ACE CAFE RADIO

    jeudi 6 mars 2014

    Meeke’s return to Mexico / Meeke de retour au Mexique


    Rally Mexico rookie Kris Meeke has already competed in this country. In November 2012, the he took part in the Baja 1000, in the Baja California peninsula, on a Honda CRF 450.
    Oui, le pilote Citroën Kris Meeke connaît bien le Mexique, et plus particulièrement la péninsule mexicaine de Basse-Californie. En novembre 2012, le Britannique avait participé à la Baja 1000 au guidon d’une Honda CRF 450.
    Meeke contested the Baja 1000, North America’s biggest cross-country event, in 2012. The route’s 1,800km course takes competitors through the Mexican desert from Ensenada to La Paz at the peninsula’s southern top and is swallowed up practically non-stop.
    “I started enduro at the age of 10 but I never really competed. The Baja 1000 is an event I always wanted to do, though, and it’s one of the toughest anywhere in the world,” he says.
    When Prodrive left the Briton without a WRC drive, he decided it was time to live the dream: “I trained hard and, to accustom myself to such long distances, I took part in the Dawn-to-Dusk race in Wales. My aim was to complete the Baja in under 35 hours, because it can be very hard physically, especially during the second night.”
    Not many WRC drivers have attempted the legendary event. The exceptions are Sweden’s Erik Carlsson (third in 1969 and fifth in 1970 in a Saab 96 V4) and Armin Schwarz whose BMW X6 has become a regular feature of the SCORE championship. Meanwhile, the Baja 1000’s car class has drawn such household names as actors Paul Newman, Steve McQueen and Patrick Dempsey.

     Meeke va découvrir le Rallye du Mexique, certes, mais il a déjà parcouru plus de 1800 kilomètres en course dans ce pays. C’était à la Baja 1000, la plus grande épreuve Tout-Terrain d’Amérique du Nord, en novembre 2012. Plus de 1000 miles à parcourir d’une traite, en solo, dans le désert mexicain, entre Ensenada et La Paz à l’extrémité sud.
    « Je pratique l’Enduro depuis l’âge de 10 ans, mais je n’avais jamais vraiment fait de compétition. J’ai toujours voulu participer à cette course qui, pour moi, est l’une des plus dures au monde. »
    Laissé sans volant officiel en WRC par Prodrive, Kris Meeke s’était alors lancé ce défi un peu fou. « Je m’étais beaucoup entraîné bien sûr et pour m’habituer aux longues distances, j’avais participé à la course Dawn-to-Dusk, au Pays de Galles. Mon objectif était de terminer la Baja en moins de 35 heures car ça devient très difficile physiquement à la tombée de la seconde nuit »
    Peu de pilotes du WRC ont disputé cette mythique course américaine, hormis le Suédois Erik Carlsson (3e en 1969 et 5e en 1970 sur Saab 96 V4) et Armin Schwarz, devenu un inconditionnel du championnat américain SCORE sur son BMW X6. En revanche, la Baja 1000 a attiré de nombreux people, comme les acteurs Paul Newman, Steeve McQueen ou Patrick Dempsey en catégorie auto.
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    Meeke chose a Honda CRF 450 X prepared in the USA to contest the event in the Sportsman Motorcycle class (which meant competing alone, whereas the other classes see two or three riders share the same bike) along with 35 other competitors.
    He crossed the line in 18th place with a time of 40h38m20s. “It was unforgettable. You go through all sorts of phases, from extreme fatigue to moments of euphoria. You’re completely on your own, so you need to look after your rations. You only stop to work on your bike. The landscape is a bit like Rally Mexico’s mountain stages. In the middle of the night, in a very sandy section, I came across a Mexican quad rider stopped on the track. He had fallen asleep from exhaustion on his machine. I gave him some water and then I saw a powerful white light coming up fast behind us. It was the first Trophy Truck runner [4x4 prototype] which was about to catch us. I just managed to pull the guy clear when the Trophy Truck ran over his quad without even noticing…”
    Meeke would love to drive one of these 800hp monsters. He is also drawn by the Dakar, but only when his WRC career is over. This weekend, the Citroën-Total Abu Dhabi driver has no particular objective: “I did the recce a few years ago. Rally Mexico is a difficult event. There are some wide portions that are easy to memorise, but there are some very tricky narrower parts. Judging by past results, it’s possible to finish in the top five without taking any big risks. I will just try to find a safe, consistent pace.”

    C’est au guidon d’une Honda CRF 450 X préparée aux USA que Kris Meeke s’était présenté au départ, en catégorie Sportsman Motorcycle, c’est-à-dire celle des pilotes solo (dans les autre catégories, deux ou trois pilotes se partagent le guidon). Une catégorie très fournie avec 36 concurrents.
    La Honda N°263 a coupé la ligne d’arrivée en 18e position après 40h38min20s de course. « C’est inoubliable. On passe par tous les stades, d’une fatigue extrême à des moments d’euphorie. On est en totale autonomie, il faut donc savoir gérer ses rations, son alimentation. On ne s’arrête que pour ravitailler la machine. Les paysages ressemblent un peu à ceux du Rallye du Mexique dans les montagnes. Au milieu de la nuit, dans une zone très sablonneuse, j’ai vu un quad arrêté sur la piste. Le pilote, un Mexicain, dormait sur sa machine, il était à bout de forces. Je lui ai donné de l’eau et puis derrière nous, j’ai vu une puissante lumière blanche. C’était les 1ersTrophy Truck (les proto 4x4), partis derrière les 2-roues, qui nous rattrapaient. J’ai juste eu le temps de tirer le mec hors de la piste, le Trophy Truck est passé à fond et a écrasé son quad, sans même s’en apercevoir… »
    Kris Meeke rêve de piloter ces engins de 800 chevaux. Il aimerait bien aussi participer au Rallye Dakar, mais après sa carrière en WRC. Ce week-end, pas d’objectif précis pour le pilote Citroën-Total Abu Dhabi. « J’avais effectué les reconnaissances il y a quelques années. Le Rallye du Mexique est difficile avec des portions larges faciles à mémoriser, mais d’autres plus étroites et piégeuses. Quand on regarde un peu l’histoire de ce rallye, on s’aperçoit que sans faire de coups d’éclat, on peut entrer dans le top-five. Alors je vais adopter un rythme prudent et régulier. »

    Latvala tops Mexican shakedown order / Latvala le plus rapide aux essais


    The WRC drivers found themselves back on gravel today for the first time since last year’s Wales Rally GB, more than 100 days ago. Jari-Matti Latvala (VW/Michelin) posted the fastest time.
    With the two days of recce completed, the crews switched to their rally cars this morning for Rally Mexico’s shakedown which visited ‘Llano Grande’, the Qualifying Stage in 2013 when Mikko Hirvonen was fastest with an effort of 3m57.2s on soft-compound Michelin Latitude Cross S2 tyres.
    The concept of Qualifying Stages has been dropped this season, but crews must now complete four passes of the shakedown test. After two familiarisation runs on hard Michelins (H2), Sébastien Ogier returned to the service park in Leon with the best provisional time in his pocket (3m57.5s), ahead of Latvala and Kris Meeke who were equal on 3m59.7s. Mads Ostberg (4m0.5s) and Mikko Hirvonen (4m1.6s) were next on the list, while the two Hyundai i20 WRCs were seventh and eighth. The Korean team’s Chris Atkinson, who is making his WRC comeback after a year’s absence, reported that his suspension set-up was too hard.
    Ogier’s third attempt saw him improve to 3m55.6s, but team-mate Latvala‘s final run produced a 3m53.6s, an improvement of 3.6s over 2013… on ‘hard’ tyres! Meeke (Citroën DS3 WRC) ended up with the second-best time (3m54.7s), ahead of the world champion.
    The top five was rounded off by Andreas Mikkelsen (VW Polo R WRC) and Mads Ostberg (Citroën DS3 WRC), chased by Hirvonen (Ford Fiesta RS WRC) and Thierry Neuville (Hyundai i20 WRC) who failed to get beneath the four-minute mark.
    After two runs, the WRC-2 timesheet was topped by Ott Tanak, ahead of Nicola Fuchs and Quentin Gilbert, all in Ford Fiesta R5s.
    Thursday’s menu will end with the spectacular start ceremony in Guanajuato and the 1.01km super-special which visits the maze of tunnels that lie beneath the former mining town.
    Plus de cent jours après l’arrivée du Wales Rally GB 2013, les pilotes du WRC ont retrouvé leurs marques sur les pistes en terre à l’occasion du shakedown disputé ce matin. Jari-Matti Latvala (VW/Michelin) a réalisé le meilleur temps.
    Après deux jours de reconnaissances, les concurrents ont enfin pris le volant de leur voiture de course pour parcourir la spéciale d’essais, Llano Grande, identique à l’édition 2013, où Mikko Hirvonen avait réalisé le meilleur chrono en 3min57s2. Il s’agissait alors de la Qualifying Stage qu’il avait disputée en pneus Michelin Latitude Cross S2 (soft).
    Plus de Qualifying Stage au programme cette année, mais quatre passages d’essais obligatoires. Après deux tours parcourus en gommes H2 hard, Sébastien Ogier est rentré au parc d’assistance de Leon avec le meilleur temps provisoire (3min57s5) devant Jari-Matti Latvala et Kris Meeke ex-aequo en 3min59s7. Les pilotes Volkswagen s’étaient élancés au shakedown dans l’ordre de la 1ère étape vendredi. Suivaient Mads Ostberg et Mikko Hirvonen (4min00s5 et 4min01s6). Les nouvelles Hyundai i20 WRC pointaient aux 7e et 8e places avec des suspensions trop dures pour l’Australien Chris Atkinson, de retour en Mondial après un an d’absence.
    Le champion du monde en titre a amélioré le temps de référence en signant 3min55s6 à sa 3etentative, mais son équipier Jari-Matti Latvala a sorti un 3min53s6 lors de son dernier run, soit 3s6 de moins qu’en 2013 et en pneus Michelin hard ! Kris Meeke (Citroën DS3 WRC) a signé le 2e temps en 3min54s7 devant Sébastien Ogier qui n’a pas amélioré à son 4e essai.
    Andreas Mikkelsen (VW Polo R WRC) et Mads Ostberg (Citroën DS3 WRC) complètent le top-five devant Mikko Hirvonen (Ford Fiesta RS WRC) et Thierry Neuville (Hyundai i20 WRC) qui n’est pas descendu sous la barre des 4min00s. En WRC-2, après deux passages, Ott Tanak détenait le meilleur temps devant Nicola Fuchs et Quentin Gilbert, tous sur Ford Fiesta R5.
    La journée se terminera par la spectaculaire cérémonie de départ à Guanajuato et la Superspéciale d’1,01 km tracée dans les entrailles de l’ancienne cité minière.

    MOTONERO BLACK ROADSTER


    Moto Nero Black Roadster 1
    Motonero have been quietly producing high quality builds out of Bristol in the west of England for the past twenty years, producing custom Guzzis that have set the benchmark for the UK’s Guzzi aficionados, but without the kind of fanfare we’ve come to expect in the modern custom scene. You’ve probably seen John’s bikes without knowing who built them, and if that’s the case we hope to start putting things to rights.
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    John’s early interest in bikes started with his older brother and his ‘greaser’ mates, with his first bike a 250cc Triumph Trailblazer bought in ’74. Since then, John has built a number of notable Guzzis, but this 2007 all-black build, originally inspired by a photo in a German specialist parts catalogue, is what spawned the ‘Motonero’ moniker for all of John’s subsequent builds and blog.
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    John has been creating cafe racers with alloy tank upgrades, shortened seats, and forks swaps since the ’90s “I haven’t had a Guzzi in standard form for decades” but this was the first build that involved significant frame modifications and custom-machined components.
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    The frame is from a 1975 Guzzi (John’s unsure of the model but the frames from that era were all essentially the same) with a custom aluminium seat base made to John’s design by “an employee at Airbus” and upholstered in black marine vinyl.
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    The 850cc engine has been swapped out for an early ’90s LeMans 1000S with big valves and 40mm carbs, “…a good combination with a great handling frame with my preferred choice of short headstock and shorter swingarm”. Although not as pretty as the earlier round-finned engines the later LeMans 1000 motor (actually a 950cc) does offer an extra 10-15bhp at the rear wheel and a top speed of about 130mph: “I’m not really into top end figures though it’s nice to know it’s there and that at normal 70-90mph speeds you’re not straining the engine.”
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    The exhaust is a free-flowing stainless system made by Mistral in Italy: “The silencers are quite heavy but they do have a lovely deep tone”.
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    At the front end, John has replaced the original ’70s forks with USD Paioli forks from a mid ’90s Laverda ‘Zane’ 650 Kevlar, using the standard yokes with a shortened steering stem. Stopping power is provided by 4-pot Brembo calipers and wavy disks with specially-machined carriers to accept the modern setup. “I’ve always liked the mixture of modern parts with older styling, and you can’t get much more readily-available ‘classic style’ in the bike world than a Moto Guzzi.”
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    The wheel hubs are standard ’70s Guzzi T3 items with non-standard 17″ (2.50) front and 18″ (3.00) rear rims powder-coated black. The tyres, a ‘part worn, little used’ eBay purchase, are 130/80 Bridgestone BT45 rear and 110/80 Aero Speed front (no, we’d never heard of them before either!)
    Moto Nero Black Roadster 9“I always intended for it to handle reasonably well and be relatively comfortable for a 200-300 mile ride. The handling’s good but the Paioli yokes have created very little steering lock with the standard LeMans I petrol tank”. Small price to pay, we’d say, …just be careful where you park-up; back-wheel to the curb.
    We’ll be posting more from John and Motonero in the future, meanwhile check the Motonero Blog. Photos are courtesy of Italian Motor Magazine

    YAMAHA XS750 CUSTOM


    Yamaha XS750 Custom
    The Yamaha XS750 was produced from 1977 to 1979 before being replaced by the larger XS850, the model never saw the same production numbers as the wildly popular parallel-twin Yamaha XS650 but we’ve been seeing more and more custom XS750s coming to light in recent months – like the one you see here.
    It isn’t often that we come across a custom bike builder based in Montana, I imagine it’s because the residents of Big Sky Country have better things to do (like running away from bears) – so when New Zealander Colin Cornberg moved to Missoula 2 years ago he set about finding himself a motorcycle and getting to work on it.
    He found a 1977 Yamaha XS750 being sold nearby in Bitterroot Valley and went to have a look, the bike was in terrible condition and had clearly suffered a great deal in the last few years of its life. The original engine’s  electronic timing unit had been barbecued in an engine fire and had one bent valve and one that had broken off completely – fortunately the sale included a spare engine that was in far better condition and so Colin’s first major task was to rebuild this spare engine, remove the original unit and bolt the newly refurbished powerplant into place.
    Once this was done, Colin set to work stripped the bike back to the frame and rebuilding it as his own interpretation of a minimalist, survivalist motorcycle – the sort of thing MadMax would ride if he happened to live in Montana when the world ended.
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    A new, much simplified wiring loom was first on the to do list, anyone who’s ever attempted to make a wiring loom from scratch will immediately understand how much fun this isn’t. The stock air box was removed and new high-flow pod filters were added, a new seat pan and seat were bolted on above and a pair of clip-ons replaced the stock handlebars. Both the carburettors and brakes needed a full rebuild before they were able to be trusted and the forks needed to be disassembled and tidied up before compression was reliable.
    The completed bike with its blacked-out engine, clear coated steel fuel tank and seat pan, wrapped exhaust and minimalist gauge cluster is a fantastic example of what a cafe racer should look like – a stripped back bike that’s quicker than the original and an order of magnitude more fun.
    Colin is currently working on establishing Number 8 Wire Motorcycles in Montana, possibly the only cafe racer garage in the state. He’s hard at work on more customs in the vein of the Yamaha XS750 you see here, so if you’d like one for yourself hit that link above and pay him a visit.
    If you’d like to stay in the loop on new builds you can click to Like the Number 8 Wire Motorcycles Facebook Page.
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    via SILODROME