ACE CAFE RADIO

    mercredi 3 juin 2015

    BAD WINNERS 010


    Bad Winners Boxer 1 THUMBMusic and motorcycles go hand in hand, and always have done. Jim Morrison rode a lurid green Von Dutch painted Honda CL77, Bob Dylan had a thing for Triumphs and Billy Joel has his own bike gallery. Walid from Bad Winners in Paris might not have scaled the dizzy musical heights of the aforementioned but after 10 years as a DJ and producer he has now been signed to French label Beat X Changers. When he’s not spinning the wheels of steel, Walid spends his time in a city workshop building bikes. Sounds like a pretty good gig to us.
    Bad Winners Boxer AWe got to meet Walid at Bike Shed Paris where he exhibited this Honda XL600, and garnered quite a few fans in the process. The dude isn’t just jumping on a trendy bandwagon, he’s been working on bikes since the age of seven, learning the ropes from a racer cousin who instilled the importance of proper engineering. Four years ago Walid customised an SR125 for a friend and was so surprised at the attention he decided to set up Bad Winners in a 240sqm workshop and go for it.
    Bad Winners Boxer CThe Bad Winners 010 – Wall Eyes, originated as an XL600 LM, the Paris Dakar version with two large round headlights. Luckily the customer had given carte blanche and as these lamps provided such a characteristic part of the donor bike’s look Walid decided to deviate from the trend of tiny headlights and mount these bad boys in all their luminary glory.
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    If you’ve ridden an old trailie you’ll know that the brakes are designed for gentle retardation on a sandy track, rather than saving your bacon in a congested city. The original front wheel and brake was swapped for a KTM SMC560 combo, meaning not only are endos possible but the smaller 17 incher full of disc looks meaner than the gangly 21″ stock hoop.
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    The subframe has been modified and a slim seat made to suit, with a neat kick-up at the rear. There’s enough padding for all day riding without looking like an 80s throwback. But to keep that long range Dakar feel the Honda needed a beefier tank, and there’s not much beefier than one from a BMW. Trouble is the Beemer unit is a bit long, no bother, Walid chopped it in half. With 15cm removed he set about reuniting the two sections. Underneath that gorgeous ink blue paint is five days of toil, that’s right, no filler here just patience with the TiG torch, brazing rod and lot of sanding.
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    Another thing Walid learnt from his racing background was an engine’s requirement for cool air so he broke out the TiG torch again and fabricated stainless steel intake pipework to match the handmade exhaust. The twin port, twin carb single should see those big headlights pointing skyward most of the time.
    Bad Winners Boxer FThe fenders are also handmade, with the front an aesthetic nod to the glory days of desert racing. This is one street scrambler than would be just at home being thrashed down a green lane or fire road as it would across the cobbles of the Champs-Élysées.
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    Walid burnt a barrel of midnight oil over the last few weeks and pitched up to Bike Shed London at the weekend with 3 bikes, including 010 Wall Eye. The other two bikes went down a storm and we’ll be featuring them over the next couple of weeks. It seems that Bad Winners are really rather good.
    via The Bike Shed

    World-Record Ferrari 212 leads line at RM’s Villa Erba sale


    Hammered away at a World-Record €6.72m (including premium) by the ever-enthusiastic Max Girardo, a 1952 Ferrari 212 Export Barchetta helped RM achieve a strong €26.7m sale total and 87% sell-through rate at its 2015 Villa Erba sale…

    California... stalling?

    It wasn’t all good news, though. Unlike the charming, Touring-bodied Barchetta, the SWB Cal’ Spider was unable to take advantage of the idyllic setting, with a high bid of €10.25m too low to breach its lower estimate – or, more importantly, its heady reserve. The same fate befell the yellow 250 SWB Competizione (bid up to €9.1m), leaving the 250 GT flag to be flown by the smart ‘Pino Verde’ Lusso (€2.01m) and the Series II Cabriolet (€1.56m).

    Falling foal of the youngsters?

    Modern collectable Ferraris enjoyed another vote of market confidence, with the ‘fab four’ selling well: the 288 GTO, F40, F50 and Enzo all marched beyond the magic million (as did a 2.7 RS Lightweight, the Fiat 8V Cabrio by Vignale, and a Miura P400 S – just). But when a Ferrari 458 Speciale Aperta – a model that has only been in production for a few months – sells for €515,200, isn’t that going a step too far?

    From tropical colours to topical contours

    Elsewhere, the 1949 Alfa Romeo 6C Villa d’Este Coupé made full use of its topicality by selling for an above-estimate €784,000, and the appropriate ‘pistachio green’ hue of the 1974 Lancia Stratos no doubt contributed towards a strong €431,200. However, the unique Italian bodywork of the BMW-Glas 3000 V8 failed to command enough interest to sell on the shoreline – perhaps the backdrop was better-suited to the ex-Bardot Riva Florida, which sailed beyond estimate to an impressive €146,250.
    Photos: Rémi Dargegen for Classic Driver

    Hot Rod ...


    mardi 2 juin 2015

    HOLDEN VINTAGE § CLASSIC : Tiger roars to success winning class at Tour Ireland


    Tiger roars to success winning class at Tour Ireland
    Earlier this month (12-15 May) Chairman Jeremy Holden competed in the 'Tour Ireland' rally � - driving a very rare 1964 Sunbeam Tiger ex-Works Rally Car, one of only seven Rootes Group works ever made. Jeremy Holden and his navigator Angelica Fuentes Garcia scooped first in class award in what was a tough and challenging rally plagued with wet slippery track conditions and numerous potholes on the closed road stages.
    Unlike many fellow competitors Jeremy and Angelica completed the rally unaided, with no support crew or spanner required. This was quite a feat in itself; many other vehicles didn't make it across the finish line.
    Speaking about the rally, Jeremy Holden said 'I was a bit apprehensive being paired with co-driver Angelica Fuentes, not only is she a professional rally navigator and driver, but she has won numerous races, and has taken part in over 200 rallies including 30 times at La Carrerra Panamericana Rally, Mexico. � I was conscious that Angelica and I had never raced together before, had no to time to test, and was competing in a vehicle that had literally just undergone major restoration days before, and had no support crew. The Tiger had not raced competitively since 1993 and ironically one year (to the day) after I bought it, it had been restored and we were thrashing it around Southern Ireland and the UK on the same day'.
    He continued 'expectations to win were high, and we had everything stacked up against us, which made the win even more satisfying. I would like to extend a big thank you to Hardy Hall Restorations – what a grand job they have done, and to Gauge Pilot for the navigational aid'.
    'Tour Ireland' was a new event for 2015 organised by Tour Britannia and sponsored by Holden. The tour started and finished at the HQ in Llandudno, North Wales and included 24 hours in Ireland, using the high-speed ferry from Holyhead to Dublin.�  The Irish leg has four closed-road stages in the Wicklow Mountains as well as a race at Mondello Park.
    The duo competed in Jeremy's ex works Sunbeam Tiger, which has very recently undergone a full restoration with much of the cars originality being preserved. Jeremy's model (The AHP 294B) features the original Ford 4.2 Litre V8 engine. It made its debut at the 1964 Geneva Rally, just three months after it was registered, where 'Tiny' Lewis and Barry Hughes took the controls and edged the car to victory. Heralded as the most campaigned of the seven Tiger models, highlights for this particular car include being driven by Maurice Gatsonides in the 1965 Monte Carlo Rally, as well as by Peter Harper in the 1966 Monte. Other successes include a spell of endurance racing at the Zandvoort circuit, shattering Dutch National Records in 3, 6, 12 and 24 hour categories where it averaged a speed of 75.47mph over the course of 23 hours, despite regularly pulling into the pit lane to be topped up with water. The car so impressed Gatsonides that he christened it "Thunderbus".
    In 1965, AHP was forced to retire from the Alpine Rally when the car caught fire. � A rear brake shoe failed and the resulting debris damaged the hydraulics sending a jet of highly flammable brake fluid onto a hot brake drum with inevitable results. In the ensuing blaze, all the fire extinguishers were used up to quell the flames and the resulting damage is part of the reason why the car was returned to the Competition Department at Rootes for a full rebuild.
    Despite lying unused in the 70s & 80s and being prepared for classic rallying in the early 1990s, a full (FIA spec) rebuild by Hardy Hall Restorations was needed. AHP is now in fine fettle and retains many period competition features including the 288 limited slip diff, the long-range saddle tank fitted in the boot, quick-rack steering, the original works hardtop badged "1966 Marathon de la Route", period Halda rally instruments and the fly-off handbrake specially made for Peter Harper to aid his cornering technique. Indeed all the interior trim is original, including the driver's seat which was specially tailored to suit Peter Harper's long-shanked frame.


    Robinson and Clarke win Tour Ireland

    Tony Robinson and Phil Clarke won Tour Ireland after a nail-biting final day for the Irish edition of Tour Britannia (13-15 May).
    After three days of fantastic competition over some of the most spectacular and scenic terrain in Ireland and North Wales, Porsche 911s took a clean sweep of the overall podium as just 10 seconds covered Robinson/Clarke, John Spiers/Susanne Niedrum and Stephen Radcliffe/Peter Gunson
    In one of the event’s closest ever finishes, Spiers was able to peg back 18 seconds from Robinson on the last day to end the unique classic race and rally tour just nine seconds behind. Radcliffe’s mighty pace in the races at Anglesey in particular shot him up to third, just one second behind Spiers.
    “It’s been superb,” said Robinson. “I’ve always enjoyed Tour Britannia and this year the Irish stages made it doubly good fun.” For co-driver Clarke it was a second major win in six days as he won on the Isle of Man the previous weekend.
    Event newcomers Tony and Aston Blake took their Porsche 911 to fourth while Mike Smith and Peter Thomas were first non-Porsche home with their Ford Escort Mk2 in fifth.
    In the concurrent regularity rally, the Austin Allegro of rallying veterans Doug Dawe and Ernie Waldron took a dominant victory, leading from the start to finish half a minute ahead of the Porsche of Harry and Lorraine Sherrard. Jason Butler and Paul Graham were only nine seconds further back in their Lancia Fulvia.

    Babes Ride Out - A Motorcycle Story

    Babes Ride Out founders Ashmore Ellis and Anya Violet wanted to create an environment where women can come together to share their cross country journeys, triumphs, close calls and disasters on the bike. GoPro Production Artists Tina Marchman and Annemarie Hennes joined these five hundred ladies in Joshua Tree for this women’s only event. See what happens when they hit the open road.


    6th Street Specials 360 Degree Ink Sketch

    Martin Squires Automotive Illustration
    Two revolutions of my 360 degree ink sketch which was started when I visited the famous British Bike workshop in September 2014 for 2 days. The remainder of the ink sketch was done in the studio taking a further 4 days of sketching.

    6th Street Specials 360 Degree Ink Sketch from MARTIN SQUIRES on Vimeo.


    Pegaso Tamarit Spanish Motorcycles

    Video Pegaso Tamarit Spanish Motorcycles from Tamarit Motorcycles on Vimeo.

    This Ducati 860 S is a mint-green espresso for the senses


    Resplendent in mint green parked up casually outside a coffee shop, you might assume this Ducati’s mid-life transformation was the work of an Italian. However, its striking styling was, in fact, mastered in chilly Stockholm…
    The brainchild of Johan Orrestedt – owner of Swedish ‘wheels and waves’ shop 6/5/4 Motors – this Ducati really is a breath of fresh sea air. Bringing together the leisure pastimes of riding and surfing, the bike was intended to be a simpler and lighter version of the original 860 GT, albeit retaining the ‘alien’ V-twin engine, the iconic tank, and the horizontal frame line.

    Scandinavian pick-me-up

    After searching Sweden for the perfect donor bike – a mid-70s GTS variant that had been laid up in a barn for many years – 6/5/4 set to work stripping, lightening, overhauling and painting. The chosen colour? Well, the inspiration came not from a sophisticated mint tea, but a good old beer can. The look was completed by adding diamond-quilted leather from Swedish tannery Tärnsjö, along with retro-look Coker Diamond tyres and simple flick-switches for the lights. Who’d have thought the Swedes could do Italian elegance?
    Photos: Simon Hamelius (outside) / Johannes Helje (studio) / David Gonzales (board) for 6/5/4 Motors
    You can find numerous classic Ducatis for sale in the Classic Driver Market.

    Road to Le Mans : Team ByKolles


    Aux 24 Heures du Mans 2015, Michelin est partenaire de 20 teams que nous présentons jusqu’au début de la semaine mancelle. Si le Team ByKolles débute aux 24 Heures du Mans sous cette entité, la plupart de ses membres sont déjà rompus à l’épreuve mancelle.
    Diplômé de médecine dentaire, Dr. Colin Kolles a monté son écurie de course – Kodewa - en 2000 et participé au championnat Formule 3 Euroseries.
    En 2005, Colin Kolles a débuté une carrière en Formule Un qui l’a conduit au poste de managing director chez Jordan GP, Midland, Force India, Campos GP, HRT. Il a aussi travaillé ainsi en DTM et fut consultant chez Caterham F1 en 2014.
    La première apparition du nom Kolles en Endurance remonte à 2009 avec l’engagement de deux Audi R10 TDi en ELMS et aux 24 Heures du Mans. C’est au volant de l’une d’elles qu’avait débuté André Lotterer au Mans.
    En 2012, Colin Kolles est revenu en Endurance (FIA WEC et 24 Heures du Mans) avec le nom Lotus, en partenariat avec Praga et sous licence tchèque. Mais les deux prototypes LM P2 (en réalité des Lola B12/80-Judd) n’ont guère brillé, et pas davantage en 2013 malgré un nouveau châssis T128 conçu par Adess. On se souvient de l’imbroglio judiciaire lors des 24 Heures du Mans 2013…
    L’an passé, c’est en catégorie LM P1-L que le team dirigé par Colin Kolles a ressurgi en cours de saison avec une Lotus P1/01, rebaptisée CLM P1/01 cette année et engagée en FIA WEC sous la bannière Team ByKolles.
    Les deux premières courses ont tourné court en raison d’une collision à Silverstone et d’un souci technique à Spa. Au Mans, la CLM P1/01 sera opposée aux nouvelles Rebellion R-One motorisées, comme elle, par un bloc V6 turbo AER.
    bykollessilv203-e1428949792310

    We’ll be counting down the days to the 2015 Le Mans 24 Hours by presenting each of Michelin’s 20 partner teams at this year’s race. This June will be Team ByKolles’ first appearance at Le Mans under its present name, but most of its staff have solid experience of the French 24-hour classic.
    Doctor Colin Kolles, a qualified dentist, created his first team – Kodewa – in 2000 with a programme in the Formula 3 Euroseries.
    In 2005, he started a career in Formula 1 which culminated in the position of managing director at Jordan GP, Midland, Force India, Campos GP and HRT. He also worked in DTM and was a consultant with Caterham F1 in 2014.
    The first appearance of the Kolles name in endurance racing dates back to 2009 with the entry of two Audi R10 TDIs in the ELMS and at Le Mans. One of the cars at La Sarthe featured debutant André Lotterer…
    In 2012, Colin Kolles returned to endurance with an FIA WEC/Le Mans programme under the Lotus banner, in association with Praga and running with a Czech licence. Its two LM P2 prototypes (Judd-engined Lola B12/80s) failed to make a big mark, and things weren’t much better in 2013 with a new Adess-designed T128 chassis.
    Last year, the outfit reappeared in LM P1-L in the course of the season with a Lotus P1/01. It has been rebranded CLM a P1/01 this year and runs in FIA WEC under the Team ByKolles name.
    Its first two outings of 2015 ended with a collision at Silverstone and a technical issue at Spa. At Le Mans, the car will face opposition from the latest-spec Rebellion R-Ones powered by the same AER V6 turbo engine.
    Voiture engagée aux 24 Heures du Mans 2015
    N°4 CLM P1/01-AER – LM P1 : Simon Trummer / Pierre Kaffer / Tiago Monteiro
    Palmarès aux 24 Heures du Mans
    2009 : 7e LM P1 – Audi R10 TDI (Zwolsman/Karthikeyan/Lotterer & 9e LM P1 – Audi R10 TDI (Bakkerud/Albers/Mondini)

    ‘82 BMW R100 – Blitz Motorcycles


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    It sounds like an outtake from Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, or an idea for a Karate Kid road movie. It goes like this – you muster everything you’ve learnt to build your dream bike and enter it in one of the world’s biggest custom bike shows. Then you crash and destroy it after two weeks. You are injured, but you pick yourself up and completely rebuild the bike just in time to enter it into the show, where’s it’s a great success. Along the way you learn about the futility of material possessions and the value of perseverance. Is it a script we’ve been working on around the office while drunk? Or maybe the fevered dream of a bike-obsessed lunatic? Nope. In fact, it’s all in a day’s work for Hugo and the boys from France’s Blitz Motorcycles.
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    For those of you who might have been off-world for the last few years, Blitz is a custom bike shop based in Paris that was founded by two likely and very hairy French lads, Fred Jourden and Hugo Jézégabel. Known for their charismatic, mix-and-match stylings and a dangerous love of patina, the boys have been regulars on the House of Burnt Pipes for many a year. They also love them those nice BMW bikes. And how.
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    The Bee-Em here, aptly named the ‘Black Pearl,’ was finished around 15 months ago. It was intended from the get-go to be Hugo’s personal ride. And as anyone creative will tell you, there’s nothing quite like having an open brief with only yourself to impress. As you’d expect, the bike turned out like a dream. The boys were sure it’d make a splash at Baritz’s 2014 Wheels & Waves show. But then…
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    Fred takes up the story, “For two weeks, Hugo enjoyed his new love. Then, on the very same day we planned to leave Paris for Baritz to take part in the Wheels and Waves ‘pre-run’ meet, Hugo was hit by a car while riding. Actually, he was on his way to get the truck that was going to take all our gear. You can’t imagine the emotions and the disappointment.”
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    Luckily, Hugo was only slightly injured – a bruised right arm and a dented tank ego. But the same couldn’t be said for the new BMW. “The bike we severely damaged. It was as bad as it could be without having to scrap it. We could have thrown in the towel and taken another bike, but we picked ourselves up and accepted the challenge.”
    Four weeks. A total rebuild. Their best bike to date. No excuses. “We had to start from scratch just one month before showing it at Wheels & Waves. And it was representing us, so we wanted it to be perfect. In a way, we built it twice, and we wanted the second version to be better than the first.”
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    As with most Blitz builds, the tank set the tone for the rest of the bike. In this instance, a Yamaha 500XT with a bespoke cup welded on the front to house the speedometer. The front fork was then lowered by 15cm to pump the stance, and an 18″ front wheel was added from an R65.
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    Next up, tubing. A set of bespoke, stainless exhaust pipes were added (proudly Fabriqué en France, as the boys put it). Then bars from an R100RS were mounted and things got a little weldy with a new rear loop added to the frame. This was topped off with a brand new seat to match the exact swoosh of the supporting metal.
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    “Last up was a brand new TCI/AC/CDI system and a matching (and much simplified) rewire,” says Fred. “We added the shiny black powder coating to the frame, fork legs and engine covers to tie things together. Then there was a quick re-jetting of the carbs to match with the custom alloy air filters. The cherry on the top was the vintage headlight from a 1970s rally car. We think the splash of yellow really makes it.”
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    Inspirational stuff, huh? How’s that famous poem go? “To watch the things you gave your life to, broken, and stoop and build ’em up with worn-out tools. And lose, and start again at your beginnings, and never breathe a word about your loss.” But to put mere words to a feat of this magnitude would be damning it with faint praise. Nice work, boys.
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    [Photos: Gary Jézégabel]
    via PIPEBURN

    Alfa 8C is ‘Best in Show’ at the 2015 Villa d’Este Concorso d’Eleganza


    The jury has spoken – and this year, the ‘Trofeo BMW Group’ has been awarded to an Alfa Romeo 8C 2300 Zagato. The beautiful pre-War spider was brought to Lake Como by American collector David Sydorick…
    The Villa d’Este Concorso d’Eleganza jury has once again displayed a penchant for classic Italian coachwork, electing a Zagato-bodied Alfa Romeo 8C from 1932 as ‘Best of Show’. The audience award – the ‘Coppa d’Oro Villa d’Este’ – was awarded to a Touring-bodied Ferrari 166 MM barchetta from 1950, which once belonged to Fiat patriarch Giovanni Agnelli.
      
    Photos: Rémi Dargegen for Classic Driver © 2015