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    dimanche 10 novembre 2013

    Defining The Niche: The Liberty Walk GT-R


    Is Liberty Walk taking over the internet? Has the Nagoya-based company declared war on the SEMA Show? It sure seems like it if the number of cars we’ve seen wearing the company’s signature wide body conversions is anything to go by. If Kato-san was attempting to get our attention, it’s safe to say he definitely has! After taking a closer look at his Ferrari 458 last week, it’s now time to move onto his second SEMA project…

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    … the LB☆WORKS Nissan GT-R.

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    If you cast your minds back a few months, you might recall that Kato-san allowed Speedhunters to unveil the first rendering of the GT-R

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    … a CG image that Miura-san at TRA Kyoto – the man that Kato-san has entrusted to design and produce his aero kits – later showed in a variety of body colors and angles. So like the 458, we all had a pretty good idea of what the car would look like in its finished form. However, as was the case with the Ferrari, seeing 3D images on the internet can never prepare you for the full impact of witnessing the completed car.

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    If there’s one car out there that probably doesn’t need its fenders blistered it’s the R35 GT-R. The big Nissan – successor to the Skyline GT-R – boasts a pretty robust stance to start off with: big Aeroblade (in Nissan talk) front fenders joining a chunky, bulbous rear end that makes it one of the most imposing cars on the streets today. But who the hell said aggression has limits?

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    Kato-san certainly didn’t, so when he asked TRA Kyoto to make those works-style overfenders as “in your face” as possible…

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    … Miura listened, and delivered. The bolted-on look is once again used, exposed screws…

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    … showing each mounting point onto the cut stock fender below it. The FRP addition follows the primary crease line of the GT-R’s wheel arch…

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    … extending downwards along the side air outlet, then all the way down to the main skirt line.

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    Making the LB☆WORKS aero stand out as much as possible, while sticking to the company’s recognizable design ethos, was all part of the plan.

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    Color is always important – especially for a show car – and the OEM dark metal grey makesevery line of the GT-R’s exterior pop under the sun’s rays.

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    The GT-R has been captivating the minds of the worldwide tuning industry since it was first revealed back in 2007, and it’s quite cool to see that Liberty Walk decided to do something with a domestic car instead of the usual imports and exotics it tends to concentrate on.

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    Will this car appeal to everyone? Of course it won’t – it’s not meant to. Like all the cars that bear the LB☆WORKS name, it’s aimed at a very unique individual – one that just isn’t content sitting at the wheel of a car that everyone can own.

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    So it seems that this sort of aero package is born out of exclusivity; the need to satisfy a very small niche…

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    … and judging by its rump – the sheer need to shock! Miura may as well have come up with the biggest works-style overfenders ever created for a car – the massive rear pieces extending from underneath where the door ends and arching all the way around and touching the high hip line. Over the top touches like this were sort of a necessity, you don’t try to make a statement with a car like the GT-R and not go full out.

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    Take how the overfenders end abruptly once they pass the bumper line…

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    … and tuck in, quickly merging into the original dimensions of the car. Miura here gave a nod to aerodynamics, the recess behind any fender helping the extraction of air from the wheelarch and some of the flow form the underside of the car, which if you recall is completely flat on the R35 to smooth air passing underneath it. While this detail may or may not add a functional aero effect, the fact that you end up seeing more of the rear tires is a big bonus in the looks department, that aggressive offset of the rear wheels making quite the statement.

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    Does it all seem a little exaggerated? Yes, but that was the obvious intention, having been given carte blanche there was little if no conformity to what he was sculpting away at.

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    Take the rear wing for example; Miura keeps up with the times, he gets his inspiration from a variety of styles, is always paying attention to how things change in the vastness of the car world and it was motorsports that provided the idea for the spoiler. As we have seen, with the introduction of DTM regulations in Super GT most GT500 teams are adopting the swan neck wing stays which literally hangs the wing from the top side over the car. Here it’s purely a style driven addition of course, but one that brings a touch of race spirit to the road. I’m sure we will be seeing more of these type of wing stays in the aftermarket during the course of 2014.

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    Race car touches don’t end there of course, the Liberty Walk GT-R sports a GT-3 inspired extended front lip spoiler to help slice through the air and actively boost downforce while at the rear Miura has extended the centre section of the diffuser and bolted additional winglets onto each corner, for an additional visual impact.

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    The LB☆WORKS treatment has created a one-of-a-kind GT-R that’s just as aggressive as the BenSopra R35, but in a totally different way.

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    No show car is ever complete with out a well chosen set of rims, and serving as a dark contrast to the silver-bronze body, Liberty Walk went for a set of Forgiato Maglia wheels…

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    … custom painted in satin black and measuring 20×11-inch up front and 20×12-inch at the rear. The LB☆WORKS GT-R runs Toyo Proxes tires, 285/35ZR20 at the front and rather large 315/30ZR20s on the rears, boosting grip levels considerably.

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    Providing the unmissable stance element and dropping the car right to the ground is the CSD Platinum VIP adjustable suspension…

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    … featuring air cups at each corner that allow the R35 to go from normal-ish low ride height…

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    … all the way down to show car mode at the push of a button. See what I mean with the tucked in rear over fenders? Can you see how much of the rear tires you can actually see? Yes we like!

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    The Japanese phrase Jiyū ni aruku underneath the Liberty Walk logo on the rear bumper roughly translates as ‘walk freely’, and it’s somewhat of a motto for Kato-san. It’s an emphasis on the way in which he approaches his cars and his products, and to some extent, his life – doing his own thing and striving to reach his goals in his own unique way.

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    While under the knife, the GT-R also gained some extra performance courtesy of a complete Trust exhaust system and a full hard piping kit which gets rid of the cheap looking stock items with lots of polished aluminum goodness. Trust Gracer Airinx filters have been positioned right behind the front grille so they are not only in the best position possible to suck in cool air, but also away from engine bay heat. Trust blow-off valves dump unneeded intake charge when backing off the throttle and also supply that must-have whooshing sounds many R35 owners dream of. An ECU remap takes full advantage of these upgrades, helping to obtain a slight bump in horsepower and a more responsive set up. However as the car was just completed the day before SEMA, no power measurements have been made.

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    The interior has been given a little custom touch too…

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    … thanks to a two-tone quilted leather seat re-trim courtesy of Newing…

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    … which also stretches to those tiny seats in the back!

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    If you are a purist and insist that any modification made to a car must be functional and bettering performance even in the slightest of ways, then the LB☆WORKS GT-R will probably make you angry. But if, on the other hand, you are more like Kato-san and are happy to enjoy the more aesthetic approach to car customization, then I think this R35 will be doing it for you. No matter what camp you may belong in though, the Liberty Walk GT-R has done its job – it has awakened some emotion within. Love it, or love to hate it as they say…




    CAGIVA ALA AZZURRA BY VENIER


    Cagiva Ala Azzurra
    There’s always a certain style, a certain luxe look to Stefano Venier’s builds. He’s best known for his immaculately finished Moto Guzzis, but his latest machine is a less recognizable beast.
    Although the engine is stamped with the Ducati logo, the bike is a mid-80s Cagiva Ala Azzurra 350. Cagiva was closely linked to Ducati, and later bought the Bologna firm before selling it in 1996 and morphing into MV Agusta.
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    Stefano has called the bike Sputafuoco (bootstrap). He’s particularly attached to it, because it was the first bike he envisioned customizing. “I wanted to make this one happen, because even after a few years, it was still interesting to me. It’s a small motorcycle with a small engine, but when you ride it the sensation is of a really fast motorcycle. It screams like a rocket, and has no fear of bigger bikes!”
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    If the bodywork looks familiar, that’s because Stefano used the tank—with a custom aluminum gas cap—and side panels from a Ducati Pantah TL. The front light is from a vintage Moto Guzzi, a type that Ducati also used, but the fenders, seat and brackets are hand made. Stefano also modified the back of the frame to achieve the line he wanted.
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    A speedometer is fitted into the headlight, which sits ahead of vintage Benelli 354 bars. The slender frame is the real star, though. “It was the first time Ducati came out with the trellis frame,” Stefano notes. “It’s such a beauty that I couldn’t resist.”
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    “I think this is my most elegant build, and elegance is what I was after,” he says. I’ll second that—there’s a beguiling, unorthodox charm about this machine that matches the slightly strange history of Cagiva.
    Check the Venier Customs website for more of Stefano’s work, and follow his news via the Venier Facebook page.
    Cagiva Ala Azzurrar
    from BIKEEXIF

    High-value snapping: Leica sale promises new records


    They are among the best photographic equipment in the world - cameras from Leica. Later this month, Bonhams in Hong Kong will be auctioning several extremely valuable models that might well set new records...
    In 1925, Oskar Barnack created the first small-format 35mm camera, the foundation stone of Leica - and one which revolutionised photography in the process. Many famous reporters and photographers such as Robert Capa and Henri Cartier-Bresson worked with the handy but high-quality Leica cameras and, today, you find not only the latest digital models in demand, but also the classics. In the Bonhams 'Leica and Classic Camera Sale' on 22 November, the cameras and lenses on offer include such special items as a rare Leica Luxus 1 from 1930, estimated at €480,000-670,000. In 2012, a similar model was sold for €712,000. The only known Leica Luxus II from 1932 still in existence might beat even this result and, judging by the catalogue's estimate, achieve up to €860,000. The current owner bought the camera along with a crocodile leather case after the Second World War for use in his amateur photography.
    Less glamorous, but nevertheless exciting is one of just 100 frost-resistant IIIFs made, in 1956, for Arctic operations by the Swedish army. It carries an estimate of €38,000-56,000. Or, a style statement of a more recent past is available, in the form of a calf leather-cased Leica MP Hermès Edition from 2003, which is estimated at €8,000-12,000. Alternatively, anyone not looking for a collector's item but merely wanting to bid on a high-quality camera will find numerous opportunies listed at reasonable prices.
    For more information on 'The Leica and Classic Camera Sale' by Bonhams on 22 November 2013 in Hong Kong, should visit bonhams.com.

    Nomos Lambda: A watch for Sunday best


    Nomos Lambda
    "Put on your Sunday clothes, we're gonna ride through town," sings Cornelius in the musical 'Hello Dolly'. What does a musical about the adventures of two city boys have to do with the golden Nomos Lambda? Nothing! It's simply an introduction to a watch that you keep for Sunday best...
    The new gold piece from the German luxury watchmaker 'Nomos Glashütte' has true cult potential. Rarely has a new watch inspired such controvery as the Lambda. Classicists, recalling their lessons in Ancient Greek, will remember that lambda is the eleventh letter of the Greek alphabet but, in scientific nomenclature, lambda is a symbol with many meanings... including 'intrinsic value'.
    Which brings us back to the topic in hand. The Nomos Lambda has a wealth of instrinsic value, such as the extremely unusual yet well-balanced arrangement of the dial. The hours and minutes seem almost secondary, banished to the extreme edge of the face, while an oversized power reserve indicator is the central eye-catching feature. And rightly so, because the in-house DUW 1001 movement guarantees a power reserve of around 84 hours.

    No compromises

    The dramatic design of the Lambda is utterly uncompromised - and that goes for the price tag, too, which stands at a fairly uncompromising 12,000 euros. But then the Lambda in rose gold is arguably a design icon in the same league as a classic Porsche 911. And it's far too beautiful to be worn only on a Sunday.
    Photos: Nomos
    For more on Nomos see www.nomos-glashuette.com
    Vintage watches for sale can be found in the Classic Driver Marketplace.