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    jeudi 31 janvier 2013

    Antoine Meo – the way to “Le Touquet”: Part 1


    Legend Boucles de Spa : Mikko Hirvonen en guest star sur une Visa 1000 Pistes

     
     

    L'organisateur des Legend Boucles de Spa a levé un - gros - coin du voile sur l'édition 2013 qui aura lieu le samedi 16 février. Outre divers points d'organisation sur lequels nous reviendrons, le RAC Spa a surtout donné des détails sur la liste des engagés, forte de 275 équipages en tout (124 en Legend et 151 en Classic).
    La grosse surprise vient de la présence au départ de Mikko Hirvonen, candidat déclaré au titre mondial des rallyes. Accompagné de son fidèle Jarmi Lehtinen, le pilote officiel Citroën s'alignera à Spa au volant d'une Visa 1000 Pistes identique à celles que piloteront son patron chez Citroën Racing Yves Matton et le pistard Eric van de Poele. Autre bonne nouvelle, le public spadois pourra voir en action non pas une mais bien deux Lancia 037 : outre celui que pilotera Christian Kelders (seconde par Stéphane Prévot), un second exemplaire sera de la partie aux mains de Patrick Snijers !
    Autres autos marquantes attendues à Spa, une VW Golf 2 ex-usine confiée à Kevin Abbring, la Porsche 924 Turbo ex-Walter Röhrl (et Jacky Ickx aux Boucles), ou encore la belle Lancia Stratos de l'Anglais Steve Perez. Pour le reste, on pointe encore le tenant du titre Jean-Pierre Van de Wauwer (Lancia Beta Monte-Carlo), Bruno Thiry et André Lotterer (Audi Quattro), Thierry Neuville, François Duval, Marc Duez - navigué par François Cornelis le président de RACB -, Frédéric Bouvy (Ford Escort RS), Bernard Munster, Felix-Marie Brasseur, Xavier Bouche et peut-être Robert Droogmans (Porsche 911), Chris Van Woensel (Opel Manta 400), Marc Timmers (Opel Manta A), etc. Enfin, on n'oubliera pas de souligner le retour de Renaud Verreydt au volant d'une Porsche 911 dont il partagera l'habitacle avec le chanteur Jali, et la présence de Stéphane Henrard en ouvreur sur la 911 qu'il alignait à l'Africa Eco Race.
    On le voit, cette cuvée s'annonce prometteuse et bien dans la ligne des précédentes éditions. Dans les prochains jours, nous vous dévoilerons d'autres facettes de ces Legend Boucles de Spa 2013.
    via sport.turbomagazine

    Tiny Terrors: RM to sell The Bruce Weiner Microcar Museum





    Over two days (15-16 February) early next year, RM Auctions will conduct what is certain to be a fun event when it offers approximately 200 microcars - and assorted automobilia - from The Bruce Weiner Microcar Museum, all at ‘No Reserve’.

    Bruce Weiner amassed what is probably the world’s finest collection of miniature vehicles over many years of assiduous collecting. His museum in Madison, Georgia, USA, will be the venue for the sale.



    The collection includes the world’s smallest car (a 1964 Peel P-50) several bubble cars by Messerschmitt, Isetta and Goggomobil, and two Voisin Biscooters, extraordinary microcars built by French aviation and automotive engineer Gabriel Voisin.

    Joining the original German Polizei and Jagdwagen (hunting car) versions of the BMW Isetta is the amazing ‘Whattadrag’, a dragster utilising the chassis of a 1959 donor car and inspired by the Hot Wheels toy car.

    It is powered by a 730bhp, 302ci Chevy V8 and can be seen in action in the entertaining video above.
    Related links

    RM Auctions' special Bruce Weiner Museum sale website: www.handlewithfun.com


    Text: Steve Wakefield
    Video: RM Auctions

    PROJECT VOLVO WAGON


    1980s Week on Speedhunters has been a stark reminder about one of my own personal cars from that era. When I look at my 1989 Volvo 245 estate, I wonder what it could have been by now if I’d have realised that it was a proper project car and not just a bit of fun. If I’d have just focused on it from the start. We all know the stories of people with half-finished builds, good intentions, unrealistic budgets and ultimately an incomplete project. Well, my Volvo 245 is one of those. Welcome to the Strip Club.
    I bought it by accident in 2001. I already had a 240DL that I’d bought for £5 (yes, really) and had done a few thousand miles in, and figuring it should get some love I took it to a local Volvo specialist for a service. This was probably the first time I’d paid somebody to work on one of my cars in over 10 years. On the way there the heater core blew… It was winter and they had this Volvo 245 GLT  part exchange/trade-in on the forecourt that I was told I could have on a 24-hour test drive. Dog guard, leather, heated seats, FSH, two owners, factory 15″ alloys… You know, all the stuff that I’ve since junked.
    The fact was that I needed a proper daily that I could eat, sleep, work and drive out of. In amongst the tens of cars my Dad owned were a couple of Volvos –this is the only reason I can find for me buying this one. Even with 200K miles on the clock, it still cost me £1,000 with a fresh MOT. But at the time it was just over 10 years old – now it’s 23! Like I say, if only I’d just stuck with it. But then I never fully intended for this to be a project, which I’m fairly sure is how the best ones start.
    I think this has been the Volvo’s enduring charm. I’ve never placed any value on it, so I’ve never sold it. But how did it become a stripped-out, turbo-powered wagon? Well that one’s simple: I broke the rear shocks towing a really heavy car home across country on a really heavy trailer… Another distraction. A short while later I was at British suspension manufacturer SPAX. I asked about a kit for the 245 and they said they’d make one – I paid up, and then my Volvo was lower.
    Yes, I was on a slippery slope and sliding down fast with my hands clamped over my face. Over the next year or so, I stripped the interior for another article to show how you can get free power, gaining 12bhp per tonne. Then came polycarbonate windows, a six-point cage and a whole load of other cars… Because nobody would seriously modify a Volvo, would they? I aspired to own hot rods, M-powered cars, obscure Japanese models. All of which have since come and gone. Leaving the Volvo sat quietly in the back of my lock-up, ready when I needed a cheap car to get around in. Or across Europe on a 4,000 mile adventure, after which I sprayed it the green/grey/brown colour it is now.
    All of that work was done getting on for 10 years ago now, and the Volvo really was there for me whenever I needed it. But I always swore that when the engine gave up I’d replace it with something better. Even so, no matter how many chances I gave it to throw the towel in, it still took 50 thousand miles before the cambelt snapped in a fairly undramatic fashion on the motorway. Now, I could bore you with the endless engine choices I played with, but ultimately it came down to being able to tell people it was powered by a Volvo motor. Not a V8, or BMW M3 engine, or an RB25 or even a Cosworth – all of which I considered.
    In England we never got the turbo 200 series, because the turbo downpipe is a little close to the steering column and the master cylinders are right above the turbo itself, so I guess Volvo never saw the point in developing it. For about four years I didn’t live in England, preferring to roam the Earth, and it was near the end of this time that I saw the perfect 240 donor advertised for sale. It had been built with real care and attention by a nice guy called Mike, who had documented it along with the help of the Turbobricks Forum. For the asking price I couldn’t replicate what I was buying, so now I’ve got two Volvo estates. The shot above is obviously in the same position as the first picture (albeit a few years apart). Given that the silver car is lowered it gives you an idea of just how much lower the Strip Club is than stock.
    Loosing another couple of years which saw the newer estate road-tested to Italy and back via Switzerland, and I’m doing a shoot in the workshops of Huxley Motorsport, December 2011. I don’t know why I asked Hux what my money and two cars would get, but I’m glad I did. In a little over two months in the Summer of 2012 he took both estates and made one.
    This made me very happy, because what Hux did was something I now realise I could never have done. Build the Volvo the way I wanted it, simple as. I don’t have those skills; I’ve built my beach buggy and the odd barn, done an engine swap or two but what he did was look at it as a project, rather than a job.
    I remember being stood in the absolute middle of nowhere in Scotland, surrounded by some 4x4s, answering a text message asking me what I wanted to do with the exhaust. My answer? “Side-exit stainless; notch the sill if you need to.” Done. The list of jobs Hux did seemed endless: another text consisted of, “I’ve made hard pipes because what you had was crap.”. He was right, I was thankful.
    If you can, I urge you that when you’re done with your daily fill of Speedhunters you follow the link at the end to Huxley Motorsports’ Facebook page. I know not everybody uses the social media, but there’s an album on there with loads of pics he took whilst doing the work. If you’ve got this far, I think you’ll enjoy it. One modification I’m a big fan of is the front MacPherson strut/coil-over conversion, and seeing as they’re running Bilstein inserts, Hux figured ‘Brynstein’ stickers would look good. We’re sorry Mr Bilstein, it won’t happen again… He also raised the front crossmember to give me another 50mm of ground clearance: it’s a big problem when you run a low 240 and just this small amount has helped loads.
    Taking a closer look at the Volvo has reminded me of just how many jobs I’ve done on it, or parts I’ve sourced. Like the clear indicators that took an age to arrive from America, or blacking out the internal headlight surrounds.
    On the inside it’s kind of evolved since I stripped it out: the carbon bucket seats have minimal padding and came cheap from a friend who didn’t need them any more. Surprisingly they’ve been comfortable for over 40 thousand miles. They’re not ideal though, and I’ve been considering softer options. The Takata harnesses are a newer addition.
    I did have some five point, three inch wide harnesses in there, but since Takata became an official supplier to Speedhunters I got the chance to try their product out. Not wishing to offend anybody but the Takata green just isn’t for me: it would have clashed with the outside colour and I like things that don’t show the dirt too much on the inside.
    So the new black colourway they’re offering is an obvious choice. There are some really nice touches that were absent in my last set of harnesses too: the rubber-dipped metal clips for one, or the foam-inserted pull ends like a stuffed crust pizza that you can grip to pull tight. At the recent Autosport Show, I showed the Takata guys some more pictures of the Volvo on my phone… They seemed to like it, although they may just be really polite.
    This is my shifter. It’s made from a replacement hip insert. I can’t tell you where I got it from, but fear not – it wasn’t needed. My friend Wayne operates as the Intergalatic Custom Shop nearby, and I often call over for coffee as we both work alone. This is the result of one of those visits when I went to show him what I’d found.
    Up until last year the steering wheel was a two-spoke, suede Personal, which now hangs on my office wall, polished smooth after years of abuse.
    It was replaced when it came out of the rebuild with a Personal Grinta limited-edition ‘Kingston’ wheel. I first saw them advertised in America, and when the guys at Driftworks got them in it was a must have. As the ad on Driftworks says, ‘Even comes wit’ a green horn push an’ ting’! Although I replaced that with the blue Volvo one I had. In my subconscious, never-ending quest to mix and match styles I couldn’t resist it.
    The NASCAR centre pad is there because I spent a lot of time and money at JEGS when I was in Ohio, although these are actually really cheap. I also got a load of SFI-approved rollcage padding, it’s always been a bug of mine when you see bare rollcages and people driving with no helmet on.
    The window net came about for the same reason, as I can slip the windows out very easily by swinging that alloy bar forwards and pulling them clear. So the net is necessary… Honest.
    It just so happens I can also imagine I’m running the wall at Daytona when it’s down.
    Many, many things need attention on the Volvo. The engine needs some standalone management, and I could go on… But what I really need is a decent dash with some gauges that work. I’ve started making one from old license plates, as they’re light and easily formed, so now I just need to decide on the gauges I guess. Oh, the decisions.
    The more I look around the Strip Club, the more I realise as much as I’d like to think it’s been a series of considered decisions this has been pure evolution. Everywhere I look are marks of my travels and experiences, like this ‘Mind your head’ plate I picked up in the back streets of Hong Kong. I figured it made sense to warn somebody if they climbed in the back.
    Or the more recently added Speedhunters stickers, right in the front of the passenger seat on the backside of the sunstrip. Just so they know what they’re getting in to.
    To the left hand side of this picture is a gentlemen called Kjell, who lives in Sweden. Which is where I took this picture a couple of years ago. It’s the top of a barn hidden away in the countryside, and it’s owned by his father who used to build the 240 Group A touring cars for Volvo R Sport in the 80s. He has original wheels, composite airboxes and all sorts of alloy parts… I saw Kjell at Autosport in January and I told him I wanted to come back for some parts. I think there may be a roadtrip this summer.
    Wheels have been the bane of my life through this project. For years the combination of a 5×108 PCD and low-ish offset of ET20 meant that aftermarket wheels were virtually non-existent, so I had to rely on the standard 15s. Then about seven years ago I tried some 17-inch Peugeot steels banded to 9-inch, but they leaked. Way back in 2002 I went and spoke to Compomotive Wheels at the Autosport Show about getting some 17-inch MOs… Remember what I was saying about how I should have just got on with it? I even ran some American Racing five-spokes on it for a very short while using adapters – the latter I still have. Up on the shelf I also have some 17-inch Halibrand style rims and some very rare 15×8 Pontiac Firebird Turbo rims too, so who knows what’s next?
    Well maybe now I’ve accepted it as a project I should know. I certainly have a plan: bigger wheels, more power, bigger brakes, respray the interior to match the underbonnet in HUX grey and possibly the rear suspension from an M3 to give me some diff choices. The tow bar is staying though; this isn’t a race car.
    One thing I really need to do soon is make a composite bonnet, as lifting the standard steel one on and off its pins is not the most elegant or easiest of tasks. But realistically I currently have seven other cars, six of which could be considered projects, so hey – this could take a while.
    I do know that I just need to get on with it. Rod keeps on saying 2JZ and 800bhp to me, but the fact is I’m a Volvo guy and proud of it.

    1989 Volvo 245 GLT
    ENGINE
    2,316cc plus Garrett T3 turbo, 531 head, engine has been fully rebuilt with standard Volvo parts but balanced and lightened where appropriate
    Head has been ported and polished
    Custom made 2.5in stainless steel side exit exhaust
    Remote oil cooler
    Approx 180bhp
    SUSPENSION
    Front: Standard struts converted coilover type with Bilstein inserts and custom specification springs, front crossmember strengthened and modified for clearance, polybushed
    Rear: Standard trailing arms with Bilstein dampers and lowering springs, polybushed
    BRAKES
    Zimmerman drilled and vented discs front and rear with uprated pads and standard four piston callipers on front, two on rear, normal handbrake
    BODY
    Standard panels with body side trims removed
    Colour change to RAL Brungrau
    Brown tinted polycarbonate windows on side and rear
    ‘Strip Club’ pinstriping on rear tailgate
    Clear front and rear indicator lenses
    BMW E36 M3 Evo lower splitter plus plywood lip on front bumper
    INTERIOR
    Completely stripped of standard trim, door panels lightened and all electrics removed, windows now have sliders in front doors, rear are fixed, no stereo
    Carbon-fibre bucket seats
    Takata five-point, three-inch wide black harnesses
    Six point Caged FIA-approved bolt-in roll cage with full MSA-approved padding
    Personal Grinta ‘Kingston Edition’ steering wheel with NASCAR spec central pad
    SFI-approved window net
    Narrow band air fuel ratio gauge and boost gauge
    Battery relocated to behind passenger seat
    WHEELS AND TYRES
    8x17in Compomotive MO fitted with locking wheel nuts


    Bryn Musselwhite

    I’d like to give a massive thanks to Hux @ Huxley Motorsport in Worcestershire, England, for getting the car to where it is today – the world would run smoother with more people like him in it. Check out Huxley Motorsport for more info and look at the Facebook page for even more albums of cool projects. There are loads of Volvo build shots there too.

    Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona 2013


    The Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona 2013 was held January 26-27 on the 12-turn, 3.56-mile Daytona International Speedway, a combined track made up of portions of the NASCAR tri-oval and an infield road course.
    Ferrari 458 Italia
    The 51st running of the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona put on a tremendous finale, maintaining tension right up to the last. Pre-race favorites in the Daytona Prototype class, Chip Ganassi Racing’s #01 BMW/Riley, took the checkered flag as the Rolex timing hit the 24-hour mark. The script may appear pre-written, but such was the nature of the contest that Juan Pablo Montoya, driving the final stint, did not have an impregnable lead until the last five minutes, when he passed the #10 Velocity Worldwide Corvette DP on lap 706. In the GT class, the #24 Audi R8, of Audi Sport Customer Racing AJR, took the honors, and the GX class win went to the #16 Porsche Cayman of Napleton Racing.
    The #01 drivers, Americans Scott Pruett and Charlie Kimball, along with team-mates Colombian Juan Pablo Montoya and Mexican Memo Rojas, were jubilant. Pruett’s fifth overall win in the Rolex 24 At Daytona puts him alongside Hurley Haywood in the record book. Haywood was one of the first to congratulate Pruett, who was predictably emotional: “It’s just an incredible day all the way around, winning with these guys, and then at the end of it to have Hurley there was a very special thing.”
    DSC 7600 Version 2 620x413 Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona 2013   Report and Photos
    Winning BMW Riley of Chip Ganassi Racing
    Team principal, Chip Ganassi, celebrated his fifth overall win in ten starts at the Rolex 24 At Daytona: “I am very, very proud and especially because every single one of them has been with the same crew, same team. My hat is off to our guys in Indianapolis who put this car together. They are in charge of the preparation and worked very, very hard.”
    In the GT class the battle was every bit as fierce, even if the outcome was decided some 40 minutes earlier when Felipe Albuquerque took a decisive lead by staying out on track while the #69 AIM Autosport Team FXDD pitted: “When they put me in the car, no one really believed we could win. We were one lap down with two and half hours to go. I just drove every lap like qualifying. I didn’t care about the car, about the tires, about anything. I was flat out.” Co-driver, Dion von Moltke put Alburquerque’s drive in perspective: “Two hours ago we thought we were out. Felipe got in the car and put in one of the most amazing drives I have ever witnessed.”
    DSC 4625 620x413 Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona 2013   Report and Photos
    GT Class-Winning Audi R8 Grand-Am of Audi Sport Customer Racing Alex Job Racing
    For Napleton Racing, the GX win concluded a period of two and a half months of working 24/7 to be on the start line for the class’ debut at the 2013 Rolex 24 At Daytona. Driver David Donohue paid tribute: “For us it was a race of preparation. Our team did a superior job when this program was conceived in building this car and making it reliable.” Co-driver Shane Lewis pointed to just how reliable they had been: “If it wasn’t for some pit-lane violations and a couple of minor on-track incidents we would have had the cleanest run that I think anybody has had at the Rolex 24 for a long time.”
    The 52nd Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona will be held over the weekend of 25-26 January 2014.
    Photographer Mark Coughlin documented the racing action at the 2013 running of the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona, offering the following 110 images that highlight the endurance race and the heritage vintage car racing exhibition.
    Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona 2013 – Photo Gallery (click image for larger picture)
    Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona 2013 – Daytona Prototype Results
    1. BMW Riley – Chip Ganassi Racing, 709 laps (Overall Winner)
    2. Corvette DP – VelocityWW + 0.67s
    3. Ford Riley – Michael Shank Racing + 0.67s
    Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona 2013 – GT Class Results
    1. Audi R8 – Albuquerque/Jarvis/von Moltke/Mortara 678 laps
    2. Audi R8 – Baas/Basseng/Rast/Stippler + 1.476s
    3. Ferrari 458 Italia – Assentato/Lazzaro/Longhi/Stanton/Wilkins + 15.533s
    Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona 2013 – GX Class Results
    1. Porsche Cayman – Napleton Racing 635 laps
    2. Porsche Cayman GX.R – Bullet Racing – 10 laps
    3. Porsche Cayman GX.R – Motorsports – 21 laps
    Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona 2013 – In Numbers
    - 57 cars started, 30 cars were still running after 24 hours
    - Distance driven by winning DP car #01: 709 laps/2, 524 miles
    - Average speed of winning DP car #01: 105.167 miles per hour
    - Laps led by winning DP car #01: 421
    - Most laps led by any single driver: 205 by Scott Pruett in #01
    - Winning margin in DP class: 21.922 seconds
    - Fastest lap: 1:41.177/126.669 miles per hour in lap 293 by #02 in DP
    - Longest period under caution: 1 hour 45 minutes due to fog
    - 5th win in 10 attempts by Chip Ganassi Racing
    - 5 overall wins by Scott Pruett matches the record of Hurley Haywood
    [Source: Rolex; photos: Mark Coughlin]
    via sportscardigest