ACE CAFE RADIO

    vendredi 3 janvier 2014

    2008 Triumph Thruxton - 'Steampunk Racer' by BCR


    Written by Ian Lee.
    Speed hole: (noun) a sometimes superfluous modification where a hole is drilled into an automotive accessory, denoting a sporting aspect in relation to the machine. See also; 'awesome'.

    Sometimes a bike appears in the Pipeburn inbox that is truly something special. A high level of work, thought, and time, create a truly magnificent motorcycle, the sort of machine that catches your eye and won't let go. BCR's latest project, the 'Steampunk Racer', is one such bike. A transformed Triumph Thruxton with a beautiful finish, nicely matched with tasteful performance mods. And speed holes as far as the eye can see. 

    Starting out with a 2008 model Trumpy with 8000 miles on the clock, the BCR crew decided they wanted to build something out of the ordinary. The factory cafe racer was relieved of a good part of it's aesthetic componentry, and a design brief decided to finish the bike in bare polished and brushed aluminium with jet black highlights. The frame, engine and suspension geometry was to remain as Triumph intended, but the rest would have to be something not seen before. 
    Stripping the front end, the Triumph forks have been replaced by a set from an early 2000s CBR1000RR. In order to accommodate the Honda forkset, BCR fabricated a new steering stem and the steering bearings changed to suit. To allow for a spoked front wheel a 40 hole hub from a Harley-Davidson was sourced, a set of axle and spacer adapters machined up in order to keep the front end dual rotor setup. The calipers are the stock CBR units, ensuring no adaptors were required for fitment. 
    Looking now at the upper end of the forks, the top trees were cleaned thoroughly and a set of stainless steel clip-ons were made in house. Sitting atop the forks is a custom dash, using a Harley tacho/speedo and keeping the factory warning lights. The dash has been treated to some speed holes to add lightness and cool to the build. The front fenders are fibreglass with stainless steel struts.
    One of the many highlights on this bike is the aluminium front fairing. BCR didn't want to take the well travelled road and just put a fairing and a headlight on the front. That would be "too easy". A teardrop bead was used and the yellow headlight offset in the fairing. A panel was hand beaten and used to secure the headlight. In the opposite side to the headlight, louvred have been fitted to keep the voltage rectifier cool under pressure. Mounted atop the fairing in a 1/4" plexiglass windscreen and underneath is covered up by an aluminium panel.  
    Once this was done, it was time to change the hand levers. To eliminate the factory clutch cable setup a hydraulic clutch system was fitted, courtesy of a Ducati 900SS. Using the master and slave cylinder from the Duc, a side cover was fabricated and some speed holes added. To keep with the Italian aesthetic, the brake lever was exchanged again for a 900SS unit and matching brake reservoirs mounted. 

    To ensure the bike had an overall look unlike any other, the fuel tank was built from scratch. The main idea was for it to be streamlined and unique. An organic scallop bead was run across the the front of the tank to match the front fairing. A tank cap was fabricated, and to keep with the raw industrial look of the bike a vent tube was added and exposed. To round out the tank, a hand hammered badge was mounted and speed holes added.

    Once the tank was made, the next step was to fabricate a new seat and tail assembly. To keep with the lines of the tank, the seat widened the further back it sat. This was also done to keep with the stock wide seat frame and to accommodate the 18 inch 160 profile rear tire. The bottom end of the freshly made ducktail kicks up, mirroring the fairing at the front end of the bike and is split to allow for the large tire. The seat trim is black cowhide with single piping front to back, reinforced by double stitching and piping at the rear. Mounted where the seat and the ducktail meet, a speedholed aluminium strip holds the two materials together. 
    Sitting under the rear end of the bike, the tail light is mounted in aluminium and designed to keep in tune with the headlight. The rear fender is painted jet black, matched with stainless struts again to match the front end of the machine. To keep with the look of the new seat, fenders and tank, a new exhaust system was fashioned up. Starting out high the piping kicks in under the rider, then branching out and culminating in twin reverse megaphone silencers flanking the rear guard. To protect the rider from pipeburn a set of exhaust shields were produced, complete with speedholing. 
    From the front to the back, from the tires up, BCR has gone all out to prove themselves to be one of the top custom bike outfits around. The little touches, the amount of in house fabrication, the speed holes, all add up to this being one of the most unique and beautiful custom bikes to grace the pages of Pipeburn. BCR themselves say it best: "We had a lot of fun building this bike. As a company, we wanted to evolve, show people that we could come up with a different look, and that we can go in a different direction when it comes to the overall look and design of a bike. Sure, we could just slap on any of the other parts that we offer, but, again, that would be too easy. We are always up for a challenge and with this build we proved to ourselves that we could do it." We have to agree.
     

    évolution de l'espèce .....

    33 ans séparent ces 2 Yamaha !!


     Foto Mario Ciaccia.

    mécanique

    “Wildman” Cenni Performs 360 Barrell Roll In Baja

    The "Wildman" Adrian Cenni pulled off a spectacular 360 Barrell Roll in a custom built shortcourse truck in front of thousands of fans in the middle of Ensenada during pre-race festivities for the SCORE International Baja 1000.


    jeudi 2 janvier 2014

    ERC : New Year wishes from Austria ! / Meilleurs vœux d’Autriche !


    It was in Freistadt (Upper Austria) that the teams and crews participating in the FIA European Rally Championship rang in 2014, and Best-of-RallyLive joins them in wishing you all a very happy New Year…
    C’est depuis Freistadt, en Haute Autriche, que les concurrents du Championnat d’Europe des Rallyes FIA et Best-of-RallyLive vous adressent leurs meilleurs vœux pour 2014. Qui pour succéder au double vainqueur sortant Jan Kopecky, absent cette année ?
    The 2014 ERC kicks off with the 31st edition of Austria’s Jännerrallye which will start in Freistadt, near the Czech border, on Saturday, January 4. The event features 18 wintry asphalt stages totalling 245.60km, while the compact layout is practically identical to that of 2013 when Jan Kopecky (who isn’t contesting this year’s ERC) claimed the top prize in his Skoda Fabia S2000/Michelin, ahead of Bryan Bouffier.
    Once again, tyre choices promise to play a crucial role in conditions that are likely to vary from dry or damp, to frosty, icy or snowy. Indeed, the 2014 Jännerrallye sees Michelin introduce a new asphalt range which is founded on a new tread pattern available in a choice of three compounds (R01/extra soft, R11/soft, R21/medium). Depending on the conditions encountered in the Austrian Alps, Michelin’s runners will also have a choice of two snow tyres, namely the ‘wide’ NA00 (with or without studs) and a narrower studded alternative (10/65/16).
    More than 80 crews are expected to start the rally which counts towards the Czech championship, as well. Spectators can look forward to an interesting fight between the reigning WRC-2 champion Robert Kubica (Ford Fiesta RRC), the Polish champion Kajetan Kajetanowicz (Ford Fiesta R5), the Czech champion Vaclav Pech (Mini S2000) and the Austrian champion Raimund Baumschlager (Skoda Fabia S2000).
    Last year’s ERC Production champion Andreas Aigner will be on home soil in his Stohl Racing-run Peugeot 207 S2000, while the 2012 IRC Production champ Robert Consani from France has entered a similar 207 S2000 tended by Delta Racing. Other potential winners include the Czech Republic’s Pavel Valousek (Ford Fiesta R5) and Russian youngster Vasiliy Gryazin (Fiesta S2000).
    The slippery stages are likely to suit the Mitsubishi and Subaru R4 runners, whose ranks include the Czech Republic’s Jan Cerny, plus Austrians Beppo Harrach and Hermann Neubauer.
    Action will begin with a Qualifying Stage on Friday, January 3, to determine the start order, followed by a start ceremony in the centre of Freistadt. The competition ends on Sunday after two attempts at the weekend’s longest stage, ‘Bad Zell-Tragwein-Aisttal’ (25 km).

    Organisé tout début janvier, le Jännerrallye ouvre la saison européenne des rallyes dans la froidure autrichienne. La 31e édition s’élancera samedi 4 janvier de Freistadt, près de la frontière tchèque, et proposera un parcours asphalte/glace/neige de 245,60 km chronométrés sensiblement identique à celui de 2013 sur lequel avait triomphé Jan Kopecky et sa Skoda Fabia S2000/Michelin devant Bryan Bouffier.
    Si les 18 épreuves spéciales sont concentrées autour de Freistadt, où se tient le parc d’assistance et où s’effectuent les changements de pneus, les choix de pneumatiques sont tout de même très délicats car dans un seul groupe, certaines spéciales peuvent être sèches ou humides et d’autres givrées, verglacées et enneigées. Clous ou pas clous ? Pneus neige ou pas ?
    A l’occasion du Jännerrallye, Michelin lance sa nouvelle gamme de pneus rallye asphalte « Compétition-Clients » 2014 avec trois produits dotés d’une nouvelle sculpture : R01 (extra soft), R11 (soft) et R21 (medium). Pour parer à toutes les conditions qui peuvent sévir en Haute-Autriche début janvier, les pilotes Michelin disposeront aussi de pneus neige « larges » NA00 (avec ou sans clous) et de pneus neige « étroits » cloutés (10/65/16).
    Plus de 80 d’équipages devraient être au départ de ce rallye qui compte également pour le Championnat de République Tchèque. On attend une superbe bagarre entre le Champion du monde WRC-2 Robert Kubica (Ford Fiesta RRC), le Champion de Pologne Kajetan Kajetanowicz (Ford Fiesta R5), le Champion tchèque Vaclav Pech (Mini S2000) et le Champion d’Autriche Raimund Baumschlager (Skoda Fabia S2000).
    A domicile, le Champion ERC Production Andreas Aigner aura une belle carte à jouer sur sa Peugeot 207 S2000 de Stohl Racing. A suivre aussi les débuts du Champion IRC Production 2012 Robert Consani sur une 207 S2000 de Delta Racing. Le Tchèque Pavel Valousek (Ford Fiesta R5) et le jeune russe Vasiliy Gryazin (Fiesta S2000) sont eux aussi candidats à la victoire.
    Ce terrain rapide, vallonné et glissant, convient également très bien aux véloces Mitsubishi et Subaru R4. Le Tchèque Jan Cerny, les Autrichien Beppo Harrach et Hermann Neubauer pourraient briguer les accessits.
    Une Qualifying Stage est organisée vendredi 3 janvier pour déterminer l’ordre des départs, avant la cérémonie de départ dans le centre de Freistadt. Arrivée dimanche 5 janvier après deux passages successifs dans Bad Zell-Tragwein-Aisttal (25 km) la plus longue spéciale du rallye.

    LIX TOLL'S TRACKED DEFENDER 110

    VIDEO: LIX TOLL'S TRACKED DEFENDER 110

    Lix Toll Garage, in Perthshire has recreated one of its trademark machines, a bright yellow tracked Land Rover.

    For years, a towering Series IIA Cuthbertson Conversion stood sentinel outside the Highland garage and was photographed by countless Land Rover fans, including LRO’s Mark Saville. That was over 20 years ago. Now, he’s finally got behind the wheel and driven this latest incarnation off-road. See how he got on in the February issue of LRO or watch a video of the man and machine in action below.



    via http://www.lro.com


    YAMAHA XJR400 BY ELLASPEDE


    Yamaha XJR400
    Let’s say you’re a relatively new convert to motorcycling. And you want a custom bike, something a little smaller and cheaper than an 883 Sportster, Triumph Bonneville or Moto Guzzi V7.
    The obvious option is the Yamaha SR400. Or maybe one of the more compact vintage Honda CBs. But Australian builder Ellaspede has come up with another solution—the Yamaha XJR400, little brother to the evergreen XJR1300.
    Yamaha XJR400
    “Being an import-only model in Australia, there aren’t that many good XJR400s around,” says Ellaspede’s Hughan Seary. “So locating one took a while. Our client Matthew managed to find a great example in black, rode it in, and we started discussing possibilities. Whilst taking cues from our previous XJR, he had some other ideas he wanted to explore.”
    Yamaha XJR400
    One of the cues was cafe styling, so clip-ons and a humped seat were in order. The ability to carry a passenger was another requirement, so Ellaspede made the custom seat unit just long enough to achieve this.
    Under the seat are discreet frame mods, relocated electrical items, and a custom rear guard with a plate relocation bracket to help with legal requirements. The removal of the airbox left space for BMC pods to feed air into re-jetted carbs, and the standard headers are now hooked up to a SuperTrapp muffler.
    Yamaha XJR400
    A lowered headlight and Acewell gauge help clean up the front end, while Posh indicators and an LED taillight take care of the other lighting duties. To reduce the revs, the front cog was swapped out for a 1-tooth-up unit. Many fabricated, powder coated, painted and polished items help finish the look.
    Matthew got himself a cool ride because he chose a donor bike that didn’t need a huge amount of work to produce a sharp, semi-modern take on the cafe racer genre. If you were a young rider looking for an affordable custom, would you have done the same?
    Yamaha XJR400
    from BIKEEXIF

    Snapshot, 1963: 500 miles with Steve McQueen and Bud Ekins


    500 miles can be a long haul, especially on two wheels through the barren Californian desert. It is therefore advisable to take some entertaining companions along for the ride. How about Bud Ekins and Steve McQueen?
    John Dominis snapped this shot of the two Hollywood heroes in 1963, during a motorcycle endurance race across the Mojave Desert in California. That’s Steve McQueen on the right, and Bud Ekins on the left tilting into the corner. The rider in the centre remains unknown. Ekins was one of the most famous stuntmen of his generation. He was often McQueen’s stunt double – in ‘The Great Escape’, he jumped the Triumph TR6 over the barbed-wire fence, and in ‘Bullitt’ he drifted the Ford Mustang through the streets of San Francisco. He also successfully competed in motorcycle racing, and occasionally at the helm of even bigger machines – trucks, for example, in the notorious Mint 400 and Stardust 7-11 desert races. Ekins and McQueen were great friends, until the latter’s death in 1980. 
    Photo: John Dominis/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images
    Numerous classic motorcycles can be found for sale in Classic Driver Market.

    balai !

    mercredi 1 janvier 2014

    Driving with the gods: East African Safari Classic Rally


    Imagine competing alongside former World Rally Champions on the beautiful but challenging roads of Kenya and Tanzania. The East African Safari Classic Rally (21-29 November 2013) provides exactly that experience: with huge smiles at the end, but plenty of dust and clenched teeth on the way…
    "It's frustrating... but it's part of the game."
    Former World Rally Champion, Björn Waldegård, was bearing the double responsibility of preserving both his record of two wins on the East African Safari Classic, and his son Mathias, who was once again sitting beside him in a Porsche 911. This was combined with competitive pressure from former World Rally Champion Stig Blomqvist in another Porsche 911 and six-times Kenyan Rally Champion Ian Duncan, in an unusual but very powerful Ford Capri Perana V8. Indeed, as the route moved into Tanzania, Waldegård might have pushed a little too hard, launching his Porsche 911 into a spectacular roll over a dry river crossing. The crew was unhurt but Waldegård’s hopes of winning for a third time were scrapped along with the 911’s bodyshell. “It’s frustrating,” he said in a typically Swedish philosophical style. “But it’s part of the game.”
    For the rest of the field, the Tanzanian roads brought both beauty and variety with twisty, technical sections coming down the Rift Valley Escarpment and long, fast, dusty sections with very few landmarks by which to navigate. Even veteran Safari navigator Lofty Drews was lost for words, although this was not helped by an intercom failure. “I had to use some very complicated hand signals to my driver and sometimes I got some very basic gestures in return…” 

    Three flats; only two spares

    As the rally headed back into Kenya, Duncan was in front but a series of punctures handed the lead back to Blomqvist. “To have one flat is unlucky but to have three in one section, when you only have two spares… well, I don’t have a polite word for that.” Indeed, it was not just the Capri’s tyres that suffered on the rough Kenyan roads, with several crews comparing their experience to “being inside a washing machine with dust instead of water”. But when the route went north to Naivasha there were plenty of river crossings to solve that problem, allowing some crews to demonstrate their ability in deep-water driving, while others had to rely on camaraderie to climb the soft river banks. 

    Victory deflated by a puncture

    Heading back to sultry Mombasa on the final day, the Safari still had plenty of drama up its sleeve. Unusually for this endurance event, mere seconds separated the leader Duncan from Blomqvist. The Kenyan started in front but, with just one competitive section left, Blomqvist wrested back the lead – only to have a tyre and his hopes of victory deflated by a puncture. The Safari Classic 2013 crown went to Ian Duncan in his Ford Capri, while Blomqvist had to settle for second place.

    A chance of immortality

    Out of the record 60 crews that started this epic event, 54 crossed the finishers’ ramp. Despite the clear diversity in competitive experience, what was striking by the end was the similarity in their level of determination. Although the likes of Blomqvist, Waldegård and Duncan might drive like gods, it seems every Safari competitor has a chance of immortality: if only for eight days.
    Text: Franca Davenport
    Photos: McKlein
    Further information about the East African Safari Classic Rally can be found at:www.eastafricansafarirally.com
    Classic rally cars can be found for sale in the Classic Driver Market.

    Pipeburn's 2013 Bike of the Year Award


    2013 has been a massive year for Pipeburn. We've got six times the eyeballs looking at the site now than we did this time last year. And on top of that, we've had an amazing run of great bikes. They were easily our best ever. So to celebrate, we thought we'd end 2013 on a high and introduce something that we're calling the Pipeburn Bike of the Year Award. See that 2kg trophy of perfectly machined and polished stainless steel in the picture above? That's our way of giving a little back to the scene and recognising the bike and builder that has defined 2013. So we've gone back over every bike to count comments, tally Facebook likes and measure absolute coolness to come up with our top 10 for 2013. The bike in the No. 1 spot takes the trophy. And what a bike it is...

    10. ‘77 Honda PA50III - Matt Turner

    In the number 10 spot is a moped that is easily the most detailed, well-though-out and polished ‘ped build we've everseen. Owner Matt poured his heart and soul into it and took on some serious engineering challenges, including modding the engine and electrics to run backwards for the bike's transmission. And then he gave it away in a raffle. Crazy? Possibly. Genius? Definitely.

    9. ‘08 BMW R1200R - Galaxy Customs

    This one came way out of left field. Or should that be East Field? Ivaylo, the man behind Bulgaria's Galaxy Customs, had one thought when he commenced the build; he wanted to create something that was retro on the outside and modern on the inside. Not only did he manage that in spades, but he's also beaten BMW's top designers to the punch by pre-empting their brand new R nine T model by a good 12 months. Impressive stuff.

    8. '47 BSA B33 - Briton Bees

    The Bees bikes are a perennial favourites of ours, and this year Emmanuel has really managed to blow us away. Effortlessly making the transition from motocyclettes to bigger, bolder builds he dropped this one on us in March. Only the best of builders could take a classic like this and make it better than when they started; which is just what he did with a little help from Jake Hall at HCV Motorsports. Have they done a deal with the devil at midnight? We like to think so.

    7. Michael Alton's ‘69 BSA Firebird

    From one classic BSA to another; this one is almost a quarter century younger than the bike in our No. 8 position, yet somehow it manages to look like it's Grandpappy. It'll come as no surprise, then, that owner Mike's main inspiration for the build was his Grandmother's bike ridin', roller-derbyin' exploits in the 1930s. Using your granny as a creative muse? Now there's a Pipeburn first.

    6. ‘82 Yamaha XV750 - Hageman Motorcycles

    There's not much to say about Doc's Chops a.k.a. Greg Hageman that hasn't already been said. He was the builder at the pointy end of the Yahama Virago trend that turned the model from a customiser's bad joke to a bike lover's wet dream. And this one is in all black. With a number board. And gold lettering. There's a reason why there's a Yamaha Virago in the Pipeburn garage, and we call that reason ‘Greg’.

    5. ‘83 BMW R80 - ER Motorcycles

    It seems that nothing gets our reader's blood pumping more than a well-executed BMW build. And this bike takes ‘well exectued’ and shoots it to the moon. There's not one part of this bike that hasn't been worked to within an inch of it's life; the seat looks like it was made by Louis Vuitton. It even has it's own bespoke labeling. It's another bolt from the blue of Eastern Europe's burgeoning scene - this time it's ER Motorcycles and their main man Blaž Šuštaršič with a bike they call ‘The Mobster’.

    4. Moto Guzzi Nuovo Falcone - Medaza Cycles

    This is the bike that took the 2013 AMD Custom Bike Building World Champion's title. What more can we say? Don Cronin, Medaza's head honcho, now gets to call himself the best custom bike builder in the world without an ounce of irony, boastfulness or dishonesty. How cool is that?

    3. Yamaha Scorpio - Thrive Motorcycles

    If movies shaped your childhood as much as they did ours, then there's no doubt that you'll have a special place in your hear for the original Star Wars trilogy. As die-hard bike lovers, the closest you'll come to motorcycles in that galaxy far, far away were the Empire's Speeder bikes. And the closest you'll ever come to riding one is this amazing build by Jakarta's Indra and his Thrive Motorcycles. The force is strong with this one.

    2. ‘77 BMW R60/7 - ER Motorcycles

    And again! You know you're doing something right when you can turn out two killer bikes in the same year. Which is just what Blaž and the boys at ER Motorcycles have done. But just how killer is it? You're now looking at the bike that holds the all-time Facebook likes record on Pipeburn. 4,300 likes to be exact. That's so many that we almost gave it top honors by default. But there was always one bike that was up to the challenge...

    1. Royal Enfield Bullet 500 - Hazan Motorworks

    It's rare to say that a bike has changed the way you think about custom builds. As amazing as all the other bikes on this list are, it would be difficult for them lay claim to construction techniques that break new ground. This bike can. It isn't so much about thinking outside the square; it's more about taking everything you know about squares and setting them on fire. Twice. You may know him as Max Hazan from Hazan Motorworks, but we'd like to refer to him as the inaugural winner of the Pipeburn Bike of the Year Award. Congratulations Max! We will be in touch and hope to get the trophy over to you as soon as possible.
    We'd also like to take this opportunity to thank everone who helped us make this award happen. Massive thanks to Paul McKinnon from Evolution Motorsports in Sydney who made the amazing trophy for us. His workmanship and attitude is second to none. We'd also like to thank Junior Burrell at Retro Moto who not only let us use his photo for the first image in the article but who also missed out on a top 10 spot by this much - as did Russell Mechanica's BMW, Sur les Chapeaux de Roues' CB750 and Rajputana Custom's Royal Enfield. Oh, and Craig Johnston's Kermit.
    We'd also like to express our heartfelt thanks to all the builders, readers and fans who supported us in 2013. We couldn't have done it without you. See you in all in 2014.
    via PIPEBURN

    YAMAHA XS650 BY THRIVE MOTORCYCLE


    Yamaha XS650 custom motorcycle
    When asked to reveal their influences, builders can come up with some pretty odd answers. But I don’t think I’ve ever seen “a wood-burning stove” credited before.
    ‘Moon’ comes from Thrive Motorcycle of Jakarta, and they have an unusual method for finding out what their customers like. Putra Agung explains: “We asked the client, ‘What’s on your mind right now?’ and he answered, ‘A wood-burning stove.’” The stove in question turned out to be a Mendip Loxton, an angular English creation usually finished in a dark charcoal enamel.
    Yamaha XS650 custom motorcycle
    Wood-burning stoves are not common in Indonesia. After all, temperatures rarely drop beneath 25°C (77°F). But that stove became the inspiration for this build, which is based a Yamaha XS650.
    Given the rarity of larger-capacity bikes in Indonesia, obtaining and customizing an XS650 is no mean feat in itself: It took almost a year to locate the bike. But Thrive’s lead builder, Barata Dwiputra, completed the transformation inside two months, including a complete engine overhaul and hand-fabricated bodywork.
    Yamaha XS650 custom motorcycle
    Thrive wanted an aggressive look, so the wheelbase was lengthened via a custom swingarm, and the front end was lowered a little. The colors have been reduced to shades of black, with brass and copper accents for the details.
    Yamaha XS650 custom motorcycle
    There’s a very elegant floating rear fender, and the shocks have been sleeved to simplify the detailing. The wiring has been simplified too, and a square headlight adds to the angular look. The only curvaceous items are the simple straight-through exhaust pipes.
    Yamaha XS650 custom motorcycle
    There are practical touches though, like a custom canvas bag containing every tool needed to maintain an XS650. And a pair of leather belts have been fitted under the battery box, designed to hold a flannel shirt or jacket in place.
    It’s a remarkably original build from a company with a strong and unusual aesthetic.
    Thrive does not have a website yet, but is on Instagram and Vimeo. Thrive’s work is also featured in the book The Ride: New Custom Motorcycles And Their Builders. Order your copy here.
    Yamaha XS650 custom motorcycle
    from BIKEEXIF

    HAPPY NEW YEAR !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Happy New Year !!

    taxi !