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    vendredi 19 avril 2013

    The Crazy, Cocaine–Fuelled 80s Tuning Specials




    The 80s saw the personalisation of the motor car enter a new era; ‘tuning houses’ sprouted across Europe, with aftermarket projects replacing the bespoke work undertaken by experienced coachbuilders in the previous generation. Here we take a look back, and present the heroes and horrors of the 1980s customisation scene.



    Gemballa: Tuning, the German Way


    One of the scene’s progenitors, Uwe Gemballa founded his company in 1981 and started by installing high-end sound systems and leather interiors in honest Volkswagen models. The company soon progressed to working on the offerings of the more prestigious German marques, and in 1985 came the ‘Avalanche’, based on Porsche’s ‘flatnose’ 911 Turbo.

    If you thought the odd buttresses, overladen ‘tea-tray’ spoiler and almost comically wide wheelarches were extreme, consider some of the items on the options list: a fridge and minibar located behind the front seats, and a built-in safe. Had Tony Montana not met his demise a few years before, this would surely have been his mount in Scarface: Part II.

    Uwe Gemballa’s downfall was no less violent. Having spent the remainder of the 80s extending his reach to cover other German cars, he continued tuning Porsches until his murder in 2010. He’s said to have been embroiled in a large-scale money laundering operation in South Africa, which involved an imported Gemballa Cayenne and the disappearance in transit of a million euros hidden inside the body panels – sounds like something straight out of an Eighties film, eh?


    Koenig Special: Building 1,000bhp Ferraris, 30 Years Ago


    Another German tuner, Koenig Special began tuning Ferraris in the late 1970s and soon expanded its work to give cars from Mercedes, Jaguar and Porsche the typical 1980s ‘widebody’ treatment. Especially notable projects included a 1,000bhp Ferrari Testarossa, a road-going version of the 962 sports-prototype, and a flatnose 911 Turbo with headlights and tail-lights borrowed from the Porsche 928 and Audi 200, respectively.


    Autocostruzione: The Italian Butcher

    So, you’ve just purchased one of the most expensive saloons in the world and, in a possibly cocaine-induced moment of madness, you decide to give it to a relatively unknown Italian coachbuilder to be decapitated. The result? Your Silver Spirit is robbed of its structural rigidity (despite the use of a Golf Cabrio-esque roll bar), and painted Canary Yellow to add insult to injury. With Autocostruzione’s owner having been the factory manager for Bizzarrini in the 60s, you’d expect him to have vetoed the request for such unseemly alterations, but if Sir (or Sultan) has the means…


    Vantagefield of London: An Alternative Point of Hue


    Vantagefield was famous for reconfiguring luxury vehicles for specific uses – the examples here show Series 1 Range Rovers, both adapted for very different customers. The first is the ‘Starlight’, a desert-bound, stretched convertible conversion with a camel-coloured leather interior, ‘sheer’ grille, and a 5.7-litre engine with accompanying air vents. The other is a stretched, six-wheel behemoth built for hunting – although we’re unsure exactly how the transplanted Mercedes headlights and grille would improve your kill count. Maybe you can ask – the company is still in business…


    Boschert: The Gullwing That Never Took Off


    Boschert’s sole offering – the B300 – somehow managed to appear familiar and yet odd at the same time. At the time, other companies were reprising the iconic 300 SL by using W126 SECs, but Boschert chose the W124 300CE (with a nose borrowed from the R129 SL, just to confuse matters further) upon which to base its gullwinged creation. Despite an anticipated production run of 300 cars, very few were made – the majority of which were specified with ‘clipped’ wings (i.e. conventional doors). 


    Sbarro: A One-Man War on Ordinariness


    With creations at the ‘extreme’ end of the spectrum, Franco Sbarro’s company could be seen as more of a conceptual design studio than a ‘tuner’ as such. However, one of the more tuner-esque products of the company was the Sbarro Golf Turbo built for a Swiss customer. A hydraulically powered system lifted the back end of the car to reveal the rear-mounted flat-six borrowed from the 911 Turbo, while the resultantly empty front engine bay was filled with a 100-litre fuel tank – supposedly giving the car a 50/50 weight distribution when brimmed. Other creations included the wedge-shaped Challenge fitted with a turbocharged Mercedes V8, and the ‘Adventure’ activity vehicle based on a humble Citroen C15 van.


    B&B: Targa Turbos and .44 Magnums


    The Buchmann brothers formed their company to capitalise on the boom of the European stock market – there were plenty of new millionaires, all with money to spend on making their cars that little bit more exclusive. One of the first offerings was a Targa-roofed version of the 911 Turbo, which proved popular since Porsche had neglected to offer one. Thereafter, B&B began to specialise in installing electrical equipment in customers’ cars, and a later project saw a Porsche 928 fitted with a T-Bar roof pillar, into which a telephone and stereo control units were integrated. Oh, and don’t forget the optional Magnum .44 installed in a compartment beneath the driver’s seat; apparently an oft-specified B&B speciality.




    Text: Joe Breeze (Classic Driver)
    Photos: The Companies / Private

    928 WAYS TO KILL THE 911

    Porsche 928Porsche 928 Cutaway
    by Alan Franklin / 16 Apr 2013
    Porsche 928

    A world without the Porsche 911 is not a place I like to imagine, but to paraphrase 
    Hunter S. Thompson,
     you’ve got no place as a writer if you’re not willing to indulge the occasional dark thought. 
    So here goes: no iconic uber-beetle, that unmistakable silhouette honed by decades of aerodynamic
     refinement no more than a dream, the gruff, off-beat idle and yowling, warbling top-end
    scream of that fabulous pancake six merely an echo from an alternate plane of reality,
     that gently bobbing front end, living, ethereal steering, initial understeer and physics-defying
     post-apex traction no more corporeal than an emotion. This 911-less world is a cold and 
    colorless place for anyone with petrol in the blood, a nightmare scenario for those of us
     who love great cars like others love the sun, so we should all be thankful that Porsche
     never had their way—they never killed the 911.
    It wasn’t for lack of trying. The 911 was difficult and expensive to build, its basic architecture
     already over a decade old by the mid-seventies, when huge advancements in the technology of car
     building made assembling the old rear-engined beasts less profitable nearly by the day. 
    Conceived during a time when Porsche was still a relatively tiny, boutique maker of
     highly-specialized machines, the Typ 901 was designed to be built largely by hand, a long,
     expensive, and laborious process that could only be partially automated. Furthermore
     it was cramped, quirky, and rapidly losing sales. Enter the 928, of which development
     began in earnest around this time.
    Intended to address all of the aforementioned shortcomings of the 911, the 928 was designed
     from the offset to be easier to manufacture, maintain, drive, and live with on a day-to-day basis.
     Much more of a GT than its predecessor, it combined modern levels of luxury, refinement,
     and technology with performance easily matching, if not surpassing, that of its rear-engined
     older brother. Released in 1978 to nearly universal acclaim, it was awarded “Car of the Year”
     by the European press.
      
    Porsche 928
    Porsche 928Porsche 928












    With a front-mounted, all-alloy, overhead cam V8 and rear-mounted transaxle,
     the 928 had ample power, perfect 50/50 weight distribution and the thunderous
     soundtrack of a muscle car, all wrapped in a beautiful, unadorned body penned
     by Wolfgang Möbius—its exposed, flush-fitting headlights popping up to expose bullet-shaped
     fairings when turned on among our all-time favorites. Its futuristic interior was incredibly
     well appointed, leather covering most surfaces, including the dash and headliner
     in many examples. With all the electronic and power equipment one would 
    expect of a high-end luxury sedan, Porsche’s new coupe was a wonderful place to spend time,
     regardless if you had first-gear hairpins or continent-crushing high-speed cruising on the mind
    —it really was effortlessly capable of either.
    Later versions offered significantly more power by way of increased displacement and more valves,
     culminating in 5.4 liters, four per cylinder, and 345 HP in the final GTS version from 1991,
     which was good for 170+ MPH and low five second 0-60 times. Though far from a flop
     with some 60,000 built, the 928 was never successful enough to replace the 911, either.
     If it weren’t for a seven-foot timing belt and other ridiculously indulgent engineering touches,
     the V8 cruiser might’ve actually been somewhat reliable, thus avoiding the reputation
     it later gained for catastrophic engine failures. If you’ve ever wondered why you can pick up
     a once $100k example for less than the cost of a down payment on a new Kia, wonder no more.
    So here we are in 2013, the Carrera still with us and selling in greater numbers than ever before,
     and the newly-released 991 continuing the rear-engined bloodline with honor and distinction,
     with no less than 15 planned versions on the way—hard to believe that Porsche once thought
     the 911 had reached a developmental peak, yet another reason the 928 was green-lighted.
    Every time I hear a GT3 RS wound out through the gears I think back to that NBA point
     guard-length rubber belt, and I thank God for making the complexity-loving engineers
     who developed the 928’s engine—cheers to you, guys, and to your spectacular reliability failures.
    Porsche 928 Cutaway



    Photo Sources: GermanCarsForSaleBlog.comFavCars.comFavCars.comBrownCar.tumblr.com,
     ProductionCars.comAutoGuide.comSeriousWheels.comPicc.it

    Jaguar F-Type Sportbrake rendered


    Jaguar F-Type Sportbrake render

    Could happen

    The Jaguar F-Type has been turned into a Sportbrake through digital manipulation.
    The shooting brake body style is increasingly popular and for good reasons since it brings more practicality without compromising looks. We don't know where this render comes from but some are saying it's an official Jaguar photo (which we highly doubt) while others are suggesting it's a simple render by an F-Type fan (more likely).
    At this moment nobody from Jaguar confirmed a shooting brake variant of the F-Type, but a report indicates during F-Type's official launch in Spain an engineer from the British marque hinted at such a version. What's almost certain is that a hotter F-Typewill be out probably in 2016 with approximately 600 bhp (447 kW).
    Source: carhoots.com via autoblog.nl
    via Worldcarfans

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