ACE CAFE RADIO

    jeudi 20 février 2014

    The ‘I Heart Honda’ Charade


    “A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away was a Daihatsu Charade.” That’s how Alex Parisi started off his mail to me when I asked him to tell me about his little time attack project. With a opening line like that, I knew I was in for an interesting story and despite this being only a little spotlight, I’ll do my best to let you know how it all came to be. The idea was always to create something that would surprise people, a little Daihatsu that would be capable of going really fast and getting itself noticed in the process. Back when it was still a street car it was running a turbocharged HD series motor, good for 350hp at the wheels. Decent enough power, except for the fact that it would constantly make the upgraded gear sets in the gearbox destroy themselves.
    WTAC-Daihatsu-Charade-01
    Looking at the car now, you can imagine the amount of work that went into making it look so functional – what was required to change a little compact Japanese hatch into a dedicated time attacker. Before the car even looked like this, Alex attempted to enter it in the 2012 WTAC, but missed out as all entry spots were literally taken up in 15 minutes. Not to worry, 2013 came around and that’s when he decided to go for it. “What the hell” as he put it. Never having even been to Sydney Motorsports Park, he wasn’t going to take any chances – he knew the high speeds that could be reached on the main straight and the importance of aero. Turning the little brick that was the Charade into something that would actually generate downforce proved to be a fun challenge that Alex tackled head-on. He created a one piece pre-preg carbon, nomex-cored flat floor and rear diffuser.
    WTAC-Daihatsu-Charade-06
    Here’s a better look at that massive rear diffuser which is there to balance out the downforce that the front end treatment with a big protruding splitter and carbon canards generates. Fender flaring followed; Alex needed to bump the front and rear tracks of the Charade so it would wear the widest wheels possible, settling on 10Js, allowing him to run 275 section A050s at each corner. Looking at the picture above, you may have noticed the big cut outs on the hatch lid.
    WTAC-Daihatsu-Charade-07
    Well those are there because what used to be the Charade’s trunk is now occupied by the radiator, mounted at an angle and armed with a pair of big extractor fans and fed by two massive tubes that fish air from the side windows. The reason the cooling has been moved to the rear of the car is because following the continuous gearbox failures, Alex decided to do things a bit differently up front…
    WTAC-Daihatsu-Charade-03
    He knew that an all-new engine and gearbox combo was the only way to move forward, and despite considering Honda’s K-series, the power that guys in the US were getting out of boosted B18s made his decision an easy one. Honda’s unmistakable, red-topped four-cylinder now resides in the Charade’s modified engine bay – you can see the stiffening bars welded onto the suspension turrets.
    WTAC-Daihatsu-Charade-05
    500hp at the wheels was not too difficult to obtain thanks to a fully built B18 courtesy of AMP Racing, mated with 25psi of boost supplied by the Garrett 3076 turbo which sits on a pretty awesome-looking manifold. And hence the need to move the radiator to the back, because with the blower sitting where it is, there’s just enough space to fit and clear the big front-mounted intercooler.
    WTAC-Daihatsu-Charade-08
    The cabin is built around functionality: fully stripped out, including the stock dash which has been replaced with a simple carbon panel.
    WTAC-Daihatsu-Charade-04
    Much work went into fitting the Charade with Motec M800 engine management, guaranteeing the custom-built motor gives its best under the hardest of use. Alex and his team weren’t particularly lucky at last year’s WTAC with small problems hindering their chances at setting a decent lap time in the Pro Am Class the car was entered in. 2014 will be spent sorting out the little issues, as well as perfecting the suspension geometry and shedding even more weight. It might not have been the fastest car out there, but it’s builds like these that continue to grab our attention. Thinking outside the box goes a long way!
    Dino Dalle Carbonare

    Volkswagen Amarok Sets New Off Road Record


    Volkswagen Amarok Across Russia

    Over 60 Days and Almost 10,000 miles through the Russian Outback


    Volkswagen has just broken a huge off-road record for the longest off-road trek in a single country using three custom Volkswagen Amaroks to cross almost 10,000 miles from Moscow to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky o help promote the 2014 Winter Olypics. Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky is one of the worlds largest cities and it sits on the Bering Sea but getting there is no walk in the park and since there are no roads leading to it, Volkswagen's record breaking run was not for the weak.
    Volkswagen Amarok Crossing Frozen Lake
    The almost 10,000 mile trek began in the Russian capitol Moscow where three Volkswagen Amoroks pickups equipped with huge lifts and giant tires departed on an over 60 day journey to reach the Bering Sea. Of course having giant tires is practically a requirement if you don't want to get stuck in the freezing deep Russian snow. The team traveled across Lake Baikal which was frozen over abput three feet thick. Luckily the Amoroks made it through without incident but the same could not be said when they reached Lultin Pass, where the crew managed to get stuck in the deep Russian snow. Although getting stuck did set them back, the team was able to work together to recover the stuck vehicles and push in toward the ultimate goal.
    You would think that spinning tires that large would be a huge undertaking especially when it's well below 40 degrees below-zero for most of the day but it turned out to be nothing the 2.0-liter Turbo diesel Volkswagen Amorok engines couldn't handle.
    Volkswagen Amarok Crossing Frozen Lake
    We're not sure we'd be as willing to brave the elements while crossing nearly two thirds of the frozen Russian backcountry in the dead of winter but if we had to, we wouldn't hesitate to do it in one of these beefed up Volkswagen Amorok trucks. After all, Amarok is Inuit for 'Arctic Wolf' and this was one wolf pack that couldn't be stopped by thick snow and icy conditions.
    Volkswagen Amarok Crossing Frozen Lake

    RUSSENSCHMIEDE........!!!!!!

    CAFE RACER CUSTOMS


    CRC 6 1
    Hunkered in a workshop in the industrial estate behind London’s legendary Ace Cafe, Cafe Racer Customs in many ways hark back to the cafe racer tradition of Paul Dunstall, the Rickman brothers and Colin Seely, who would build custom performance bikes to the highest standards of engineering and design prowess in the 60s and 70s.
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    Not that there’s anything old fashioned or retro about Cafe Racer Customs. Their ethos and practice is very much routed in the 21st Century, but carries the torch for the uncompromising engineering benchmarks of their cafe racer forefathers.
    CRC 6 3
    A team of two, Will and Simon do almost everything in-house, including engine building and modification, fabrication and machining, tube manipulation, vapour blasting, and of course design. Their skillsets combine to cover all of stages manufacturing and production. Their uncompromising attention to detail is beyond obsessive, and it is no more evident than in their CRC6 CBX1000.
    CRC 6 4
    The most extraordinary air-cooled motorcycle engine ever produced finally finds the home it deserves in CRC’s astonishing, hand built tribute to the Great British Cafe Racer. The engine was stripped, vapour blasted, rebuilt and housed in a powder-coated custom T45 tube and bronze welded frame. A bespoke matching swingarm was added with Ohlins shocks. The Ohlins forks and custom billet brackets brace the Brembo calipers and twin 320mm floating discs.
    CRC 6 5
    The yokes, instrument mounts and rear sets were all customed out of billet, and the tank, seat unit and front mudguard were alloy constructed in-house. The six Keihin flat-slide carbs had a full dyno set up. The exhaust system is a bespoke Racefit titanium 6 into 2. A custom loom powers a Dyna ignition and coils. The creamy paint finish is by Khameleon Customs and the upholstery courtesy of the mercurial Stan Leathers.
    CRC 6 7
    The spec list runs to several pages, but what is immediately clear is that this bike is as every bit beautiful as is it engineered. In the metal, it’s simply breathtaking. The result of hundreds of hours of dedicated craftsmanship, the CRC6 is a perfectly balanced hybrid of the contemporary and the classic, that stays true to the spirt of the legendary A40 cafe racer.
    CRC 6 8
    Will and Simon are currently splitting their time between customer commissions and projects of their own, including the equally outstanding soon to be featured Suzuki GSX1100 powered Magnum. See more from Cafe Racer Customs on their website and here on The Bike Shed.