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    Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Design. Afficher tous les articles
    Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Design. Afficher tous les articles

    samedi 9 avril 2016

    ART OF DRIVE: AUTOMOTIVE DESIGNER JAMES NISSEN


    Words Craig Metros Photography Luke Ray.
    Our Art of Drive series interviews artists, designers and photographers to find out what inspires them.
    “What do you want to be when you grow up?” How many times are we asked this during our wonder years? When James Nissen was growing up in Melbourne, his consistent and quick response was "Car Designer".  However, Nissen had two passions; cars and jet aircraft. His two dream careers were sketching future automotive concepts and piloting state-of-the-art military aircraft. Two very solid careers, both requiring serious commitment and focus. After high school, Nissen went on to pursue both dreams.
    In primary school, the young Nissen started drawing cartoons that eventually led to drawing planes. In high school, planes gave way to sketching cars. "At the time, I found the Ford vs. Holden car culture in Australia very intriguing," recalls Nissen. "Planes are much more engineering driven and I thought designing cars would be so much more interesting."
    Another creative discovery during high school was graffiti. "Along with cars, I also started sketching graffiti. I really enjoyed translating those smaller sketches to a much larger scale," Nissen recalls. "Graffiti really helped my sketching and designing process. It was a great medium to push and evolve shapes and line even though it was two dimensional." High school wasn't just about spray painting blank walls and sketching cars. Nissen excelled in chemistry, mathematics, physics, and visual communications, he graduated from high school in 2003 and started Monash University in 2004. Monash is a local university that offers a world class Industrial and Automotive Design program.  His focus was car design and his short-term goal was to land an internship with Ford or Holden. That happened in 2007 when the Ford Motor Company offered him a year-long internship at their Research and Design Centre in Campbellfield, North of Melbourne. Nissen returned to Monash in 2008 to finish his final year. After graduation, the humble, highly-motivated, and extremely talented Nissen started working as a designer for Ford.
    Wall3.JPG
    With the Monash years behind him and his new career just beginning, Nissen still had jets on his mind. In 2009, Nissen went to the Avalon Air Show. "That show really rekindled my passion to fly jets," remembers Nissen. His curiosity for what it would take to pursue his second dream was growing. By mid 2009, programs coming into the Ford Research and Design Centre were slowing down.
    Nissen took advantage of the down time and contacted the College of Aeronautical Science at the University of Queensland. This is where he needed to complete an aeronautical mathematics and physics course before being eligible to apply for a job as a pilot in the Royal Australian Air Force. After weeks of contemplation, Nissen decided he wanted no regrets in his life. He signed up to begin pilot aptitude testing with the Australian Defence Force. At the end of 2009, Nissen resigned from Ford.
    "I started my studies almost immediately. It was going very well and I was passing all my initial tests, " a very keen Nissen recalls. He passed the first and second stage of pilot aptitude testing with ease. "I was passing everything and that was making my experience even more enjoyable," explains Nissen. The last stage of training before being qualified to enlist with the Royal Australian Air Force was Nissen's flight screening. This was a two week flying course in Tamworth, New South Wales.        
    In May of 2010, Nissen was notified that he passed the flight course and was offered a position in the Royal Australian Army as a Helicopter pilot. Nissen really wanted to pilot jet aircraft. After making a very difficult decision, Nissen returned to Ford as a car designer.
    "I'm very content now knowing I pursued both dreams since I was a kid."
    Nissen, who will be moving to Cologne, Germany to work in the Ford Merkenich design studio this August, seems to be very happy and comfortable with designing cars again. "The amount of study leading up to all the testing I had to go through, has helped me to stay even more focused and work harder these days as a designer," according to Nissen. He is currently working on advanced programs and is really enjoying it. Nissen is known for coming in the studio on weekends to brainstorm and sketch advance automotive interiors.  
    Nissen still thinks about aircraft in general. "When designing vehicles, whether it's interior or exterior design, aircraft is my greatest source of inspiration," Nissen points out. He still thinks about flying for recreation. As soon as Nissen can afford it, his plan is to start flying lessons to obtain his private pilot's licence.
    This article first appeared in Fuel Magazine issue 14.

    samedi 19 janvier 2013

    SACHS BEAST 1000



    This bike has been haunting the living shit out of me ever since I clapped eyes on it way back when it was released in 2001. That's over ten years ago for you'ze who is not good at doing mathamaticisms, and yet it still looks as fresh as a daisy (a daisy which is packing a 1000cc v-twin and twin projector lamps!).

    I say 'haunting' because while its one of my favourite ever motorcycle designs, 
    I've never managed to see one in real life and there are very few quality images around with which I can ogle it perversely from afar. There's not even much specification detail out there so I'll probably be making most of this article up (as always- corrections very welcome).

    Its beautiful yet brutal (brutiful?), refined yet mechanical; its the Sachs Beast 1000 concept.

    Sachs Beast 1000

    Sachs Motorcycles is/was/could be a German manufacturer, founded in 1886 which in recent years has had a bit of a rough time. Initially producing small capacity motorcycles, motorised bicycles, mopeds and ATVs the company suffered some nasty times through the late 80s and 90s with a bankruptcy and the ultimate humiliation of being reduced to assembling Chinese sourced scooters (not counting the MadAss: Sachs designed and made). Recently the company changed name to SFM and manufactures electric bicycles and scooters.

    So given that history of sensible commuter transport where did the wild 1000cc Beast come from? Well, given the lack of available background to this story I would make an educated guess that the 'Millennium-Bug', rather than screw with everyones computers on NYE1999, actually implanted itself into the brain of the CEO of Sachs, compelling him to produce an incredible motorcycle (the Millennium Bug is an avid motorcyclist).
    I won't speculate further on that at this point however one thing is clear; someone at Sachs got on the phone with someone at Target Design (designers of the Suzuki Katana) and asked them to draw up a beast of a bike. And they did.
    Sachs Beast 1000
    Sachs Beast 1000

    The engine appears to be a Swedish built 1000cc Folan V-Twin. Its a mysterious engine; the Folan website is fairly 'information-free' however it seems to be a DOHC, 60 degree angle model with dry clutch which was eventually bought-out and put into use by American manufacturer Highland Motorcycles. The engine is a stressed member to the extreme extent that there isn't any visible 'frame' at all.

    The Target Design website claims a 100hp und einem gewicht of 145kg which is kind of academic really since you and I will tragically, never ever ride the damn thing.

    Sachs Beast 1000
     Front end gives me goosebumps: Paioli, little spoiler fairing things and projector lamps.
    Sachs Beast 1000
    Sachs Beast 1000
     (Top) Exhaust is work of spaghetti-art (Bottom) Frosted PMMA panels for knee grip; tidy.
    Sachs Beast 1000

    dimanche 6 janvier 2013

    STEVE MCQUEEN’S DUNE BUGGY DAYS


    Steve McQueen enjoying a cigar behind the wheel of the "TCA" dune buggy.
    Steve McQueen-- rockin' the Aran sweater & enjoying a smoky treat, behind the wheel of his dune buggy from "The Thomas Crown Affair."
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    Steve McQueen & Faye Dunaway with the dune buggy from The Thomas Crown Affair.
    Steve McQueen & Faye Dunaway with the dune buggy from "The Thomas Crown Affair."
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    Steve McQueen's highly customized, Corvair powered, Meyers Manx dune buggy.
    Steve McQueen's highly-customized, Corvair-powered, Meyers Manx dune buggy from "The Thomas Crown Affair."
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    “Crown lives at the beach, and he has a sand Dune Buggy.  I helped them design it, so I’m kind of proud of that.  What it is, it’s set on a Volkswagen chassis, with great old wide weenies – big wide tires on it with mag wheels. Corvair engine stuffed in the back, and a semi reclining position, somewhat like my formula 1 car.  It’s very light, you know, I think we are around about 230 horses, and the vehicle weighs about 1000 pounds.”
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    All the Dune Buggy stunt scenes from The Thomas Crown Affair were performed by Steve McQueen himself– with actress Faye Dunaway bravely sitting by McQueen’s side like a true sport.  Man, how I love the howl of that souped-up Corvair engine in the clip below–
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    steve mcqueen dune buggysteve mcqueen dune buggy
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    Next up, A Steve McQueen dune buggy on some serious steroids– the Legendary Hurst Baja Boot.
    The Hurst Baja Boot was envisioned by Vic Hickey who was regarded as one of General Motors top engineers of the time. GM had a “no racing” policy in place that initially stopped any plans of producing the Baja. But under the shadow of darkness, Hickey and Drino Miller completed the Baja Boot in 26 days at the Hurst facility in Michigan. The chassis was constructed out of SAE- 1010 13/4-inch steel tubing that weighed 3,450 pounds. The suspension system included parts from a Corvette rear drive assemblies and a Dana transfer case to support the 112 inch long hybrid four-wheel-drive buggy. The Baja Boot could operate from a Front wheel drive platform through an inverted drive assembly that allowed the driver to disengage the transfer case. Other Innovative features included a collapsible steering column, 11-inch Hurst-Airheart disc brakes, a 20-inch-diameter six-blade fan with reversed pitch, and a 350ci V-8 engine that was installed backwards.
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    Steve McQueen and his legendary Baja Boot, only 2 were ever made.
    Steve McQueen, Bud Ekins and the legendary Chevy-powered Hurst Baja Boot, only 2 were ever made.
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    Steve first raced the Baja Boot in the ‘Stardust 7-11′ off-road race in June 1968. A gruelling 320 mile odyssey for both cars and motorbikes, the race started at the Stardust raceway in Las Vegas, Nevada, and ran across the potentially lethal Amargosa desert. Friend and fellow racer Bud Ekins was also with Steve in the Baja Boot in the role of rider-navigator.
    In the lead up to the race Steve told the media - “I’ve lined me up a sweet machine for this one called the ‘Baja Boot.’ Chevy powered. Four hundred and fifty horses under the bonnet. Space frame construction. Four-wheel drive. Independant suspension. And ‘smooth’! I can notch close to a hundred over a sand wash and you better believe that’s moving.”
    Steve and Bud were performing well in the race, until, in Steve’s own words, as related to writer William F Nolan– “We were really battin’ along, feeling good about the car and our chances with it, when we see this big fat wheel rolling along beside us. It’s our wheel!  The axle had popped.  Well, that did it. We just sat on our tails in the desert ’till help came.”
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    Steve McQueen and the Hurst Baja Boot 1968
    Steve McQueen and the Hurst Baja Boot 1968
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    McQueen also took the Baja Boot for a spin in 1969′s ‘Baja 1000′, which as the name suggests, is a 1000 mile long off-road race.  Set on Mexico’s Baja California Peninsula, also known as ‘The Devils Playground’, the Baja 1000 is the longest off road race in the world.  It is also arguably the toughest and most dangerous– 1969′s event claiming two lives.
    Steve McQueen was accompanied by co-driver Harold Daigh this time out, and the pair were travelling well, but, with just 237 miles completed, disaster struck when a broken transmission put them out of the race.
    McQueen later told William Nolan– “In the fast sections, it was not unusual for us to get airborn for 50 to 70 feet over road dips.  The Boot rides so smooth you can overdo things.  Even in bad, choppy sections it’ll do 60 or so, and if you slam into a big rock at that speed you can crack an axle or worse.”
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    Steve McQuen Bud Ekins Baja Boot
    Steve McQuen and Bud Ekins in the legendary 450 HP Chevy beast-- the Baja Boot.

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    Thee Hurst Baja Boot driven by Steve McQueen.
    Thee Hurst Baja Boot driven by Steve McQueen.
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    Restored McQueen Baja Boot with correct Hurst decals and red paint.
    Restored McQueen Baja Boot with correct Hurst decals and red paint.
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    Interior of the off-road Hurst Baja Boot
    Interior of the off-road Hurst Baja Boot
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    The Legendary Hurst Baja Boot off-road monster
    The Legendary Hurst Baja Boot off-road monster
    from theselvedgeyard

    dimanche 30 décembre 2012

    THE RAG & BONE MAN.


    Rag and Bone titles3
    For our debut Make Your Bones film we check in with Paul Firbank, AKA ‘The Rag & Bone Man’. Paul spends his days locked deep in his man cave creating beautiful objects from the dregs of East London’s scrappers.
    He sorts and sifts through the scrap yards, railway arch grease shops and the thrift markets finding the remains of vintage engineered machinery and outmoded modern metal parts that make up scraps of British industrial history. Paul assembles these shiny unwanted fragments into new playful designs. Restoring, welding, turning, stripping, polishing and lacquering he develops each piece responding to the materials he has found.

    home_01
    lamp
    chandelier-home
    chandelier-home 2
    chandelier-home 3
    hangers
    home-roll1
    chair
    from http://makeyourbones.com

    mercredi 26 décembre 2012

    BOTT XR-1


    Probably the final resoult will be quite different to what you can see in these images, but looking at them you will have a good idea about what’s going on with the BOTT XR-1 project.

    BOTT XR-1 CAD concept.

    The BOTT XR-1 is a bike based on a Buell, who acts as a donor of wheels, suspensions, brakes, engine and swingarm. The intention is to create a motorbike with flattrack aesthetics, based on the Harley XR 750 racers. To build this bike we had to design a central spine chassis. We will give more details about this chassis in following posts.

    BOTT XR-1 CAD concept.

    The idea about building this bike is from Ramón Bellosta, the guy who asked us to build this chassis. I think it is a very good idea because the BOTT XR-1 will be very funny to ride. The Harley XR1200 is the most similar thing you can find on the market, but while the Harley weights 250 kgs and has 85 HP, the BOTT XR-1 will weight 170 kgs, will have more than 100 HP, and it will have much more agressive geometries, so it will be a much more agile bike.

    BOTT XR-1 CAD concept.

    Ramón will finish the bike following his taste, but in Bottpower we couldn’t avoid to make some renders to explore the aesthetic possibilities of this concept. It is very probable that we continue making renders during the following weeks, testing different ideas.

    BOTT XR-1 CAD concept.

    If the project stirs up enough interest we will think about making a kit, so anybody interested could be able to build a BOTT XR-1 starting from a Buell.
    Here you can see the images at higher resolution.from 
    http://bottpower.com 

    jeudi 31 mai 2012

    Steer Dodge Dart Rally Car


    the SRT Motorsports Dodge Dart Rally Car made its debut in the Global Rallycross series at Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 26th. Highly decorated rally driver Travis Pastrana piloted the all-wheel-drive turbocharged rally car through the 2012 Global Rallycross season.


    SRT Motorsports began work on the rally variant of the new Dart well before its world debut in Detroit earlier this year. Thanks to extensive development and engineering of the powertrain, the turbocharged 2.0-liter I-4 is capable of over 600 horsepower. Its all-wheel-drive setup provides the grip required to attack any surface with authority.