ACE CAFE RADIO

    lundi 6 octobre 2014

    Iron & Resin 2013 Teaser side car Oural

    Iron & Resin 2013 Teaser from Scott Toepfer on Vimeo.

    Oiler's Car Club & The Race of Gentlemen


    WSBK : doublé Aprilia sous la pluie de Magny-Cours / Aprilia double whammy glory at wet Magny-Cours


    Les deux pilotes Aprilia Racing Team, Sylvain Guintoli et Marco Melandri, se sont partagés la victoire lors de l’avant-dernière épreuve du Championnat du monde Superbike à Magny-Course (France). En Supersport, la victoire est revenue à Jules Cluzel (MV Agusta Reparto Corse).
    Les deux courses Superbike ont été  déclarées « Wet » et réduites à 19 tours chacune.  En première manche, les consignes d’équipe ont été imposées chez Aprilia et Kawasaki Racing Team alors que Marco Melandri a refusé de laisser la victoire à son coéquipier lors de la seconde course.
    Sur une piste détrempée, Jonathan Rea (Pata Honda World Superbike Team) a pris le meilleur départ et a mené les premiers tours avant de céder aux attaques de Sylvain Guintoli, à l’aise dans ces conditions.
    Alors que le poleman Tom Sykes (Kawasaki Racing Team) luttait avec Rea et Loris Baz (Kawasaki Racing Team) pour la troisième place, Marco Melandri, nettement plus rapide lors sur la seconde partie de la course, s’est emparé de la tête aux dépens de son coéquipier. Mais l’Italien a été sommé de laisser la victoire au Français toujours en lice pour le titre mondial qui se jouera dans quatre semaines au Qatar. Jonathan Rea complète le podium.
    De même, Loris Baz a été prié par son équipe de laisser filer la quatrième place au profit de Tom Sykes. Le Français, qui rejoindra le MotoGP en 2015 avec l’équipe Yamaha Foward, termine cinquième.
    Leon Haslam (Pata Honda World Superbike) s’est classé sixième devant Davide Giugliano (Ducati Superbike Team), qui avait chuté en début d'épreuve. 
    Jonathan Rea a mené les 11 premiers tours de la seconde manche avant de partir à la faute, laissant ainsi les commandes aux deux pilotes Aprilia, Guintoli et Melandri. L’Italien s’est imposé pour la sixième fois de saison ne respectant pas les consignes de son équipe. Sylvain Guintoli est deuxième devant Leon Haslam qui signait sa meilleure performance de l’année.
    Tom Sykes a rallié l’arrivée en quatrième position devant Lorenzo Lanzi (3C Racing Ducati) Max Neukirchner et Loris Baz.
    Au classement général, Sylvain Guintoli est revenu à 12 points du leader Sykes. Le titre se jouera dans quatre semaines lors de la finale au Qatar.
    En catégorie Supersport, Jules Cluzel s’est imposé à domicile devant le nouveau Champion du Monde Supersport, Michael van der Mark (Pata Honda World Supersport) et Roberto Rolfo (Go Eleven Kawasaki). La course a été arrêtée par drapeau rouge bout du douzième des 17 tours prévus.
    Prochaine épreuve : Qatar, Losail, 2 novembre
    Davide Giugliano, Ducati Superbike Team, Magny-Cours FP1
    Aprilia Racing Team’s Sylvain Guintoli and Marco Melandri shared the spoils at the penultimate round of the Superbike World Championship at Magny-Course, France. Supersport honours went to Jules Cluzel (MV Agusta Reparto Corse).
    Both superbike races were declared ‘wet’ and shortened to 19 laps each. Team orders were issued by Aprilia and Kawasaki Racing Team for the first clash, but Melandri refused to hand victory to his team-mate in Race 2.
    The first encounter saw Jonathan Rea (Pata Honda World Superbike Team) get away well in the wet to lead for the first few laps before succumbing to pressure from Guintoli who appeared to revel in the conditions.
    While pole-winner Tom Sykes (Kawasaki Racing Team) scrapped with Rea and Loris Baz (Kawasaki Racing Team) for third place, Melandri was much faster in the latter part of the race and managed to dislodge his team-mate from the lead. However, the Italian was requested to leave victory to the Frenchman who is still in contention for the world title which will be settled in Qatar next month.
    Rea was third, while Baz was asked by his team to allow Tom Sykes to come fourth. The French youngster – who is set to join MotoGP team Forward Yamaha in 2015 – consequently ended up fifth.
    Sixth place went to Leon Haslam (Pata Honda World Superbike), ahead of Davide Giugliano (Ducati Superbike Team) who recovered from an early fall.
    Rea led the second race for the first 11 laps but a mistake led to him being passed by both Aprilia riders. Melandri went on to claim his sixth victory of the season after choosing not to comply with team instructions. Guintoli was second, ahead of Haslam who enjoyed his best weekend of the year.
    Sykes crossed the line in fourth place, chased by Lorenzo Lanzi (3C Racing Ducati), Max Neukirchner and Baz.
    In the championship standings, Guintoli has closed the gap to Sykes to 12 points. The title will be decided at the last round in Qatar in four weeks’ time.
    The Supersport battle was won by Cluzel on home soil, ahead of the class’s recently-crowned 2014 champion Michael van der Mark (Pata Honda World Supersport). Roberto Rolfo (Go Eleven Kawasaki) was third. The race was halted after 12 of the 17 scheduled laps.
    Next round: Losail, Qatar (November 2).

    LA BUSCA’S THE DISPATCH


    Working in the music industry, tattooing folk or building motorcycles must be some of the most enviable jobs going. Well Jez seems to have done something right in a previous life as he incorporates all three. His new shed-venture La Busca Motorcycles has produced its first build, The Dispatch, using a donor that is a break from the norm. Whilst on a climbing trip in Asia (seriously Jez, anything else cool that you want to chuck in?) he noticed one of Honda’s VRX400s parked up, which set the creative juices going. Not only that, a BMW engine won’t fit down the path to the shed so a donor with cylinders the correct way up would be needed.
    Honda didn’t export the VRX to the UK as most punters on our shores would quaff at such a weedy engined Harley-Davidson look-a-like, but I think Jez is onto something here. 400cc, smooth V-twin, with a low straight frame and sensible fuel tank, let me just see if eBay stocks such a thing. No, it doesn’t. During a bike trip to Norway (Come on Jez, give it a rest) a VRX came up for grabs so a call went into Steve Bentley of Dust Motorcylcles to sort the logistics. By the time Jez was back at home in Yorkshire, the Honda had been delivered. (Yorkshireman, I knew there had to be something wrong with him, he was starting to sound a bit too cool).
    La Busca Dust 8
    After many years modding adventure bikes Jez wanted a machine that could go more or less anywhere so rather than strip the donor to the bone, storage spaces and cubby holes were retained. A rack, tool roll holder and 12v socket were added in case the wilds of Yorkshire become overbearing.
    La Busca Dust 6
    Working in the confines of a shed meant Jez had no room to step back and check on aesthetic progress, which is a good thing because his lines and balance seem about right, and you can’t go wrong with black with a silver V-twin in the middle. The “night grey colour” was applied in the newly kitted out spray booth, also known as the greenhouse, handy.
    La Busca Dust 5
    For a WW2 dispatch rider look, a pair of Harley XR bars were fitted and the rest of the cockpit put to one side. A Suzuki speedo sits where the ignition used to be and a keyless system wired in to do away with unsightly lock barrels.
    La Busca Dust 4
    A bullet style lamp mounts to Triumph headlight ears, again in black with fairly generic tinted indicators blending in without fuss. The mudguards have been shortened slightly and the radiator will just have to fend for itself.
    La Busca Dust 3
    Rebuilt forks with heavier oil beef up the damping to cope with Jez’s off road intentions. Progressive shocks jack the rear up a tad to give a more balanced stance and provide improved ground clearance for when the chunky Mitas tyres are given their moment to shine. Slash cut pipes improve the little twin’s rumble and shed unnecessary weight.
    La Busca Dust 2
    For something a bit different and for a first build Jez can hold his head high, this VRX looks great and as I set out onto London’s mean streets in the pouring rain, I think I’d rather be on The Dispatch.
    Since completing this bike another VRX has cropped up, so expect to see another one here soon.
    via The Bike Shed

    OUT OF STYLE & ALWAYS BROKE – BRENT FAVREAU’S 1961 RAGTOP VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE


    brent-favreau-beetle-title

    "I hate standing still, and I usually only sleep for three to four hours each night, but I don't mind it at all." Brent Favreau began his story with quite the claim, followed by a sense of skepticism on my behalf; my inner voice thinking "Yeah, right." However, as the story continued, it unraveled into perhaps one of the best I've heard to date. In a narrative that played out more akin to a hollywood romantic drama starring a Volkswagen Beetle than it did anything else, Brent's words had me hooked
    Just yesterday, Brent turned 26 years old - an adult by most standards, but still young in the eyes of our seniors. It's hard to imagine what one can, with effort, cram in to their first 25 years of life, but when sleep is by the wayside, possibilities open. Leaving cars out of the equation, Brent spends his days as a full time student, working to become a physician's assistant. In addition, Brent works full time at an inpatient pharmacy at Baystate Medical Center. On weekends, he DJs weddings and events, and from time to time, he turns wrenches on the side, both for customers, and on his own cars, which he flips to fund personal projects. Amidst the chaos, and while still finding time to balance a social life and the necessities, such as eating, sleeping, and we hope bathing, Brent has found the time to unravel the story of a one-of-a-kind VW Beetle.

    "I grew up in a 'car family,'" Brent tells me, "and I've always loved cars. My pops and uncles are all Chevy guys, so that's where my interests began." As Brent matured, he grew into his own tastes. While he still admits a huge soft spot for first-generation Camaros, air cooled Volkswagens admittedly stole his heart. While it might be hard to pin down when exactly the turning point was, Brent wasn't alone in his endearment for the marque; Brent spent much of his childhood with a family friend and old-timer, a fellow air-cooled fanatic. Perhaps he's to blame?
    "It took me a few years to convince him I wasn't just a punk kid, and that I had a genuine interest in cars," says Brent. Over time, Brent had acquired a few Beetles of his own, accruing respect and admiration from his elderly friend."He called me up in early spring to come take a look at some parts that he was getting rid of." Winter had passed, and Spring Cleaning was in order. Brent arrived and picked through the lot, and after making a few selections, he posed the question. "Are you willing to part ways with any of your cars?" The old man had made mention of the red ragtop car before, but Brent had never laid eyes on it. However, mere mention of the car was enough to pique his interest. Without hesitation, Brent asked what it would take to get the car. "$3500." Having just flipped a '62 Corvette on the side, a week before, Brent walked to his car, grabbed the cash, and bought the car sight unseen.
    "He was a bit dumbfounded, but accepted the money and helped me drag it out of its resting place." The red over red top Beetle had been off the road for nearly 30 years, with decay and blemishes that told a complete story without a single word being said. The roof rack was bent, crushed by a falling tree; without it, the car likely would have been destroyed. The tail lamps were mismatched, and community college parking passes from the '65-66 school year were still in place. Dozens of flaws, features, and characteristics gave the car an unparalleled level of character, but it wasn't until after getting the car back on the road that Brent began to learn its true story.
    Brent quickly got to work. With his whole "lack of sleeping" lifestyle, it was a mere two weeks before he was able to get the car back on the road  - and lowered too. Brent began with the driveline: the original engine had long since seized in place, and hadn't run since parked. With a little love, and some "cool tricks" taught by the old-timer friend, Brent was able to get it running once again, and he seems confident in its reliability. "It's bulletproof." 
    As important as going is stopping; Brent replaced the brake components to make sure the car was roadworthy and safe to drive before moving on to the suspension. Brent began working on cars as a young child, beginning with bodywork and sanding in his father's garage. Since, he's become a competent fabricator, willing to get his hands dirty. The stock front beam was pulled from the car, and narrowed 4.5 inches, with adjusters welded into place. Brent pressed in drop spindles, poly bushings, and fitted new links and king pins. He narrowed the tie rods, and lastly, he fabbed up new headlight buckets to allow the front wheels to tuck completely into the front fenders. In the rear, Brent fabricated new extended and "Z'd" spring plates to bring the rear end down to where he wanted.
    Brent was aware that the car had been a local one all its life - a metal dealership badge sat atop the rear fender, still riveted into place, signaling Springfield as its hometown. After digging in to find out more about the car's history, the puzzle pieces began to fit together. "If a dealership had sold a certain amount of cars the previous year, Volkswagen would send them a 'dealership' car, which typically had every factory option available. Luckily, my Beetle is one of those." It explained many of the rare and strange options the car was outfitted with,  such as the fold-down "Camper Package" shift lever, deluxe radio, optional fuel gauge, and the rare pop-out windows.
    Once he had worked out the kinks, Brent sought to drive the car as often as possible. "It's always fun, and great on gas." Brent mentions that people always seem to have stories to share when he's out and about in his car; the Beetle is universally loved. Driving the car as often as he does had another benefit: increased visibility. Only 200 red ragtop cars were made in 1961, and with the other tell-tale signs, from the car's unique color, to the badging, and even those parking passes, the car was easy to recognize.

    On a summer afternoon, a car began to follow Brent and his Beetle home. He was followed into his driveway, and after getting out of his his car, he was met by an older woman. By pure chance - or fate, if that's your preference - it was the car's original owner that had spotted him, and her pride and joy from the past. Through a wall of tears, she brokenly told the story - her highs and lows - of the little red car. The story of the car continued to grow richer, and Brent was certainly a proud owner.
    Brent continued to sink time and money into the car, tracking down trinkets and tidbits to truly tailor the car to his liking. "The speedometer is out of an early euro oval-window, so it has a larger speedo needle and it's in KPH. I scored the early oval seats in a trade, and I got the swan neck mirrors and diffuser over winter, and finally picked up a vert deck lid at the last swap meet." They're intricacies no one else may notice, but that's relatively unimportant to Brent. However, despite his time spent fixing, repairing, and modifying the old car, Brent eventually felt the need to move on, and sold the car to a friend in Milwaukee.

    When Brent was 11, he had a job washing dishes, and was a "gofer" for a local paving company - his hard-working no-time-wasted attitude has obviously been around for some time. His dad had found a'69 Camaro, in very rough shape, and promised Brent that if he could come up with half of the money to buy the car, he'd chip in for the rest. After some time, Brent had saved his pennies, and the two went and bought the car. From then until his Junior year in high school, the two went through the entire car, and come time for Brent to get his license, he had a very cool first car..."unfortunately I had to sell it to pay for college."  The pain of regret is a powerful one, but it serves a great purpose.
    It was almost immediately that Brent regretted his decision to sell the Beetle. "The car's history is here in Springfield, and it should live out its days here," he said. After serious discussion and some careful persuasion, he was able to buy the car back, minus a few of the rare parts he had accumulated and fitted to the car, but he was grateful nonetheless.
    The car is back in his possession once again, and the build continues. "I still have some more parts to accumulate but have all the bigger stuff crossed off the list. I love collecting rare parts and this car gave me a jump start in that aspect, but I still am constantly hunting for anything unique.... That's why I love early air cooleds, there's always going to be something out there that you've never seen no matter how knowledgable you are." Perhaps someday he'll take the place of his old-timer mentor. But what he loves most about the car is irreplaceable - "A few examples would be the dealership badge or the community college parking passes from the university of Bridgeport. To me that's something you can't go buy or make, and as dumb as it sounds, in my mind it makes it priceless."
    Despite the fact that Brent says the car will never truly be complete, the Beetle is as complete as it needs to be. The car is turn-key, and starts up every time. Brent touts that he's not afraid to drive it anywhere, and that, given flat roads, he'll be driving to and from anywhere possible, for many years to come. This winter, he hopes to replace the original engine with a bigger counterpart, and to upgrade the 6-volt electrical system to the more modern 12-volt system, but these changes come from desire, not necessity.
    Brent has worked hard to bring the Beetle back to life, and to ensure that its rich and characteristic history are both continued and fulfilled.... but given his track record and his need to turn wrenches, I had to ask what comes next. "I have a 65' split window bus I've been building for about 4 years," Brent tells me. "All original paint, but other than that, everything's been replaced or fabricated." He explains that the bus was nothing short of dilapidated when when it came in to his possession. "It was sagging in the middle due to how bad it had rotted. The whole roof was caved in."The lack of a motor and the electrical nightmare that had been instilled by past owners and mechanics were the least of his worries. "The bus has fought me since day one, and it seems like every time I go to work on it, a friend or family member's car breaks, but it'll be done soon enough." With that attitude, I'm anxiously awaiting what Brent does next.

    via http://www.stanceworks.com

    Honda CX500RR


    CX500RR_001
    Written by Martin Hodgson
    To create a motorcycle so good that passers-by ask you when the factory started selling them, you need a designer, fabricator and builder capable of bringing such a bike to life. With his CX500RR, Mike Meyers has proven he is all three and starting out with the much maligned 1980 Honda CX500 he only made the task harder. But with a love for the look of the CX’s engine design and ready to prove the doubters wrong he built a café racer that would easily take pride of place on a Honda showroom floor.
    CX500RR_001b
    As a builder myself, I always like to focus on the engine first after the design phase has been completed. Not only is there no point in building a beautiful bike that doesn’t run but it saves damaging any new paint and cosmetic modifications as you swing the spanners, leak oil and wrestle rusted on exhaust bolts. Following this rule Mike decided he’d begin with a full engine rebuild something that might not have at first appeared necessary with only 10,000miles on the clock, but the green slime oozing from the pulse generators cover was the first sign not all was well. Worn out parts, imperial bolts jammed into metric holes and a few other surprises during pull down confirmed it had been the right thing to do. With money generated from selling off some unwanted parts, Mike was also able to shell out for a set of new Mikuni’s from Murray’s Carbs and the motor was purring.
    CX500RR_007
    The first major change to the original design of the CX500 comes in the way of a full CBR600RR front end. The inverted forks lower the overall stance of the machine while offering rebound and compression-damping adjustability and the modern twin disc braking combination are a huge improvement over stock. Mike was no fan of the original Comstar wheels but being a shaft drive finding suitable replacements isn’t as easy as it sounds. But with some helpful hints from his fellow CX500 internet forum friends a set of GL1000 wheels were sourced and with a little milling, spacing and shimming to match the splines the new look is first class.
    CX500RR_002
    With modern controls from the CBR600RR attached to the front end it made sense to use them with the clip on bars for an aesthetically pleasing front end that functions like a new bike. To make it all work Mike had to splice the wiring of the switch blocks into the factory loom, a challenge he took on with great enthusiasm. With his hands on CBR600RR parts it made sense his feet rest on them too so a set of rearsets from the model were also sourced and adapted to fit. The bike now sports the moniker CX500RR requiring one extra step of fabrication smarts, grafting in a CBR600RR gas cap into the factory 80’s tank, brilliant!
    CX500RR_006
    Mike had always intended the engine to be the show piece of the build, but the standard looks were never going to cut it, so the tank is now resplendent in flowing red, white and black paint with striking Honda graphics. A new tail section and seat give the bike a real café racer feel and hide much of the unsightly wiring. While wrapped pipes, cone mufflers and aftermarket filters clean the overall look and make the most of the negative space the CX’s frame offers.
    CX500RR_003
    And then there are the details that make this bike special, encouraged by his friend Tyler to try his hand at fabrication, Mike made himself a rear caliper bracket from scratch. Designing the piece, making a template from cardboard, milling it on a CNC machine and painting it black it’s Mike’s favourite piece. You may never notice it, but what you will notice is the incredibly detailed tacho face that truly highlights Mike Graphic design skills. Once again, doubters of the CX500’s quirky characteristic and stylings have been swept aside by a creative vision well thought out, designed and executed by a man committed to proving his detractors wrong.
    Mike would like to give his friend Tyler Schwarzkopf of Bleed Machine Industries a big shout out. Without his help and fabrication skills, this bike wouldn’t have turned out like it did.
    via PIPEBURN

    Top 5 Classic Scramblers on eBay


    Introduction

    The humble scrambler is a motorcycle genre that's seeing a huge surge in popularity at the moment - Triumph has been selling their modern Scrambler for years but now Ducati has thrown their hat into the ring with Moto Guzzi, Honda and Yamaha said to be close behind. 

    This mini-Collection of the Top 5 Classic Scramblers on eBay is accompanied by a full Collection here including 15 scramblers with a surprisingly amount of variety.

    Norton 750 Desert Commando

    So right off the bat I'm going to admit that this is my favourite, even as some of you scream that it's not a "real" scrambler. It's close enough for me. Now I just need to rustle up $12,500 USD. 

    Click here to view the listing.

    Ducati 250 Scrambler

    It's relatively rare to find Ducati Scramblers up for sale at affordable prices, they were never made in the same volume as the Triumphs and Hondas. This one needs a lot of work, but it'd be a fantastic winter project. 

    Click here to view the listing.

    Triumph Trophy

    You can't have a Collection of scramblers without a '60s era Triumph, Steve McQueen loved these bikes and they're still amongst the most fun bikes you can have for weekend adventures. 

    Click here to view the listing.

    Honda CL450 Scrambler

    These Hondas are still surprisingly cheap and this one is a great example of the CL450. These bikes are best when fitted with dual-sport tires and used both on and off-road. 

    Click here to view the listing.

    BSA B25 Starfire

    This BSA is pretty close to a perfect '70s era scrambler - it could do with a bit of a tidy up and the mechanicals will need a refresh but once it's all be sorted it'll be an exceedingly fun little motorcycle that'll also appreciate nicely over time. 

    Click here to view the listing.
    If you'd like to see the official Collection with all 15 bikes you can click here.

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