ACE CAFE RADIO

    vendredi 9 octobre 2015

    A Porsche pilgrimage to Rennsport Reunion 2015


    Rennsport Reunion is the largest celebration of Porsche in the world, attracting tens of thousands of international enthusiasts. At the fifth running of the event, held last weekend at Laguna Seca in Monterey, numerous Porsche racing stars were reunited with their beloved cars...

    The Porsche legend

    “I make sure never to miss Rennsport Reunion,” says six-time Le Mans winner Jacky Ickx, as we walk through the Le Mans celebration paddock at Laguna Seca. We asked which of those victories he looks back on most fondly, to which he replied, “That would have to be 1977, when the team was riddled with technical problems, and we only had one 936 left running. With Hurley Haywood and Jürgen Barth, we went on lap after lap, before we too suffered a technical issue. As our lead was so great, we decided to repair the car and, thanks to race engineer Klaus Bischof and his team, we were able to rejoin and win the race. It was a real team effort.” It’s stories like this that fuel the Porsche legend, and explain the immense enthusiasm for the brand not just at Rennsport, but worldwide.

    A star is born

    Rennsport Reunion was conceived in 2001, when Bob Carlson and Klaus Bischof had an idea for a festival to celebrate the immense racing success of Porsche. The first event was held at Lime Rock Park, with a small group of Porsche names that included Jacky Ickx and Paul Newman. Two events at Daytona followed, until Laguna Seca established itself as the ideal venue to hold such an event, which was getting bigger and bigger thanks to the increased commitment of Porsche itself. It’s now a place of pilgrimage for Porsche enthusiasts from around the globe.

    One big family

    This year, more former Porsche racers and other important names from German motorsport history were gathered than ever before – from engineer Norbert Singer, who was instrumental in 16 of Porsche’s 17 Le Mans victories, to drivers such as Jochen Mass, Jackie Oliver, Hans Herrmann, Derek Bell, Vic Elford and Hurley Haywood. They all celebrated in the company of some 60,000 Porsche enthusiasts.

    The stars of the show

    The real attraction of Rennsport Reunion, though, is the ability to experience legendary cars in action on the racetrack. The cars are divided into seven groups, from early Le Mans prototypes to current racers such as the GT3 Cup. The grid for the Weissach Cup was particularly impressive, featuring two Gulf 917Ks, a 910 and a 906, all of which partook in a breathtaking duel for podium positions. It was a pity that, owing to stricter US historic motorsport rules, ‘battles’ were few and far between, with overtaking that was deemed too risky by the marshals being punishable by fines.

    All things considered...

    Nevertheless, it was an incredible experience to stand beside the track at the infamous Corkscrew, and watch ultra-cool 1970s Porsche prototypes such as the 908 roaring down the slope. In contrast to historic motorsport events in Europe, visitors were allowed access to almost all areas, such as the pit garages and the paddocks. And the nature of the track allowed spectators to view the action at relatively close quarters. All these things combined to make Rennsport Reunion a truly unique event, and one to which we shall definitely return.
    Photos: Stefan Bogner for Classic Driver © 2015

    A return to the golden era of elegance with Touring’s Berlinetta Lusso


    A Ferrari should be fast, desirable, distinctive, vivacious and elegant. For decades, the marque has excelled in the former categories, but what about the latter? We organised a rendezvous with arguably the only truly graceful contemporary Ferrari: the F12-based Berlinetta Lusso by Touring...
    As a package, the F12Berlinetta is pretty untouchable among its peers: it has a monstrous naturally aspirated V12 (likely to be the last of its kind), oodles of visual drama, the sharpest of cutting-edge aerodynamics, and a dynamic balance even Philippe Petit would envy. But where has the elegance gone: the graceful, understated character that would steal the limelight from even the most glamorous lady in red? Some would say you’d need to go back to the 550M to trace the last truly elegant Ferrari; others would argue a longer reach would be required, perhaps back to the Daytona. Personally, I’d say the final ‘soft-design’ Ferraris, the 275 GTB and 365 GT 2+2, were the last offerings to embody automotive elegance in the truest sense of the word. But what if you wanted to bestow a simpler, more timeless body on the all-conquering F12 underpinnings? Your options are limited to one: the Berlinetta Lusso by Carrozzeria Touring Superleggera. Or at least, they were.

    Complex simplicity

    We say ‘were’, because Carrozzeria Touring recently announced that all five planned examples of the Berlinetta Lusso are now sold. After a brief meeting at the Villa d’Este Concorso d’Eleganza where it had its first high-society debut, we organised a more personal rendezvous in California with the only completed car, resplendent in ‘Azzuro Niourlague’. Berlinetta Lusso #1 is infinitely more captivating in the metal, first in terms of the depth of its paint – alternatively named Rad Blue – then for the ‘complex simplicity’ of its hand-beaten body. Despite­­ referencing one of the earliest Ferraris, namely the ex-Gianni Agnelli Ferrari 166 MM, it boasts subtle design flourishes that would perplex even the most modern mass-production techniques. And who better to talk us through the intricacies than Carrozzeria Touring’s chief designer, Louis de Fabribeckers...

    Three questions to Louis de Fabribeckers

    You’re in a position many would dream of – one which allows you to design your dream Ferrari. Where do you start?
    “You start with the general volumes, and you need to create a harmony; a balance. I have a special affinity for the classic coupés from the 1950s and 1960s, with the traditional three-box shape consisting of a long bonnet, a small greenhouse and a little boot; something horizontal, not aggressive but still quite dynamic; a timeless design, but still very classic.
    “It was a dream for me to do a car like this. I was so happy when the client came to us and said he would like a classic Ferrari, because he thought they were no longer producing timeless designs. In his opinion, he thought current Ferraris were overdesigned, and he wanted his car to exude elegance.”
    There are some restraints in this process though, correct?
    In some cases, we have to use already homologated parts. On this car, the headlights, tail-lights and windscreen are the only exterior elements common with the F12, and all the rest is new. It’s just a little thing you need to keep in the back of your mind, it doesn’t need to disturb you too much during the design process. Apart from that, I have the freedom to create dramatic sections that other designers do not have, as they always have to justify their choices to engineers, a financial team, and ultimately a mass market. I am fortunate in that I am always designing for a single, very passionate client. Once I have his approval, I am just dealing with my guy in the workshop – I will pop down and say to him, ‘Come on, just try to make this little change for me,’ and usually he will say, ‘Okay Louis, I’ll see what I can do. The great thing with aluminium is that until the car is painted, I can still make modifications and tweak things. Often, the design is theoretically frozen; they’ll bring the ‘body-in-white’ into the paint shop, and I’ll be running behind the car shouting, Wait, wait, just one more little thing
    “The main purpose of my job is to show how great our craftsmen are, and how able they are to create beautiful volumes. For example, this dramatic main character line leading from the front arch shows that it can only be done by hand, not with an aluminium press. In fact, if you tried to do this with a press, you would completely destroy the aluminium.”
    Would you agree that elegance is all but absent in the majority of modern car design?
    I love modern Aston Martins –  it’s timeless design, very elegant. But today, you have to sell a new product every year, and propose new ideas. This is why new designs are trendy, not timeless – otherwise you will not sell any more. It’s like a fridge: if you bought a fridge in the 1950s, it was the best fridge on earth and you could keep it for 40 years. Today, your fridge might break down after a few years, and you will be told it’s more economical to buy a new one. This is how it works with design, too – every year the market is asking for something new, something a bit more trendy, something that will ultimately be old-fashioned in a year or two. It’s my job to create something timeless, something the owner can treasure for decades to come.
    Photos by Rémi Dargegen for Classic Driver © 2015
    There are hundreds of classic and modern Ferraris for sale in the Classic Driver Market.

    Zarco décroche le titre mondial en Moto2™ / Zarco celebrates Moto2™ title by topping Friday’s practice


    Zarco décroche le titre mondial en Moto2™


    Johann Zarco a été confirmé Champion du Monde Moto2™ au Japon suite à une exceptionnelle saison 2015.
    Johann Zarco (Ajo Motorsport) a été annoncé Champion du Monde Moto2™ 2015 dès la première journée du Grand Prix du Japon, où son dernier adversaire pour le titre, Tito Rabat, a dû déclarer forfait pour la quinzième des dix-huit manches de la saison après s’être blessé au bras gauche. 
    Premier Français sacré Champion du Monde en Grand Prix depuis Mike Di Meglio en 2008 (125cc), Zarco commence sa saison 2015 sur un coup dur, au Qatar, où son sélecteur de vitesses le lâche alors qu’il file seul en tête de la course. Dans l’incapacité de changer de rapport, le Français doit se contenter d’une huitième place mais monte sur le podium dès la course suivante, à Austin, avant de décrocher sa première victoire de l’année, sa première dans la catégorie Moto2™, en Argentine. 
    Il s’agit de sa première victoire en catégorie Moto2™ mais aussi du début d’une fantastique chevauchée qui se conclura par son sacre, au Japon, six mois plus tard. Passé en tête du classement général en Argentine, Zarco va effectivement consolidé son statut de leader de la catégorie à chacune des épreuves suivantes. 
    En symbiose avec l’équipe d’Aki Ajo, qu’il avait retrouvée pour la saison 2015 après avoir été vice-Champion du Monde 125cc avec Ajo Motorsport en 2011, et le châssis Kalex, Zarco n’en est qu’au début d’une fantastique chevauchée qui se conclura par son sacre au Japon six mois plus tard.
                        Zarco continue sur sa lancée
    Passé en tête du classement général suite à sa victoire en Argentine, Zarco consolide effectivement son statut de leader de la catégorie à chacune des épreuves suivantes. 
    Opposé au Champion en titre Tito Rabat mais aussi au Britannique Sam Lowes et à l’excellent rookie espagnol Álex Rins, Zarco aligne les podiums à son retour en Europe, en Espagne, en France et en Italie, puis décroche deux victoires consécutives en Catalogne et à Assen. Après un autre podium en Allemagne, il passe le cap de la mi-saison avec 65 points d’avance et continue de creuser l’écart avec un nouveau podium à Indianapolis puis une série de trois victoires consécutives, une première pour un Français en Grand Prix, à Brno, Silverstone et Saint-Marin.
    Sur une série de douze podiums, Zarco arrive au MotorLand Aragón au mois de septembre avec sa première opportunité de décrocher le titre mondial. En manque de rythme, il termine la course avec une discrète sixième place tandis que Rabat, son premier poursuivant, s’offre une superbe victoire à domicile. Ce dernier se fracture cependant le bras gauche lors d’un entraînement juste avant de partir au Japon et fait quelques tours au Twin Ring Motegi mais se résout rapidement à déclarer forfait.
    Zarco est donc officiellement confirmé Champion du Monde Moto2™ 2015 dès la première journée du GP du Japon, à quatre courses de la fin de la saison, quelques semaines après avoir annoncé qu’il resterait dans la catégorie intermédiaire en 2016 afin d’à nouveau se battre pour le titre mondial.
                      
    Newly crowned Moto2™ World Champion Johann Zarco ends Friday’s practice on top ahead of Alex Rins and Thomas Luthi.
    Ajo Motorsport’s Johann Zarco capped a day that saw him declared 2015 Moto2™ World Champion by topping the combined timesheets at the Twin Ring Motegi. The French rider lifted the title after the only man who could stop him from being crowned champion in Japan, Tito Rabat, was forced to withdraw from the Grand Prix due to injury. Rabat tried in vain to take to the track in FP1, before being declared unfit for the rest of the weekend, handing Zarco the title.
    Zarco then set a 1’51.158 in FP2 to finish fastest overall, 0.039s ahead of Paginas Amarillas HP40’s Alex Rins. Rins crashed late on in the session at turn 10 but his time was good enough to end the day in second, ahead of the Derendinger Racing Interwetten of Thomas Luthi (+0.194s), as less than two-tenths of a second separated the provisional front row.
    Speed Up Racing’s Sam Lowes (+0.382s) was fourth fastest overall, ahead of Luis Salom (+0.552s) on the of the second Paginas Amarillas HP40 Kalex. Idemitsu Honda Team Asia’s Takaaki Nakagami ended the day in sixth at his home Grand Prix, despite being one of a number of riders to fall foul of turn 10 during the two sessions.
    Jonas Folger (AGR Team), Sandro Cortese (Dynavolt Intact GP), Axel Pons (AGR Team) and Hafizh Syahrin (Petronas Raceline Malaysia) completed a top ten that was separated by just 0.941s
    Josh Hook (Technomag Racing Interwetten), substituting for the injured Dominique Aegerter, was another one to crash during the day, finishing down in 28th overall. Wildcards Yuki Takahashi (Moriwaki Racing) and Tomoyoshi Koyama (NTS T.Pro Project) were in 24th and 30th respectively.
    Check out the combined Moto2™ FP1 & FP2 results; FP3 kicks off at 10:55am local time on Saturday in Motegi.
                           Zarco sacré Champion du Monde au Japon

    BEHIND THE SCENES ODM


    Riders on the Storm

    East meets East... riders from Serbia, India, Spain and more countries got together in Belgrade to celebrate the Distinguished Gentleman´s Ride. 



    Thanks to all riders, and specially to Bobbee Singh and Nela Redzic for making an unforgettable day!

    VROOOOOM.........


    jeudi 8 octobre 2015

    Enduro GP France 2015 : Remes, Meo, Bellino et McCanney champions du monde / 2015 glory for Remes, Meo, Bellino and McCanney


    Eero Remes (TM), Antoine Meo (KTM), Mathias Bellino (Husqvarna – Michelin) et Jamie McCanney (Husqvarna – Michelin) ont été sacrés Champions du monde d’Enduro dans leur catégorie respective, E1, E2, E3 et Juniors lors du Grand Prix de France à Requista, dernière épreuve de la saison.
    Avec dix points de retard sur Eero Remes au départ de la dernière journée, Christophe Nambotin (KTM) ne se faisait que guère d’illusions pour enlever un quatrième sacre.
    En s’imposant lors des deux journées, Remes a décroché son premier titre mondial. Une superbe consécration pour ce pilote de 30 ans, spécialiste des petites cylindrées depuis toujours et qui court après ce titre mondial depuis neuf saisons.
    Christophe Nambotin et Lorenzo Santolino (Sherco – Michelin) ont complété le podium final.
    En E2, Antoine Meo a coiffé sa cinquième couronne pour sa dernière saison en mondial d’Enduro. Le Français va désormais s’orienter vers les Rallyes.  Meo a terminé deuxième et a été contraint à l’abandon lors de la seconde boucle dimanche.
    Les victoires sont revenues à Alex Salvini (Honda). L’Italien est monté sur la deuxième marche du podium final devant Pierre-Alexandre Renet (Husqvarna – Michelin), forfait pour son GP national.
    Devant son public, Mathias Bellino est sacré en E3 dès la journée de samedi à l’issue de laquelle il a terminé deuxième avant de conclure cette saison par une victoire. Matthews Phillips (KTM), champion 2014, a dû se contenter de la deuxième marche devant Matti Seistola (Sherco – Michelin).
    Une quatrième place acquise samedi  a permis à Jamie McCanney d’empocher le titre chez les Juniors. Le britannique s’affirme comme un futur grand de l’Enduro Mondial à l’issue d’une saison particulièrement bien menée.
    Steve Holcombe (Beta – Michelin), grand pilote en devenir, a signé le doublé et grimpe sur la troisième marche mondiale derrière Giacomo Redondi (Beta – Michelin).
                 
    Eero Remes (TM), Antoine Meo (KTM), Mathias Bellino (Husqvarna-Michelin) and Jamie McCanney (Husqvarna-Michelin) respectively pocketed the E1, E2, E3 and Junior crowns at the 2015 Enduro World Championship’s final gathering at Requista, France.
    Eero Remes pushed home his 10-point advantage ahead of the final day to prevent Christophe Nambotin (KTM) from claiming a fourth title.
    Smaller bike specialist Remes, 30, won both races to seal his first world crown after chasing it for nine years. Nambotin and Lorenzo Santolino (Sherco-Michelin) took silver and bronze.
    In E2, Meo concluded his last world class Enduro season by clinching his fifth title. The Frenchman now intends to focus on rallying. He was second on Saturday but failed to finish on Sunday.
    The class wins in France went to Italy’s Alex Salvini (Honda) who came second in the championship, ahead of Pierre-Alexandre Renet (Husqvarna-Michelin) who missed his home grand prix.
    Present for his home meeting, Mathias wrapped up the E3 crown on Saturday by finishing second, before celebrating his success with Sunday’s victory. The 2014 champ Matthews Phillips (KTM) had to settle for runner-up honours, ahead of Matti Seistola (Sherco-Michelin).
    Fourth place on Saturday was enough for McCanney to seal the top Junior prize. The Briton enjoyed a particularly strong season and stands out as a bright hope for the future.
    Steve Holcombe (Beta-Michelin), another rising star, won both the weekend’s races to clinch third in the championship, behind Giacomo Redondi (Beta-Michelin).

    WRC Rallye de France - Tour de Corse 2015 ; Quentin Gilbert, Champion du monde ! / 2015 Junior World Champion!


    Le Français Quentin Gilbert (26 ans) a remporté le titre de Champion du monde Juniors des Rallyes FIA après sa quatrième victoire de la saison, au Tour de Corse. Son avenir passera par le WRC-2 avec Citroën et Michelin en 2016.
    Monte-Carlo, Portugal, Finlande et Corse : Quentin Gilbert et son copilote Belge Renaud Jamoul ont gagné quatre « monuments » du rallye mondial cette saison avec leur DS3 R3/Michelin.
    Ce week-end, sur les routes sinueuses de l’Ile de Beauté et dans des conditions délicates, ils ont une nouvelle fois devancé leurs concurrents pour conclure avec plus d’une minute d’avance sur leurs compatriotes Terry Folb et Yohan Rossel.
    « C’est une sensation incroyable et l’aboutissement d’un rêve ! », confiait Quentin. « À l’arrivée du rallye, je ne réalisais pas trop. J’étais centré sur notre performance du week-end. Nous avons bien roulé, nous avons attaqué quand il le fallait, quand la route était sèche, dans la longue spéciale du samedi. Notre équipe a été parfaite et nous avons fait les bons choix de pneus. C’est une très belle victoire, qui m’assure le titre de Champion du monde. »
    Quentin est le 5e Français à inscrire son nom au palmarès du J-WRC après Sébastien Loeb en 2001, Brice Tirabassi en 2003, Sébastien Ogier, sacré comme lui à l’issue du Tour de Corse 2008, et Stéphane Lefebvre l’an passé. Comme Loeb et Ogier, Quentin est issue de la filière française Rallye-Jeunes (vainqueur en 2009).
    « Nous avons énormément travaillé pour parvenir à ce résultat. C’est une récompense pour toutes les personnes impliquées autour du projet. Remporter des épreuves aussi mythiques que le Monte-Carlo, le Portugal, la Finlande et le Tour de Corse, des monuments du Championnat du monde, c’est incroyable ! C’est un titre qui nous rend fiers car nous sommes allés le chercher. Nous n’avons pas fait d’erreur cette saison. L’équipe nous a donné une DS 3 R3-MAX toujours performante. Désormais, nous irons parachever le travail en Espagne, avant de penser à la saison 2016. »
    La saison prochaine, Quentin Gilbert pilotera une Citroën DS3 R5/Michelin sur des manches du championnat WRC-2. Une catégorie qu’il connaît déjà pour y avoir roulé en 2014 sur une Ford Fiesta R5. Une saison auréolée par une victoire au Rallye de France, mais hélas gâchée par de nombreux soucis mécaniques.
                         
    Twenty-six-year old Quentin Gilbert wrapped up the 2015 FIA Junior World Rally Championship with his fourth win of the year, in Corsica. For 2016, he can look forward to a WRC2 programme with Citroën and Michelin.
    Quentin Gilbert and his Belgian co-driver Renaud Jamoul topped the JWRC standings in four of the 2015 championship’s most prestigious events (Monte Carlo, Portugal, Finland and Corsica) in their DS3 R3/Michelin.
    Last weekend, they overcame tricky conditions in Corsica to outpace class rivals Terry Folb and Yohan Rossel by more than a minute.
    “It’s an incredible feeling to have won the title; a dream come true,” said Quentin. “I didn’t fully realise at first because I had been so focused on the Tour de Corse. We went well and pushed when we had to, when the roads were dry on Saturday’s long stage. Our team performed faultlessly and we got our tyre choices right. It was a nice victory and it’s earned me the title…”
    Quentin is the fifth Frenchman to win the J-WRC after Sébastien Loeb in 2001, Brice Tirabassi in 2003, Sébastien Ogier, who clinched the 2008 title in Corsica, and Stéphane Lefebvre last year. Like Loeb and Ogier, Quentin came up through the ranks of France’s Rallye-Jeunes grooming scheme which he won in 2009.
    “We worked hard to achieve this result which is a great reward for all those who have been involved in the project. To have won such huge world class events as the Monte Carlo, Portugal, Finland and the Tour de Corse is incredible! We are proud to have taken the title because we had to dig deep and our team provided us with a DS 3 R3-MAX that was always competitive. We now want to round off the job in Spain before thinking about 2016…”
    Next season, Quentin Gilbert will drive a Michelin-equipped Citroën DS3 R5/Michelin on rounds of the WRC2 championship, a class he knows well after contesting it in 2014 in a Ford Fiesta R5. The year bagged a victory in France but was troubled by a high number of mechanical problems.

    THE RANCH


    Valentino Rossi's MotoRanch in Tavullia surely is a special place. Situated on the Hills near The Doctor's hometown, it includes a dirt track with multiple layouts where the Italian legend can train alongside the students of his own VR46 Riders Academy. Along the years, Rossi has invited many of his friends and fellow riders to have some fun at his private track, and this is well-documented by several videos and pictures. 

    In the sixth and newer Webisode of the Dainese Series, The Doctor himself takes you beyond the gates of his famed house and explains what's the story behind the track and how it became so popular with his mates. 



    Toyoda Model AA: Finding the world’s oldest Toyota


    Model AA intro
    Only 1,404 examples of Toyota’s first passenger car, the Toyoda Model AA, were built in the six years of production from 1936 to 1942.
    Until recently it was thought that none of these cars had survived to this day. Even Toyota itself had been forced to fabricate a ground-up replica of the Model AA because an original example could not be found to exhibit at the Toyota Automobile Museum in Japan.

    So when news of a 1936 car, one of only 100 units built in the very first year of Model AA production, suddenly surfaced from within Russia, the discovery was met with a degree of scepticism. Nevertheless, even the most remote opportunity to uncover an example of the world’s rarest production Toyota had to be followed up.
    Further investigation by specialists at the Louwman Museum revealed that the car was indeed genuine. The Model AA had been owned by a Siberian farmer since World War II.
    During more than 60 years in the family’s ownership it had been used extensively on the land and been heavily modified. At some undetermined time it had also been moved from deep within Siberia to the outskirts of Vladivostok, where the farmer’s grandson now lived.

    The video below, kindly given to us by its new custodians at the Louwman Museum, documents some of the arrangements surrounding the purchase and transportation of the vehicle. It marks the culmination of a protracted, seven-month negotiation process with the owners and Russian Ministry of Culture in Moscow, which eventually granted approval for its exportation.
    Now with the necessary documentation the Toyoda Model AA was secured safely in a container and transported by train from Vladivostok to Moscow. The final leg of its journey to Western Europe was on the back of a container lorry.
    This 1936 Toyoda Model AA is now part of the private car collection at the Louwman Museum in The Hague, Netherlands.
    Click the following link to read a more extensive report on the discovery and incredible unrestored condition of this Toyoda Model AA on the official Toyota (GB) website.

    La vidange by Darwin et CRMC


    La Vidange par Darwin Custom et CRMC c’est ce week-end à Bordeaux sur 3 jours et ça commence vendredi soir à partir de 19h. L’année dernière l’événement avait rencontré un fort succès et du coup, ils remettent ça cette année avec encore plus d’animations et d’expositions.
    la-vidange-by-darwin
    Le programme est assez chargé et à l’air bien sympathique.
    Vendredi 09 Octobre
    LE CATERING (4 rue des Ayres 33000 BDX)
    19H – 23H
    – Bagels & DJ’S Party
    – Exposition Yohan Colin / Rémi Bédora / Cosmic Medusa
    – Briefing de la ride moto du Samedi
    Samedi 10 Octobre 
    Accueil des participants 9h au Hangar Darwin (87 quais de Queyries) avec un café bio par l’Alchimiste Torréfacteur
    Le ride photographié par David Marvier, filmé par Studio Paps et avec en plus un drone piloté par Guimball Prod, vivement les images.
    La soirée :
    Entrée 3€ (Gratuit pour les motards de la Ride)
    – 18h retour Ride, lancement Vide-Garage
    – 19h course de futs de bière poussés à moto 1 contre 1
    – Photo Booth MAN vs MACHINE réalisé par Lucky Studio
    – FOODTRUCKS Sok Bordeaux
    – LIVE TATTOO Matt Captain Chaos
    – LIVE BARBER La Boucherie

    CONCERT LIVE
    Decheman & The Gardenner
    Libido Fuzz
    He Dedicated Nothing
    Dimanche 11 Octobre
    VIDE GARAGE
    – 10h-18h au sein du skate park Hangar Darwin
    MOTO / SURF / SKATE / STREET WEAR / ART
    – Expo photo David Marvier
    – Expo Deus Ex Machina
    – VISSLA demo de shape avec TAZ
    – The Sailor live shape
    16h-18h
    SESSION SKATEBOARD
    -Photographié par David Manaud
    Plus d’informations sur la page Facebook de l’événement : La Vidange
    Pour vous donnez envie d’y aller, voici deux vidéos de l’année dernière lors de la première édition.

    Splash-n-Dash – Paintings depict Shelby Daytonas conquering Sebring


    The gathering of all six Shelby Cobra Daytona Coupes was arguably the star attraction at the Goodwood Revival earlier this year. So inspired was artist Klaus Wagger, that he has painted two pictures depicting the famous cars at the 1965 12 Hours of Sebring…
    Aptly named ‘Splash-n-Dash’, the two 55x35-inch paintings are moody and atmospheric, just as Sebring was that weekend in 1965. In fact, it was one of the wettest races on record – a stark contrast to the sunny, late summer weather we enjoyed at the Goodwood Revival just a few weeks ago. We’re sure ‘Ol’ Shel’ would approve...
    Photo: Klaus Wagger/Automotive Fine Arts Society