Turkey, Iran, and Afghanistan, following the infamous “Hashish Trail.” (Yes, I had read Midnight Express.) My mode of transportation from Holland had been thumb, bus, and train, always looking out the window at places I wished I could have stopped to explore.
    Now I was sitting in the Pudding Shop in Istanbul, sipping a cup of Turkish coffee, the kind you almost have to chew—and there it was, right across the street in the little plaza: a Land Rover Dormobile. That had to be the answer.
    Travel was in my blood. San Diego State was my 13th school, including three in Mexico. After a second trip to Turkey to export sheepskin coats, meerschaum pipes, and Turkish puzzle rings—remember those?—I was more determined than ever to stay on the road of adventure. Then, on another fateful day, walking down Lombard Street in San Francisco, there it was again: a blue 1967 109 Land Rover Station Wagon sitting in a British car showroom. I bought it on the spot.

    I called it La Tortuga Azul, The Blue Turtle. Its ancient 6-cylinder, side-exhaust-valve engine came out of a Rover touring saloon in a futile attempt to give the 109 enough poop for American freeways. Nineteen sixty seven was the last year this model was imported. But hey, one Land Rover with a tire on the hood looked like it was going somewhere. Two together looked like an expedition. Was that an elephant I heard?
    IslBG
    I started buying maps of South America, even believing that I could drive across the Darien Gap. I had a Land Rover! Never mind that the engine choked on Mexican Pemex Nova. No problem. I stopped at airports and bought five gallons of 130-octane aviation fuel, and mixed that with Nova and a can of Marvel Mystery Oil. I felt like a bartender. I traveled slowly with a house on my back, and I could go anywhere. The analogy fit, and The Turtle Expedition, Unltd. was created.

    Along the way, I met Monika on a beach in Baja. Being Swiss, she tolerated my Capricorn perfectionism. She knew how to rough it, and she liked my kitchen, so we got married (short story).
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    Many changes later—roof racks, a support trailer, auxiliary fuel tanks, an overdrive, and finally a Chevy 250 6-cylinder engine swap (major improvement), I came to realize that despite the aura hovering over Land Rovers, I had been blinded by that tire on the hood. Repair shops for Land Rovers in Mexico were few to non-existent. We won’t talk about brake and clutch master cylinders or axles, okay?

    Still, I’m not complaining. After nine years on the road, throughout Mexico and parts of Central America, the Turtle I served us well. Even the two-fuse electrical system seldom failed. We had learned the basics of what was required for an overland travel vehicle: a comfortable bed, a place to prepare healthy meals, safe water, security, and room to pack the tools, repair parts, and toys for the destination. Absolute reliability of your vehicle came later.

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    La Tortuga Azul had a sink, a comfortable couch that converted to a bed in seconds, a fully equipped kitchen that slid off the custom rack and hooked on the side, a solar shower, a shovel and a folding toilet seat, and tons of storage for skis, backpacking gear, a canoe, fishing and diving equipment, and more. We lived outside. Chairs, table, ice chest, speakers, everything came outside. We could stop anywhere and set up a comfortable camp in minutes. People we’d meet on the beach would laugh at how well prepared we were. “Wow. You brought chairs?”

    Espagne,Rallye Festival Trasmiera

    Spa 6h .

    par Fabrice Bergenhuizen Ward
    Si l’édition 2014 des Spa Six Hours, bien que disputée dans des conditions pour le moins variables, a généré un spectacle d’anthologie, les 11 courses annexes à l’affiche ne furent pas en reste.
    Parmi celles-ci, l’épreuve réservée aux Masters Touring Cars a valu son pesant d’or. Programmée le dimanche en début d’après-midi et ce sur une piste rendue piégeuse par la pluie, elle fut marquée par l’envol plutôt viril de la Ford Escort MK1 RS2000 de Daniel et Sean Brown, laquelle faisait l’intérieur au pied du raidillon à la détentrice de la pole position, en l’occurrence la bestiale Vauxhall Firenza de Ward-Bronson.
    Alex FurianiEn dépit d’une attaque de tous les instants Daniel et Sean Brown ne parvenaient toutefois pas à conserver le leadership et devaient, au bout d’une heure de course riche en figure de style, abdiquer face à une autre Ford, à savoir la Capri 3.0 de l’excellent Stephen Dance.
    Le podium était complété par la Porsche 911 RSR de Mark Bates, laquelle devançait la sublissime Jaguar XJ12 de Paul Pochciol et Jeremy Welch et la monstrueuse Vauxhall Firenza de Ward-Bronson.
    PochciolDatant de 1959, la superbe Aston Martin DB4 Lightweight de Nicholas King et Tony Worthington décrochait une splendide 6e position, précédant de peu l’…Aston Martin DB4 de Matt Le Breton et Jamie Campbell-Walter, pourtant pénalisée de 20 secondes pour avoir effectué son Pit Stop en dehors de la fenêtre de ravitaillement.
    De son côté, Roger Wills jouait les équilibristes afin de hisser son imposante Mercury Comet Cyclone au 11e rang, devançant de peu l’Austin Healey 3000 du Français Emmanuel Toulisse, victorieuse en classe GT devant la voiture sœur d’Eric Perou et Bernard Bucher.
    Quant à Laurent Majou, il imposait son Austin Mini Cooper S en classe THD tout en se classant excellent 19e du général.
    WillsPrécisons que Stephen Dance et sa Ford Capri s’étaient déjà illustrés au préalable en se classant 2e de la course du British Sports – GT & Saloon Challenge et ce avec 5 petits dixièmes de seconde de retard sur la RAM Cobra de Lim-James. La 3e marche du podium revenant à l’…Aston Martin de Le Breton-Campbell Walter devant la Ford Escort MK1 de Brown-Brown, lesquelles, à l’instar de la Capri de Dance, étaient inscrites dans les deux séries.
    Pour conclure avec les courses réservées aux voitures de tourisme, saluons l’insolente domination de l’Alfa Romeo Giulia Sprint d’Alex Furiani en U2TC.
    Le classement est ici

    URBAN RIDER’S R80


    Urban Rider R80 1
    Urban Rider on the New Kings Road in London is a den of motorcycle treasures; gloves, lids and leathers adorn the showroom in a manner befitting of its lofty address. They also cater for the commuter scooter crowd, but if you spend a few minutes chatting with proprietors Will or Andrew you soon realise that it is the geared machines that get their hearts pumping. Not content with merely supplying you with the best gear, the guys branched out and now design and build the bikes to ferry their fine wares about town.
    Urban Rider R80 2
    One of their early CL400 Street Scramblers (based on the rare Japanese import) stole hearts at the very first BSMC event back in May 2013. The Urban Rider team have continued to build and refine their signature little Hondas whilst adding a Bonneville model to their repertoire. Now they present this lovely Boxer scrambler, a bike they assure us is but a one off, built by resident mechanic Len to sate his “soft spot” for the marque.
    Urban Rider R80 3
    Len came across the R80 on ebay, it was the common story of a half finished project in need of a new owner with the drive and skill to fulfil the machines ambitions. He had owned many of the Bavarian twins over the years and runs a modern GS among his current fleet. This build was about getting the desire to customise a Beemer out of his system as oppose to launching Urban Rider into the highly competitive pro built BMW market.
    Urban Rider R80 4
    “Everyone at the store pitched in with ideas but Len’s vision for the bike was clean, smooth lines and understated style.” To this end Len set about the bike with his angle grinder, the frame was de-tabbed and sent for powder coated along with the wheels, forks and swing arm. The engine was rebuilt with new valves guides and piston rings, the bores were then honed before it was all put back together using new stainless fasteners throughout. A full rewire keeps things simple and efficient.
    Urban Rider R80 5
    The hand formed alloy seat unit was one of the few plus points of the previous owners efforts and along with the tank it received a lustrous,  classic colour combination before being dispatched to Viking Vinyl for a recover. “The paint scheme harks back to the old school BMW era and is meant to look as if were done by BMW themselves”.
    Urban Rider R80 6
    The striking race style pipes are a stand out feature, bringing the classic styling bang up to date, “The silencers are GP race bike replicas which where chosen primarily because they look and sound great and we hadn’t seen it done before, the rear sets are generic aftermarket units that we modified to work with our set up.”
    Other features include new piggy back shocks, Renthal bars, a Koso digital speedometer, and Biltwell grips
    Urban Rider R80 7
    The bike rides on Continental TKC 80s and reportedly handles splendidly, “We have used them on other builds such as the modern Bonneville. They grip very well for an off-road biased tyre. Many BMW GS riders use them on all roads.” As their shop name suggests the team specialise in equipping riders for the no nonsense city environment and that ethos carries through to this highly functional bike that clearly also has the legs to carry you out of town for a sunny photo shoot.
    Urban Rider R80 8
    The bike was a fun side project for Len and the team between turning around their CL400 Scramblers at the rate of at least one every six weeks, the last off the line was even fitted with a custom removable ski rack for an Alps dwelling customer. The BMW is now for sale and ready to go from their London Headquarters. We look forward to seeing more of these fun Urban Rider side project bikes as well as more of their staple machines on their Bike Shed page.

    HUSQVARNA 510 BY VELOMACCHI


    Vintage Husqvarna dirt bike built by Velomacchi.
    Kevin Murray is a petrolhead with a very interesting day job: he runs a company designing high performance gear for clients like The North Face, Nike, Mammut and Navy SEAL teams.
    He’s now set up shop with his own brand, Velomacchi, producing “Everyday Carry for the serious motorcyclist.” In the works are backpacks, tool rolls, iPad and iPhone storage and messenger bags. The vibe is ‘privateer racer’—functional and good value.
    Vintage Husqvarna dirt bike built by Velomacchi.
    It’s a very technical process, so Kevin gets his respite via the more analog pursuit of crafting vintage dirt bikes. Like this stunning flat tracker, based on a 1986 Husqvarna 510 pulled from a hedge in eastern Oregon.
    “The air-cooled 510 was one of the last models built by Swedish hands,” says Kevin. “It was a legendary 4-stroke thumper with a 2-stroke style bottom end. It pulled like a semi and cut like a chainsaw, and was a great fit for our circuits in the Northwest.”
    Vintage Husqvarna dirt bike built by Velomacchi.
    The Husky had two serious weaknesses though: a Motoplat electrical system and a temperamental Dell’Orto 40mm carburetor. So Kevin and his crew replaced the electrical system with a German-designed MZB ignition, and installed a new Mikuni 38mm flatslide carb for a snappier throttle response.
    The exhaust system is a traditional low-slung flat track design, with stainless 2-into-2 cone silencers. It’s low slung on the right to avoid exhaust burns on the thigh when turning left, and also to save it from damage in a lowside crash.
    Vintage Husqvarna dirt bike built by Velomacchi.
    The suspension was upgraded too, with a Kawasaki ZRX1200R front end boosted with Race Tech Gold Valve internals. Bringing up the rear is a Fox twin-clicker shock from a ZX9, hooked up to an adjustable spacer system so that the suspension can be fine-tuned. (“We machined three different-length spacers so the shock height could be quickly adjusted to fit the track.”)
    The wheels went off to Buchanans, who supplied a new 19” wheel set with heavy-duty stainless steel spokes suitable for flat track racing. Meanwhile, the #2 stainless steel handlebars were hand bent by Ray Carroll, to get the perfect length and height to control the bike. “Ray is a legend in the Northwest,” says Kevin. “He maintains the Castle Rock clay track, builds custom frames and is still racing at 81 years old!”
    Vintage Husqvarna dirt bike built by Velomacchi.
    An added dose of style comes from the new bodywork. “We really loved the lightweight simplicity of Husky’s 1970s desert racers. So we kept the frame, engine and swing arm from the 510 and tossed the heavy plastic fairing, tank and seat. We replaced it with a brand new tank from a 1979 Husqvarna 390 OR, and a custom seat from New Church upholstery.” The seat is not fashionably slim, but it sure looks comfy.
    Vintage Husqvarna dirt bike built by Velomacchi.
    Now that the bike is fully sorted, Velomacchi’s focus is back onto the gear. And very interesting it looks too, providing a challenge to the likes of Kreiga and Ogio. Funding for the project has just launched on Kickstarter, and investors are piling in already.
    Check it out here.
    Images by Gregor Halenda.
    Vintage Husqvarna dirt bike built by Velomacchi.
    BikeEXIF

    Mad Max