ACE CAFE RADIO

    dimanche 13 janvier 2013

    BRITISH ANTARCTIC SURVEY


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    The British Antarctic Survey (BAS) is part of the Natural Environment Research Council based in Cambridge, United Kingdom. It has a long and distinguished history, for over 60 years, undertaking the majority of Britain’s scientific research on and around the Antarctic continent.
    The UK’s interest in the region goes back some 200 years in which it has been a leader in Antarctic science and exploration since Captain James Cook became the first person to sail around the continent in the 1770’s. The most famous British expeditions to the Antarctic took place during the so-called “heroic age” at the start of the 20th Century.
    Primarily remembered for their extraordinary feats of courage and endurance, the expeditions of Scott and Shackleton had important scientific goals. During the southern winter before the fateful push for the pole, Scott’s expedition gathered large amounts of scientific data. Undoubtedly the most hard won were five emperor penguin eggs, which three men travelled for more than a month in the middle of the Antarctic winter to collect, in the hope they would shed light on the evolutionary links between reptiles and birds.
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    This 1970/80s parka was made especially for the BAS. We like to think of it as the British cousin to USARP Expedition Parka show below with it similar burnt orange Ventile shell. The parka was/is featured on p250 of our recently published coffee-table/resource book ‘Vintage Menswear’, available here.
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    Words by DMG, Photos by Nic Shonfeld.
    from thevintageshowroom

    Yamaha SR No.26 by Custom House Stinky





    Foto: Custom House Stinky
    Via Café Racer

    BEN SPIES LEAVES YAMAHA FOR DUCATI


    Ben Spies in-action
    I had food poisoning at Mugello. Bad food poisoning. I shouldn’t even have started the race. I got sick in my helmet, and afterward, I was dry-heaving and shaking uncontrollably.
    Yamaha stayed in Italy and tested the next day, but I didn’t ride. I couldn’t ride. I couldn’t move. I couldn’t doanything. A senior Yamaha employee—that’s as specific as I’m going to get—said to me, “We’ve invested a lot of money in you. Don’t come to Laguna Seca if you aren’t 100 percent.”
    Then, he added, “We’ve lost confidence in you.”
    That was the moment—the halfway point of the season, just before the two U.S. rounds at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca and Indianapolis Motor Speedway—when I decided I wasn’t going to ride for Yamaha in 2013. I have a lot of good friends at Yamaha, but when someone talks down to you like that, you lose respect for them.
    Looking back, I know I tried 100 percent in all the races, but as everybody saw with all the crazy mechanical problems we had this past season—blistered and chunked tires, rear suspension failure, blown engine, fried clutch, overheated brakes—something else wasn’t 100 percent.
    There’s no way anybody could have planned all that or made it happen. Usually, one of those things happens once a year to a rider. For us, they all happened in one year, back-to-back-to-back. It looks bad for the team, but I know it had nothing to do with them. It was just a lot of bad luck.
    Ben Spies
    I’ll admit it was frustrating to look on the other side of the garage and see everything was perfect. My teammate, Jorge Lorenzo, was winning races and, eventually, the world title. I know his engine, brakes, clutch, suspension and tires were the same as mine. You don’t want bad things to happen to someone else, but it’s hard—not just for the rider but the team, as well—to see everything going right on their side and wrong on our side.
    During pre-season testing, we were most concerned with the factory Hondas of Casey Stoner and Dani Pedrosa. To catch them, we needed to improve some of the Yamaha’s weak points. The 800cc YZR-M1 was a good package, but it was down on power, missing a little grip and wheelied a lot.
    We definitely cured a lot of those problems and started the year with the best base package in MotoGP. Maybe the 1000cc M1 didn’t have a strong point, but it worked well in all of the places that required good acceleration, braking and top speed. At some tracks, the V-Four Honda still had a big advantage, but the Yamaha was the best-balanced.
    Finishing 11th in the first race of the year at Qatar was tough because the bike was good and the team was working well. I’d qualified fourth but had a small crash at the end of the session. Something structural broke in the seat, which also serves as the subframe. At the time, we didn’t know the seat was damaged or that it would lead to horrible chatter in the race.
    Sunday morning, I had a lot of chatter on old tires. We didn’t know if the problem was the tires or something else. On the warmup lap, however, I immediately felt the same thing, but it was a lot worse because I had more grip with new tires. My race was over before it even began. A situation like that is hard because you know what you’re in for even if no one else does. Also, there’s no getting around it. That was the start of a lot of bad luck for the season.
    The Yamaha is a great bike, but it likes a lot of corner speed. If it moves, if the wheels get out of line, it gets upset. For example, if the rear wheel comes off the ground when you’re braking, moves left or right and barely touches the ground, the bike will snap! So you can’t maintain the same front brake pressure. Both the Honda and the Ducati look like they can be ridden a little more “wild.”
    Ben Spies
    To go fast on a modern GP bike, you’ve got to keep both tires loaded and in line. You enter the corner at a speed you might think is too fast and start turning the bike to get force into the front tire. The Bridgestones have tons of grip, but because they’re so hard, they don’t have the “feel” you get from Dunlops or Pirellis. The riders asked for “safer” tires that warmed up more quickly, and the current Bridgestones are much better at that. But durability and handling are a little bit of a problem.
    Jorge doesn’t look fast. When I overlaid his data with mine, I could see he was braking earlier than I was, but he was going through the corner faster, which, at the end of the next straightway, translated to a tenth of a second. Casey Stoner looked fast. He was always sliding the bike and spinning the rear tire.
    If you watch Jorge’s body language—how he sits on the bike, not moving around a lot, the way he enters corners, lean angle—you can see he’s really good at keeping the bike evenly balanced and the tires loaded. That’s what you’ve got to do to go fast. But it’s a lot easier said than done, that’s for sure.
    I tried for a long time to ride like Jorge. But our styles are completely different. My natural style is not the smoothest, not the highest corner speed. I like to brake hard, get the bike turned and fire it out of a corner like a Superbike.
    It’s hard to completely “180-degree” your riding style. Bike setup changes a lot. You’d be surprised how much softer Jorge’s spring and damping rates are than mine, especially for how fast he’s going. But he’s super-smooth on the bike. If you can get away with that, it’s good because you can generate more grip.
    I rode Valentino Rossi’s YZR-M1 at Valencia in 2010. I did five or six laps, but there was no way I could ride fast; it was too soft. We started fine-tuning the setup for me, and I went faster than Valentino had gone on the same bike during the race weekend. It’s all about feel. If the rider is comfortable, he can ride the bike to its limit. Same goes for lines around the racetrack; there’s no perfect way to do anything.
    Sometimes, you nail the setup and you fight for a win or the podium. Other times, you’re on your back foot all weekend and don’t find the right combination until morning warmup on Sunday. That’s why a good base setup is so important.
    After my engine blew up while I was running second at Indianapolis, I thought I wanted to leave MotoGP. I started paying attention to World Superbike. That series was great to me when I was there in 2009, and the previous director, Paolo Ciabatti, is a good friend of mine. He would have loved to see me back in SBK. I still might go back there one day.
    Ducati showed interest in me first, but they had just been bought by Audi and didn’t know what they could offer. Then, BMW came at me quite hard with a good team and a good offer. BMW is definitely strong in World Superbike, too. They’ve come a long way with the S1000RR.
    Ben Spies in-action
    Ducati hasn’t raced the new 1199 Panigale in Superbike yet, so it’s a bit of a question mark, but I researched the bike and saw what it had done in Superstock. And when was the last time Ducati showed up with a Superbike that wasn’t good? Honestly, I wanted to go with Ducati and the Panigale, but they had to sort out the MotoGP program first, and I understood that.
    At that point, I started thinking a lot and finally concluded that I haven’t reached my full capabilities in MotoGP. What that is, I don’t know. I’m not going to say I can win this many races or a championship, but I don’t want to walk away and in five years say, I could have done this or that.
    Ducati wanted me on their bikes this year. San Carlo Gresini Honda wanted me really badly, too. I spoke with Fausto Gresini, Shuhei Nakamoto and Livio Suppo at Brno. I told Gresini what I would like, what it would take to get me on a Honda. But Ducati never let that become a possibility. They were ready, and Honda wasn’t.
    Finally, I came to the conclusion that it was going to be either BMW in World Superbike or Ducati in MotoGP.
    The package that Ducati put together is an ideal scenario for me. Andrea Iannone will be my teammate. We’re going to have the same Ducati Corse colors but different sponsors. I will have factory bikes, factory everything.
    Tom Houseworth will be my crew chief, and Max Bartolini will be my engineer. I asked for Max based on what I’ve seen him do in the past, what he currently does with Ducati’s GP program and after talking with a lot of people. I told Ducati that I had to have Max. They were surprised but in a good way; they knew I’d done my research.
    Ducati is going to do the best they can. They know what they’re doing. Last couple of years, they’ve been headed in a direction that may not have been the best for them. I think Audi is going to do a lot for Ducati, but it’s not going to happen overnight.
    I think riders need to remember they aren’t engineers. They need to ride the bike as hard as they can, give feedback and let the engineers fix it. I’m happy with my decision, with what I’m doing this year.
    That’s what matters.
    Photographer :  Andrew Wheeler
    from cycleworld

    DUCATI PAUL SMART BY REVIVAL


    Ducati Paul Smart
    The Ducati Paul Smart is one of the all-time greats—a high performance machine with equal appeal to fans of both modern and vintage machinery. But it’s not quite perfect … so Texas-based Revival Cycles leapt at the opportunity to thoroughly upgrade this 2006 model.
    “We built it for a client who already has a Diavel and another Sport Classic,” says Revival’s Alan Stulberg. “The goal was to create the machine that Ducati should have originally built. The factory Paul Smart was a bit visually cluttered, with plastic bits here and there. It left the door wide open for us to give the Paul Smart a more vintage look with modern upgrades.”
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    Much of the work was done with the help of parts supplier JC/Pakbikes. Revival started by installing a Termi 2-into-1 pipe and relocated the oil lines to reveal the timing belt cover, which is a Rizoma piece. “We also used a new lower triple from JC, and Rizoma reservoirs to top off the Brembo RCS clutch and brake masters. Then we installed stainless lines, a rear Demontech caliper mount and Brembo monobloc calipers and rotors up front.”
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    Revival has also swapped out the stock Paul Smart front fender and mount for regular Sport Classic parts, to get a more ‘vintage’ and proportioned look. “It looks factory and clean and it’s easy to miss, but it’s a subtle detail that really adds something,” says Stulberg.
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    The wheels are now Alpina carbon fiber items with anodized hubs, giving a big weight saving. The Paul Smart’s notoriously hot voltage regulator has been relocated (using a custom alloy mount) to under the seat subframe, where it’s cooled better in the airflow.
    Rider comfort has been boosted too, with brown suede upholstery to match Japanese Posh gum grips. A few extra metal Rizoma pieces (such as mirrors) increase the perception of quality.
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    The final touch is the tail section. “The client is a healthy 6’4″ tall and this helped push the plan to get rid of the old seat. We started with a fiberglass tail that was well proportioned—but not very well made—and then improved it,” says Stulberg. “We cut in a little American charm by installing a 1960s Corvette taillight bezel with a clear lens and a super bright red LED bulb.”
    One of the neatest parts is the easiest to miss—Revival’s proprietary ‘Micro-Supernova’ rear turn signals. Using just three watts apiece, these tiny and bright signals are almost invisible when not lit. (“It was almost comical to see something less than 6mm x 15mm being carved out on a full-size Bridgeport mill.”)
    Ducati Paul Smart
    Revival’s client is now out and about enjoying his ‘new’ Paul Smart, and has just booked his regular Sport Classic in for a major overhaul. “He’s like us and just can’t leave it alone!” says Stulberg.
    Head over to the Revival Cycles website for more information on their projects, and keep up to date with the company’s news via their Facebook page.
    from BIKEexif