Photography by Nate Stevens
Clark Gable would win over audiences and critics alike with performances in films like A Free Soul, Red Dust, and, but his first forays into Tinseltown were met with a less than enthusiastic response. Initially considered too rough to play a romantic lead by studio decision makers, it was not until undergoing grooming and training by his acting coach that Gable came to epitomize the American ideal of masculinity and virility.
Gable would make the top-ten box office list 16 times, win an Oscar for his role in Frank Capra's It Happened One Night, and is immortalized by his delivery of the line "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn,” in Gone with the Wind—among the most quoted in the history of cinema. He would also play a race car driver in To Please a Lady, and loved automobiles, so what’s a king of his industry to do?
Buy lots of them, so he could squire around the most beautiful leading ladies of the day in style.
Many people consider taste to be a purely subjective attribute, but both subjectively and objectively, Gable had taste in spades when it came to cars. As he gained fame and fortune, he was able to afford the best, and some that entered his stable were the 1935 Duesenberg Model JN that played its own part in Gable's famed relationship with Hollywood beauty Carole Lombard, as well as a 1936 Duesenberg SSJ Speedster, 1937 Ford Lincoln-Zephyr V12, 1938 Packard Eight Convertible Victoria, 1948 Jaguar 3.5-Liter Mark IV Drophead Coupe, 1955 Mercedes-Benz Gullwing, and a 1956 Mercedes-Benz 300 Sc.
In 1948, the new Jaguar XK120 would be unveiled to the public—and Gable was smitten. He wanted the car as badly as another starlet he may have tried to seduce. Originally intended as a limited-production model to raise interest for a forthcoming series of sedans powered by the same, and new dual-overhead-camshaft inline six-cylinder engine with hemispherical—or “hemi”—combustion chambers, orders for the XK120 immediately exceeded capacity, but there was also steak to go along with the sizzle.
All XK120s had independent torsion bar front suspension, semi-elliptic leaf springs at the rear, recirculating ball steering, and telescopically adjustable steering column, a sophisticated setup for the day. The six-cylinder engine displaced 3.4 liters and produced 160 bhp, and was said to be capable of 120 mph. That would make sense for the XK120 nomenclature, however the car was capable of more, hitting more than 130 mph in later testing. Zero-to-60 mph took place in less than 10 seconds, quick for the day
.
Gable could have certainly afforded any car he desired, but the XK120 was priced at $3,940 in the United States, lower than many of the cars the actor could buy, or already possessed. No, what attracted Gable to this car was its combination of beauty and performance, and Gable would go to International Motors on Wilshire Boulevard in Hollywood and personally insist that he be sold the very first XK120 to arrive on the West Coast.
Jaguar initially thought it might probably sell a couple hundred of the new model, but demand was so strong that the first cars had their bodies made out of hand-beaten aluminum until the actual production tooling was ready. While most of these early aluminum cars were destined for racing, Gable’s first XK120 was one of the first customer cars to leave the Holbrook Lane production line in June, 1949.
Our feature car here is one of Gable’s other three XK120s, and this one was gifted to him by the Indianapolis Motor Speedway owner at the time, Anton "Tony" Hulman, Jr., while the actor was in town filming To Please A Woman. He would keep it stored there, and amazingly, the car would only see use once a year in May when Gable, a race fan, would come back into town to see the race.
Today, only 6,500 miles register on the odometer.
The unpaid celebrity endorsement did no harm to the sales figures for the car, and the actor loved the model so much he that he would go on to own three other XK120s. Gable would also write in a 1950 issue of Road & Track magazine his thoughts on the car.
Titled My Favorite Sports Car…, Gable would espouse on his attempt to reach the XK120’s official 132 mph top speed, when he managed to coax 124 mph out of his completely stock and unmodified car. A total of 12,078 XK120s were sold through the car’s production run to discriminating individuals, and while today celebrities and cars are nothing new, some celebrities, like Gable, were much more interested in the intrinsic qualities of the car they bought.
Most celebrity cars change hands often, but this one—hidden away from prying eyes for more than 40 years at one of the most traffic’d places on earth for car enthusiasts—must be one Gable would instantly feel at home in more than 50 years after his death.
|
lundi 29 juin 2015
WE DISCOVER CLARK GABLE’S JAGUAR XK120 HIDDEN BENEATH THE BRICKYARD
by
dimanche 28 juin 2015
Jeep Chief concept
by Andrew Wendler | Photography by Michael Simari
Three days ago, the C/D office lost its collective mind over an insanely clean 1977 Jeep Cherokee Chief that popped up for sale on the internet. Pristine in nearly every measure, the Chief escaped our grasp and was awarded to a higher bidder (for nearly $27,000). But just as we were coming to terms with losing sight of that Chief, Jeep went and unveiled the Chief concept, a modern take on the classic Cherokee Chief that plunged many of us back into a deep internal dialogue regarding the existential relationship between the heart, the mind, the wallet, and vintage-4×4 ownership.7
Created for the forty-ninth-annual Easter Jeep Safari in Moab, Utah, the Chief’s unmistakable razor grille and chrome bumper are sure to trigger a déjà vu moment even in casual observers. A rich coat of sublime Ocean Blue paint perfectly conjures up a ’70s California beach vibe. Although the hue appears similar to a factory AMC/Jeep color of yore, Mark Allen, head of Jeep brand design, tells us it’s fresh from the color lab. The 17-inch classic slotted-mag wheels wearing 37-inch tires fall right in line with the design ethos. Motivation is provided by the corporate 3.6-liter Pentastar V-6 mated to a six-speed manual. Mopar’s Jeep Performance Parts provides a cold-air intake for the V-6.
Based on the Wrangler Unlimited, the Chief concept’s doors and windshield were chopped two inches, and a restyled roof channels the vintage Chief two-door’s look as does the elimination of the exterior handles for the rear doors. The lack of C-pillars creates a long rear side window that continues the theme—or it would if the window had any glass, but it doesn’t and neither does the tailgate; hey, when you’re living the minimalistic beach life, the less between you and the ocean breezes the better, right? A Mopar two-inch lift kit with Fox shocks gives the Chief a slightly enhanced vertical perspective, and Dana 44 axles (also sourced from Mopar) with locking diffs provide a sturdy base for the Chief.
The interior takes the beach theme to Hawaii, with floral-pattern seats in pink, blue, and white reportedly inspired by Tom Selleck’s iconic Hawaiian shirts as worn on Magnum P.I. Rosewood slats lend an air of vintage class to the cargo area, and any doubts about the influence Magnum P.I. had on the team will be squashed when you open the tailgate and find Selleck’s mug incorporated into the side panels. Vintage surfer logos are found on the console and the door handles, and a tiki-style shifter handle drives home the point.
While we’re always interested to see what the talented Jeep designers, engineers, and builders cook up for the annual off-road buffet known as the Easter Jeep Safari, it has been a while since a single model resonated so universally through our office. Who’s up for Carlsbad this weekend?
via http://www.caranddriver.com
16ÈME RALLYE TERRE DE LANGRES HAUTE-MARNE ; Septième victoire pour Jean-Marie Cuoq !
La dernière journée de course n’a rien changé à l’ordre établi hier. Disputée sous le soleil, cette seconde étape a vu Jean-Marie Cuoq (Citroën C4 WRC) s’imposer pour la septième fois à Langres. Auteur d’un meilleur temps aujourd’hui, Lionel Baud (Ford Fiesta WRC) monte sur la deuxième marche du podium devant Cyrille Féraud (Citroën Xsara WRC).
Jean-Marie Cuoq n’a donc pas failli sur les 4 ES prévues aujourd’hui, et ce n’est pas un tout droit commis dans l’ES6 qui a empêché l’ardéchois de triompher. Il remporte ainsi sa seconde victoire de la saison et augmente son avance au Championnat. Dauphin de Cuoq avant cette manche, Lionel Baud termine en seconde position au terme d’un week-end tranquille. Le pilote de la Ford Fiesta WRC a profité de cette journée pour essayer différents types de pneumatiques en vue des prochaines échéances. Cyrille Féraud signe une belle performance en terminant à la troisième position, preuve que le pilote de la Citroën Xsara WRC s’est bien habitué à sa nouvelle monture, découverte en Aveyron en début de saison.
Orphelin d’Arnaud Mordacq, son adversaire favori en Groupe N et absent à Langres, Stephan Codou (Subaru Impreza WRX) obtient néanmoins une superbe quatrième place finale tout en s’imposant en groupe N. En difficulté hier, Nicolas Rivière a pris beaucoup de plaisir aux commandes de sa Peugeot 206 WRC sur cette étape. Il termine ainsi en cinquième position devant Christian Marti (Mitsubishi Lancer Evo9), dauphin de Stephan Codou en Groupe N.
Vainqueur en 208 Rally Cup et septième au général, Frantz Comoli est passé au travers de la terrible ES6 qui a causé de nombreux dégâts (crevaisons, sorties de route) dans les rangs de la formule de promotion Peugeot Sport. Le pilote de Remiremont s’impose au final devant le Belge Guillaume De Mevius et Cyril Audirac qui terminent respectivement aux huitièmes et neuvièmes rangs.
Jean-Paul Monnin termine au pied du podium en 208 Rally Cup et à la dixième place finale, mais il peut se consoler avec la victoire en Championnat Deux Roues Motrices en devançant la Citroën DS3 R3 de Thierry Colney et la Renault Clio Ragnotti d’Arnaud Masclaux. Malgré plusieurs crevaisons, Vincent Dubert conserve la tête du Championnat à l’issue de cette épreuve à égalité avec le vainqueur du jour.
Les réactions
Jean-Marie Cuoq (Citroën C4 WRC), leader : « C’est génial, on a eu une super météo et on a pu rouler dans de bonnes conditions. Les organisateurs nous ont proposé un parcours quasiment neuf, ce qui nous oblige à faire attention au premier tour avant de se lâcher dans le second. Avant chaque départ de rallye, les compteurs sont à zéro, c’est donc une bonne opération pour moi au Championnat. »
Lionel Baud (Ford Fiesta WRC), deuxième : « Je suis content de cette deuxième place. On a pu constater que sur un terrain glissant, la Fiesta pouvait faire jeu égal avec la C4, mais sur un terrain plus sec, cette dernière fait la différence. Mais c’est intéressant car nous avons encore une marge de progression. »
Cyrille Féraud (Citroën Xsara WRC), troisième : « C’est mon premier podium en rallye. J’ai bien profité de l’avant dernière spéciale pour comprendre encore mieux la Xsara mais dans la dernière, j’ai assuré pour être sûr de monter sur le podium. »
Jean-Paul Monnin (Peugeot 208 R2), vainqueur en Championnat de France des Rallyes Terre Deux Roues Motrices : « Dans la dernière boucle, j’ai essayé de rouler vite sans faire de faute. Je perds le podium de la 208 Rally Cup pour trois dixièmes, mais cela reste tout de même une bonne opération, car je gagne la manche du Championnat Deux Roues Motrices. Rendez-vous à Auxerre pour la revanche »
Frantz Comoli (Peugeot 208 R2), vainqueur en 208 Rally Cup : « Comme quoi un rallye n’est jamais fini. Je ne suis vraiment pas bien parti samedi matin dans le premier tour. J’ai haussé le rythme au fur et à mesure. Aujourd’hui il fallait savoir calmer le jeu dans certains endroits et accélérer dans d’autres. Nous n’avons pas fait de faute ce week-end… »
Classement provisoire :
1.Jean-Marie Cuoq - Marielle Grandemange (Citroën C4 WRC), A8W en 1:20:16:9
2.Lionel Baud - Pascal Serre (Ford Fiesta WRC), A8W + 46:6
3.Cyrille Féraud - Aymeric Duchemin (Citroën Xsara WRC), A8W +4:01:4
4.Stephan Codou - Stéphane Triaire (Subaru Impreza), N4 + 6:41:1
5.Nicolas Rivière - Thomas Escartefigue (Peugeot 206 WRC), A8W + 7:56:6
6.Christian Marti - Jean-Marc Laviale (Mitsubishi Lancer Evo9), N4 + 9:21:7
7.Frantz Comoli - Annabelle Cortot (Peugeot 208 R2), R2 + 9:30:7
8.Guillaume De Mevius - Geoffrey Brion (Peugeot 208 R2), R2 + 9:48:1
9.Cyril Audirac - Audrey Nesta (Peugeot 208 R2), R2 + 9:51:1
10.Jean-Paul Monnin - Franck Gilliot (Peugeot 208 R2), R2 + 9:51:4
Meilleurs temps :
Jean-Marie Cuoq (Citroën C4 WRC) : 7
Lionel Baud (Ford Fiesta WRC) : 1
Leader :
ES 1 à 8 : Jean-Marie Cuoq (Citroën C4 WRC)
Principaux abandons :
Laurent Fouques (Subaru Impreza) : Mécanique dans ES2
Jordan Berfa (Peugeot 208 R2) : Suite sortie après ES2
Kévin Bochatay (Peugeot 208 R2) : Mécanique dans ES3
Jacky Chassaniol (Citroën Saxo T4) : Mécanique après ES2
Emmanuel Gascou (Peugeot 208 R2) : Plus de roue de secours dans ES6
Stéphane Consani (Peugeot 208 R2) : Sortie de route sans gravité dans ES6
Thibault Durbec (Citroën DS3 R3) : Sortie de route sans gravité dans ES7
Championnat de France des Rallyes Terre - Classement officieux après le Rallye Terre de Langres Haute-Marne (2/6) : 1.Jean-Marie Cuoq 50 pts / 2.Lionel Baud 42 pts / 3.Stephan Codou 37 pts…
Championnat de France des Rallyes Terre Deux Roues Motrices - Classement officieux après le Rallye Terre de Langres Haute-Marne (2/6) : 1ex. Jean-Paul Monnin et Vincent Dubert 51 pts / 3.François-Xavier Blanc 44 pts / 4.Thierry Colney 27 pts…
208 Rally Cup - Classement officieux après le Rallye Terre de Langres Haute-Marne (3/7) :
1.Jose Suarez 49 pts / 2.Frantz Comoli 20 pts / 3.Bruno Riberi 19 pts (Junior) / 4.Jean-Paul Monnin 18 pts / 5.Jordan Berfa 16 pts (Junior)…
WTCC ; CITROEN TRIOMPHE AU CASTELLET AVEC LOEB ET LOPEZ
Course 1 : Loeb devance les champions WTCC et s’impose à domicile
Sébastien Loeb a converti sa pole position en une troisième victoire dans cette saison du Championnat du Monde FIA des Voitures de Tourisme au terme d’une nette domination sur le circuit Paul Ricard.
Le nonuple champion du monde des Rallyes s’est joué de la chaleur intense et de ses équipiers chez Citroën, Yvan Muller et José María López. Grâce à sa deuxième place, Muller refait encore une partie de son retard sur le champion en titre qui ne mène désormais qu’avec 26 points d’avance avant d’affronter la deuxième manche du meeting varois.
« Yvan m’a mis la pression au départ et il m’a fallu fermer la porte une ou deux fois, confie Loeb, qui gagne avec 6 secondes d’avance. J’ai ensuite pu creuser l’écart et piloter à ma mesure sans avoir cette fois à surveiller mes rétros. Il devait également gérer les assauts de Pechito et ça l’a sans doute ralenti. Il fallait néanmoins rester concentré et j’ai préféré tenir un bon rythme tout en préservant mes pneumatiques. »
Ma Qing Hua complète la domination Citroën en quatrième position, tandis que Tom Chilton, dans sa roue, impose sa Chevrolet au sommet de la hiérarchie du Trophée Yokohama.
Norbert Michelisz et sa Honda devancent pour leur part les pilotes officiels Tiago Monteiro et Gabriele Tarquini, tandis que Mehdi Bennani prit le meilleur sur la LADA de Jaap van Lagen pour le gain de la 9e place. Le Marocain s’élancera en pole position de la course 2
Flash Course 2 : López remporte le choc des titans
José María López remporte de haute lutte la deuxième manche de la JVC KENWOOD WTCC Race of France.
Placé en huitième position sur la grille, López dérobe la deuxième place à Tiago Monteiro lorsque le Portugais sort dans le premier virage du 7e tour. Il parvient ensuite à se défaire de Norbert Michelisz et remporte son cinquième succès de la saison, qui lui permettre de reprendre de l’avance au championnat.
Michelisz, qui partait au troisième rang avec sa Honda, prit les commandes lorsque le poleman Mehdi Bennani fut pénalisé d’un drive-through pour départ anticipé. Le Hongrois ne fut néanmoins pas en mesure de résister à la Citroën de López dans le 14e tour, préférant assurer la deuxième marche du podium et la victoire dans le Trophée Yokohama.
Ma Qing Hua complète le tiercé de tête devant Yvan Muller et Gabriele Tarquini, 5e pour Honda.
José María López remporte de haute lutte la deuxième manche de la JVC KENWOOD WTCC Race of France.
Placé en huitième position sur la grille, López dérobe la deuxième place à Tiago Monteiro lorsque le Portugais sort dans le premier virage du 7e tour. Il parvient ensuite à se défaire de Norbert Michelisz et remporte son cinquième succès de la saison, qui lui permettre de reprendre de l’avance au championnat.
Michelisz, qui partait au troisième rang avec sa Honda, prit les commandes lorsque le poleman Mehdi Bennani fut pénalisé d’un drive-through pour départ anticipé. Le Hongrois ne fut néanmoins pas en mesure de résister à la Citroën de López dans le 14e tour, préférant assurer la deuxième marche du podium et la victoire dans le Trophée Yokohama.
Ma Qing Hua complète le tiercé de tête devant Yvan Muller et Gabriele Tarquini, 5e pour Honda.
Race 1: Loeb upstages WTCC champions for home win
Frenchman Sébastien Loeb converted pole position to win number three of the FIA World Touring Car Championship season following a dominant drive at Circuit Paul Ricard.
The nine-time world rally champion beat the intense heat and Citroën team-mates Yvan Muller and José María López with Muller’s capture of second enough to narrow defending champion López’s title lead to 26 points ahead of this afternoon’s second race.
“In the start Yvan put me under pressure and I had to close the door one or two times,” said Loeb, who won by six seconds. “I was able to take a little lead and drive like I want without closing the doors. He was under pressure from Pechito and couldn’t go flat out so I was able to pull away and it was okay.
“But you have to stay concentrated and I prefer to keep in my rhythm, try to save a little bit the tyre too and drive like I can.”
Ma Qing Hua completed a Citroën top-four as Tom Chilton grabbed the Yokohama Drivers’ Trophy prize in fifth in his privateer Chevrolet.
Norbert Michelisz beat fellow Honda driver Tiago Monteiro for sixth with Gabriele Tarquini eighth and Mehdi Bennani passing LADA pilot Jaap van Lagen for ninth. Bennani will start the 16-lap reverse race from pole
Race 2 : López wins action-packed WTCC counter
José María López has claimed a dramatic victory in the second JVC KENWOOD WTCC Race of France.
Starting from eighth on the grid, López snatched second place from Tiago Monteiro following a clash with the Portuguese Honda driver exiting the first corner on lap seven. He then caught and passed Norbert Michelisz for top spot and his fifth win of the season to rebuild his shrinking title advantage.
Honda driver Michelisz, who started third, moved into the lead when pole-sitter Mehdi Bennani was forced to take a drive-through penalty for a jumped start. But the Hungarian was unable to fend off Citroën driver López on lap 14, settling instead for second and top Yokohama Drivers’ Trophy points.
Ma Qing Hua finished third with Yvan Muller fourth and Gabriele Tarquini fifth for Honda.
1998 H-D Sportster by Young Guns Speed Shop
Written by Martin Hodgson.
Incredible watches, chocolate and cheese so goes the cliché about Switzerland the landlocked mountainous country in the middle of Europe. But a group of young Swiss lads are making their name with a different kind of craftsmanship, one off custom bikes that tip their hat to the days of old and with a blend of bobber and board tracker they’ve turned a Harley Sportster into a beautiful piece of standing art that also rips the street.
Led by Nik Heer the small team at Young Guns Speed Shop includes Fabian, who like Nik has been spinning spanners from an early age and artist/chef Aramis whose flair for industrial design is evident in the finishing touches of the builds. Hot on the heels of their incredible 1947 AJS build, the boys have taken this 1990’s 883 Harley Sportster and given it the vintage treatment they do so well. With the stock bike stripped down to a bare frame the sketch pads came out and the designing began. With the board tracker/bobber combo in mind it was drawn up before being turned into a roller so further designing could be done in all three dimensions.
The blacked out frame was cleaned up and the fender struts completely removed and detabbed for that old school, zero clutter look. Next up in making it a rolling chassis was to give the wheels a tougher look, the hubs have been left in raw metal while the rims and then the spokes were painstakingly painted in black. The paint on the outer rims was not just any black but one that would match the predetermined tires and give them a fatter look, they are of course classic Firestones. The suspension was then dumped to the deck, the front forks have been taken down as much as possible before they would bottom out and the stubby rear shocks flatten out the bike bringing the rear tire up close and personal with the seat.
With the full roller on the bench the boys began to visualise the bodywork with a minimalist look the order of the day. The peanut style tank is the perfect look for any bobber and custom mounts were fabricated to ensure it runs true to the lines of the backbone. The standard seat is gone, so too are all the mountings and catches that would normally keep it bolted down. In its place is a custom leather bobber seat that not only looks the business but is shaped to flow effortlessly with the lines of the new tank. Finishing out the less is more approach is a new one off rear fender that has been cleverly mounted on the swingarm where the chain guard once was. This gives the look of a tire/fender gap that is incredibly close without running the risk of the two ever meeting with disastrous consequences for the rider.
A minimalist look is not too much of a challenge until you get to the vitals of any motorcycle that actually make it run. Solving some of that problem is the mounting of the battery and other electronic components in a small box under the gearbox. The result is beautiful negative space that allows you to look through the frame and see the classic Harley V-Twin without anything obscuring the view. Sadly the standard oil tank is a bulky item for such a small frame and would have completely killed the mood. So the Young Guns set about hand crafting one that was not only smaller but was more in line with the theme of the build. Worried the reduced capacity might negatively affect the oil temperature cooling pipes were cleverly integrated into the tank and back to back testing with the original now shows an even lower oil temp.
With so much effort having gone into keeping the bike looking old school and deliberately minimal in approach an over the top heavy flake paint job would have spelt death for the final design. So a local graffiti artist who is a friend of the crew laid down the paint over bare metal that gives a modern twist with vintage inspiration in true bobber style. The headlight is also a classic piece, a 5 3/4in bates lamp with a heavily blacked out grill. While rear lighting is taken care of by another bobber touch, mounted almost out of sight below the seat. Board track styling comes in the way of under and over heat wrapped pipes and individual mufflers with the ultimate touch being the inverted and flipped bars that wear only the essential items.
There was of course one final problem, the notoriously strict Swiss road rules meant this beautiful bike could have ended up a static piece of art when really the boys had plans to ride it and ride it hard. Miraculously it passed its roadworthy test and so a side mounted numberplate was built to match the rest of the bike. The collection of builds at Young Guns Speedshop is growing by the day, from true old school classics like models from AJS and Triumph, to vintage motorcrossers and now a one off Harley bobber their portfolio is only going to grow. So with the future looking bright the young men of this thriving Swiss Speedshop are moving on to a bigger workshop and you better believe even more amazing builds are on the way.
[Photography by Lorenz Richard]
via PIPEBURN
ERC, Ypres Rally : Et de 10 pour « Fast » Freddy !
Le Belge Freddy Loix a remporté le Rallye d’Ypres pour la 10e fois et offert un premier succès international à la nouvelle Skoda Fabia R5 chaussée de pneumatiques Michelin. Bryan Bouffier et Vincent Verschueren complètent le podium sur Citroën DS3 R5.
La 51e édition du Rallye d’Ypres, qui s’est disputée sous le soleil des Flandres, a basculé en milieu de deuxième étape, alors que la bataille était au plus fort entre Bryan Bouffier, Craig Breen, Stéphane Lefebvre et Freddy Loix, tous groupés en moins de 10 secondes.
Pour espérer gagner quelques dixièmes dans les nombreuses intersections du parcours, les pilotes n’hésitent pas à couper les virages, ramenant des pierres sur l’asphalte. Ces routes salies et ces passages répétés dans les « cordes » furent sans doute à l’origine des crevaisons successives de Craig Breen (ES11), de Stéphane Lefebvre (ES12) et de Bryan Bouffier (ES15)
En début d’épreuve, Freddy Loix avait lui aussi perdu une trentaine de secondes dans une crevaison. Mais le Belge, qui découvrait la nouvelle Skoda Fabia R5 en course, est peu à peu remonté vers le haut du classement, signant son premier meilleur temps samedi matin (ES9). Après les déboires de ses rivaux, Freddy Loix est allé cueillir une 10e victoire à Ypres (nouveau record) à 45 ans !
L’Irlandais Craig Breen, qui a ensuite effectué une petite sortie de route et endommagé son radiateur, fut contraint à l’abandon. Mais en l’absence de Kajetanowicz, Breen reste leader du Championnat d’Europe des Rallyes FIA.
Le Français Bryan Bouffier et le Belge Vincent Verschueren sont montés sur le podium final de Grote Markt à Ypres samedi soir. Le Portugais Bruno Magalhaes (Peugeot 208 T16), qui ouvrait la route samedi, n’a pas commis la moindre erreur pour terminer à la 4e place devant Lefebvre et Orsak.
La catégorie Junior a quant à elle basculé dans la toute dernière spéciale du rallye, quand les deux leaders, Marijan Griebel (Opel Adam, crevaison) et Diogo Gago (Peugeot 208, sortie) ont été retardés. Le Polonais Alex Zawada (Opel Adam/Michelin), qui était remonté de la 6e à la 3eplace après une touchette, a remporté sa première victoire Junior.
Kevin Abbring (Citroën DS3 R5), Kris Princen (Peugeot 208 T16) et Bernd Casier (Ford Fiesta R5) ont joué les premiers rôles en début de rallye avant d’abandonner. Au volant de sa Porsche 997 GT3/Michelin, surdimensionnée par rapport aux petites routes des Flandres, Romain Dumas était 4e avant de se retirer dans l’avant-dernière spéciale. Lui aussi au volant d’une Porsche, François Delecour a retrouvé avec joie les routes de son enfance pour terminer 20e devant Marc Duez (Porsche).
Prochaine étape du Championnat d’Europe des Rallyes FIA en Estonie les 17-19 juillet.
ZEEMA PROJECT 3 SPEED TRIPLE
osted by garethmax
In a world of increasing conformity, making a bold and individual statement is a difficult task. Even in the seemingly free-thinking custom motorcycle culture there are dominant trends and prevailing aesthetics, and most expressions of individuality are confined to a small variation of detail or nuance. Not so with the first public offering from Zeema Innovations unveiled at Bike Shed London 2015 at Tobacco Dock last month. The Project 3 Triumph Speed Triple is a standout bike that is as brave in its ambition as it is confident in its execution. It certainly left more than a few bearded cynics lost for words and nodding in hard won appreciation.
The donor itself is an unusual choice. The Triumph Speed Triple is a machine notoriously difficult to modify, and not too pretty in its naked form. But despite its reputation as an ugly duckling, Chris Tweed from Zeema saw it as a perfect donor with a great engine, the roar of a throaty triple, and a reputation for solid handling. He loved the single sided swing arm, the twin spar frame and the “whole stubby bullishness”.
Chris started with the concept of the Riva Aquarama runabout boat and the elegant sinuous lines that led it to being known as the “Ferrari of the boat world”. Not an immediate match with the Speed Triple then. Undeterred, Chris decided this was to be “a wooden boat triumph motorcycle thingy”. OK. Chris found the unloved donor on eBay, and began in earnest to strip the sorry thing apart. The first task was the seat unit. Wood and varnish were the chosen materials and after several incarnations and four sheets of 8′ x 4′ birch ply the seat began to take shape. This was the longest solo part of the build, but is it’s defining feature.
With the seating position fixed next came the bars and pegs. The riser bars were ditched for clip-ons, the foot pegs swapped for fully adjustable rear-sets and the forks dropped through the yokes by 20mm to set the riding position. Chris felt the wheels should be spoked, so the chunky mags were ditched in favour of modified and machined Borranis, originally designed for the Ducati Monster S4R. The exhaust needed to be discrete and minimal as not to distract from the sleek tail lines, so a low slung 3-into-1 was fabricated. Then the radiator was built and hung, but Chris didn’t want the standard radiator oil cooler combo and as there was a vacant space where the lights used to reside it seemed like logical place to put the oil cooler.
The frame, swinging arm, engine covers and brakes were stripped, blasted and powder coated in a bold gloss white, with the tank painted to match. In light of the lack of a fuel gauge, Chris exposed a bare strip at the rear of the tank to allow the rider to see through the opaque plastic illuminated by an internal tank-light, to check the fuel level. The loom was drastically trimmed, rerouted and tucked out of sight. The mini speedo and idiot lights sunk into the top yoke gives the minimum info, and the discreet LED brake light under the seat unit facilitates an MOT pass. The hard lines for the oil cooler were fabricated and the brakes replumbed.
Project 3 came together just right with more than a hint of the Riva. A radical departure from the cookie cutter customs, this is a statement debut from Zeema and a joy to admire.
After many years in the racing car industry, Project 3 is a venture along untravelled roads for Zeema. Chris is confident he can bring high levels of design, finish and creativity to the scene, and this is hopefully just the first of many creations. Let’s hope each and every one is as bold and genre-busting as this elegant and capable Triple.
To get in touch with Chris to discuss future projects, or indeed race car and bike preparation head over to the Zeemawebsite.
via The Bike Shed
PEDRO CARNEIRO – COLIBRI
Behind the polished facade of this super tidy CG125 lies a terrifying past. It’s creation began innocently enough, a family collaboration between two young mechanical engineering students saw time and skill lavished on the early 90’s commuter hack but just as it neared completion, the little CG nearly succumbed to a cruel death. Trapped in a blazing inferno its chances seemed bleak, but against all the odds the CG refused to tap out, surviving to tell the tale of its baptism of fire…
Back to the beginning, meet Pedro Carneiro, a 21 year old mechanical engineering student from Vila Nova de Famalicão, Portugal. As we noted last week in the story of the stunning Ton-Up Garage Indira, Portugal is a hot bed of custom motorcycle talent and it seems the work of the big boys is filtering down to the young guns in their sheds. Maybe it is the glorious sunshine that helps provoke mechanical activity as the locals long for a fitting steed to take out beneath their great fiery orb.
After the death of his grandmother in February 2014 Pedro decided to commit himself to his passion, building custom motorcycles. He teamed up with younger brother and fellow mechanical engineering student Rui and set to work. This is the second bike the pair have built, but this time the machine came with an added pressure, the customer was Pedro’s godmother Liliana Carvalho who currently works in Luanda, Angola. The boys wanted to deliver a stunner for their beloved relative.
“My plan was to create a unique motorcycle, light, loud, and easy to drive. I disassembled the whole bike, cut the frame, carried out an overhaul revision; put wider tyres, custom exhaust, MX handlebar and a lot of ebay parts such as turn signals, thermal wrap, etc… The bike frame was powder coated, the minor things I painted at my home and the custom parts was painted by my cousin Costa.”
Keeping the build within the family Pedro turned to his godmother’s husband Rui Dinis to design custom logos for the tank. The ocean turquoise, cream and red pin stripe paint scheme is personalised with the addition of an origami bird design echoing the CG’s given name, Colibri or Hummingbird.
It was in April 2015, just as things were starting to warm up and the build neared completion, that the temperature truly soared. Colibri was having an overnight stay at the workshop of Pedro’s uncle to receive a carb tune and mechanical fettle when an explosion and fire threatened to raze the workshop to the ground. Despite the extensive damage to his uncle’s property Pedro’s prized Colibri made it through the blaze with little more than a stinging singe and quite a story to tell. After some repair work, an insurance wrangle and a few final touches, including the freshly upholstered brown seat, Pedro had the CG in tip top condition, unlike his Uncle’s Workshop…
Being the good nephew that he is, Pedro is already hard at work helping rebuild his uncle’s gaff whilst finishing up his degree. When that is all completed he has many other projects vying for a start date, a Yamaha XJR or Honda CX are the most likely contenders for his attention. He hopes to have a machine ready for the next Bike Shed event and we certainly look forward to seeing you there Pedro.
“I’m a very happy builder and hope that when my godmother comes back to Portugal she is going to be a happy customer!”
Not a doubt in our minds Pedro.
via The Bike Shed
Inscription à :
Articles (Atom)