ACE CAFE RADIO

    samedi 21 juin 2014

    TOP 5 KAWASAKI Z1 AND Z1000 CUSTOMS


    Top 5 Kawasaki Z1 and Z1000 custom motorcycles
    In the early 1970s, two Japanese superbikes ruled the roost: the Honda CB750 and the Kawasaki Z1. The Z1 was originally going to be a 750, but when Kawasaki got wind of the CB750 in the late 60s, they decided to up the ante by increasing capacity to 903cc.
    It was a wise move. On its launch in 1972, the Z1 wowed journalists with its 82 bhp output and 130 mph top speed. It was smooth and stylish as well as powerful, and buyers loved it. Upgrades ensued: In 1976 the Z1 was replaced by the Z900, and a year later, the Z1000.
    Later models didn’t quite have the charisma of the 1970s Zeds, so we’ve stuck with the early models for this Top 5. A little digging reveals some very tasty café racers—and builders on a quest for even more explosive performance.
    Kawasaki Z1 customized by Bulldock of Japan
    Bull Dock x Nitron Z1 There’s a whole subculture in Japan devoted to resto-modding Z1s. AC Sanctuary is the most prolific workshop, but we love this effort from Bull Dock. By Japanese standards it’s a subtle bike, with low-key paint in the brand colors of the British suspension specialist Nitron.
    The build follows the typical Eastern recipe: a reinforced frame, a motor bored out to 1015cc, Keihin FCR carbs, a trick exhaust and completely new suspension and wheels. Get the full specs here.
    Kawasaki Z1 customized by Racefit
    Racefit Z1 The English firm Racefit is well known for its exquisite race exhaust tubing, but owners Jon Keeling and Phil Atkinson are dab hands at building custom motorcycles too.This one has a big-tube Spondon frame, hooked up to 50mm Marzocchi forks and WP shocks.
    Wiseco pistons, Kent cams and Mikuni carbs ramp up the power output, and the wheels are lightweight Dymag items. The candy paint, from House of Kolors, is even better than you’d find in Tokyo: it’s the perfect evolution of the classic ‘root beer’ scheme.
    Photography by Paul Bryant of Kinetic Images.
    kawasaki-z1000-wrenchmonkees
    Wrenchmonkees #49 ‘Black Tuft’ If you check out the portfolio of Scandinavia’s top custom shop, you’ll notice it’s crammed with Kawasakis. Builders Per and Nicholas have a taste for retro Japanese superbikes, but not the gaudy, blinged-out resto-mods you’d find in Japan. This Z1000 is typical: stripped back, hotted up, and finished with a monochrome paint job. The motor has been rebuilt with a Wiseco big bore kit, and the swingarm, forks, wheels and brakes are from a later-model Suzuki sportbike. Low, fast and just about perfect.
    Kawasaki Z1000 cafe racer by Spirit of the Seventies
    Spirit of the Seventies #5 Commissioned builds are often compromises, but not this1979-spec Z1000 from one of England’s finest workshops. “Our plan was to improve the looks without removing any ‘Big Zed-ness,’ says SOTS’s Tim Rogers, “and also improve the performance—bringing it up to modern standards of going, stopping and turning.”
    That meant a rebore out to a whopping 1105cc, polished cylinder heads and Zircotec-coated exhaust headers. Keeping the show on the road are Triumph Daytona forks up front and a beefier rear wheel, housed in a customized Zephyr 1100 swingarm.
    Kawasaki Z1000 customized by Kurumazaka Motorcycles of Japan
    Kurumazaka Rickman Z1000 Kawasaki got ‘the look’ exactly right when designing the Zeds, so you rarely see radical makeovers or fairings. But this machine is not strictly a factory bike. It’s a Rickman special that had fallen into disrepair and has been painstakingly rebuilt by the obscure Japanese shop Kurumazaka. The classic nickel-plated frame has been tweaked to ensure that its looks finally match its performance, and the fairing and tank cover have been re-mounted with new brackets to improve the lines of the bike.
    The mechanicals have been refreshed or overhauled, with discreet additions such as new switchgear and LED lighting. And the new paint job? Pure gold, don’t you think?
    Top image: AC Sanctuary’s RCM-283 Z1. Last week’s Top 5 covered the best Modern Motorcycles for customizing.
    via BIKEexif

    Hervé Poulain and his BMW Art Cars in Zurich


    In 1975, he commissioned the first BMW Art Car, establishing a powerful link between motorsport and art. Last week, Hervé Poulain exhibited his legendary Art Cars in Zurich for one night only – so Classic Driver went along…
    In the mid-70s, at the height of the oil crisis, the idea of a crossover between cars and art was almost unthinkable. Yet French racing driver and auctioneer Hervé Poulain saw fit to bring these two worlds together, commissioning American artist Alexander Calder to paint a 3.0 CSL (which incidentally had a 3.5-litre engine) for its campaign at the 1975 24 Hours of Le Mans. The eye-catching car was an instant hit, and the following year saw Poulain line up at La Sarthe in a ‘graph paper’ CSL designed by Frank Stella. In 1977, a BMW 320i Turbo received the pop-art treatment from Roy Lichtenstein and, in 1979, Andy Warhol famously daubed a Group 4 BMW M1 in his unkempt wisps of wonder. The BMW Art Car phenomenon was alive, the most recent form of which was realised by the Jeffs Koons M3 GTR that took part in the 2010 Le Mans race. 

    Zurich welcomes art legends aplenty

     

    Six of the famous rolling canvasses – the first four cars and the M3 GTR being joined by Jenny Holzer’s ‘Protect me from what I want’ V12 LMR – were the star guests at a one-night-only exhibition held by BMW Switzerland at the future Meilenwerk, soon to open in Horgen on the shores of Lake Zurich. Also present was Hervé Poulain, today an auctioneer and co-owner of French auction house Artcurial. Describing his time behind the wheel of the 750HP Calder-CSL of 1975, Maître Poulain philosophised: “Speed is something noble, she gives us life.” We haven’t heard a better justification for motorsport in a long time. 
    Photos: Jan Baedeker for Classic Driver © 2014
    Want to commission your own BMW Art Car? You can find plenty of modern and classic BMWs for sale in the Classic Driver Market, and you could surely find a talented artist at Art Basel 2014.

    BOYS IN THE SAND 4H10.com

    BOYS IN THE SAND 4H10.com from 4h10paris on Vimeo.

    station