ACE CAFE RADIO

    samedi 28 juin 2014

    RUOTE RUGGINOSE MINERVA


    Minerva 1
    For a motorcycle named after Minerva – the Roman Goddess of War – you may have expected a touch more brute force and anger apparent in the finished form, but it was Minerva’s less aggressive tendencies, specifically her patronage of craftsmen, that prompted her name to grace this beautiful little Ducati.  Simone Ceccarelli from Viterbo, near Rome, is the man for whom the Goddess played Muse and she surely would be delighted by the level of craftsmanship which he has bestowed upon his creation.
    “I love old Motorbikes with a racing attitude and a little bit of artistic blood” begins Simone, the one man band behind Ruote Rugginose or Rusty Wheels (not that there is anything rusty about these wheels!).  A 1971 Ducati 250 mark 3 procured from a deaf, grumpy, old motorcycle collector provided all the stimulus he needed to let his artstic ideas flow.
    Minerva 3
    “The Vision was a racing motorbike (café racer if you want) that recalled classic materials like wood, brass, iron, glass and bronze, belonging to the past.”  This desire to vary his use of materials manifests itself most strikingly in the fairing, which Simone with help from friend Davide Aresi, fabricated out of wood.  No doubt Davide’s job at KD Kustom furniture benefitted in this extraordinary process. At first glance you would never realise this bold choice of material such is the execution of the finished product, yet it adds a warmth, beauty and unique talking point to the little machine, channelling the Italian artisan cabinet makers of yore.
    Minerva 2
    When Simone was finished with the planes and wood saws he turned to more traditional motorcycle tooling to cut and clean the frame before creating the long curvaceous tank and classically profiled tail piece out of fibreglass. The seat unit conceals the minimal electrics and was finely upholstered by Alessandro Starace Seats. The exquisite 250 single was then restored and tuned before slotting back into the black frame married to a wrapped exhaust.
    Minerva 7
    The Beretta wheels were donated from another vintage Ducati and are pulled up short by Racing Grimeca drum brakes.  The handlebars came courtesy of Menani, and are fitted with the original Domino throttle, Menani also provided the rearsets. The forks have been slid through the yokes to maintain the long, low sloping lines of a racer, pushing the single Smith’s RPM guage high into the fairing.  To light the way a headlight from an unknown origin has been secured low to the left front fork, allowing that masterfully smooth fairing to be free from interruption.
    Minerva 8
    The paint has a base of gold leaf with a candy red overcoat and was applied by Greaser Garage in Genova, the colour ties in beautifully with the deep lustre of the wood, the combination of matte and deep shine finishes satisfying the initial ambition to recall and combine classic materials.  Simone entered the bike into the IMC Italian Motorcycle Championship and was delighted with both the response and his third place in what must have been a very stiff competition.
    Minerva 5
    The Goddess must no doubt be proud to have her monicker emblazoned upon the product of Simone’s year of hard work that embodies traditional Italian craftsmanship in a two wheeled form. Glorious stuff Simone, and fittingly beautiful Italian picture locations, we look forward to seeing what the future holds for Ruote Rugginose!
    The Bike Shed 

    Moto GP Assen :Márquez s’impose à nouveau dans la Cathédrale d’Assen/ Fantastic Marquez maintains winning form in complicated TT race


    Marc Márquez a décroché sa huitième victoire en autant de courses depuis le début de la saison 2014 samedi à l’Iveco Daily TT Assen, dans une épreuve qui avait commencé sur piste mouillée. Andrea Dovizioso, brillant et sur le podium pour la deuxième fois de la saison, et Dani Pedrosa étaient à ses côtés sur le podium.

    Décidément, rien n’arrête Marc Márquez (Repsol Honda), pas même les difficiles conditions météo d’Assen, où l’épreuve de la catégorie MotoGP™ a été déclarée course sur piste mouillée quelques minutes avant le départ. 
    Seul pilote en pneus slick sur le tour de formation, Valentino Rossi (Movistar Yamaha MotoGP) rentre immédiatement aux stands afin de passer sur pneus pluie, quitte à devoir partir de la pit-lane, en compagnie de Broc Parkes (PBM), victime d'un problème technique quelques instants plus tôt.
    Deuxième sur la grille derrière Aleix Espargaró (NGM Forward Racing), Márquez réussit son départ mais se fait brièvement devancer par Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati), qui aura au final été son seul réel adversaire ce samedi aux Pays-Bas. Sur piste mouillée mais en l’absence de pluie, Márquez et Dovizioso creusent l’écart et rentrent en même temps aux stands dans le cinquième tour pour repartir sur leurs secondes motos chaussées de pneus slick. Les deux pilotes sont imités par la plupart de leurs concurrents alors que Jorge Lorenzo (Movistar Yamaha MotoGP), Bradley Smith (Monster Yamaha Tech3) ou encore Stefan Bradl (LCR Honda) attendent un peu plus tard pour effecteur le changement.
    La piste est néanmoins encore mouillée et Márquez part à la faute dès son premier tour sur slicks. Reparti du garage Ducati sur le pneu tendre réservé à la catégorie Open, Dovizioso en profite pour prendre le contrôle de la course ainsi qu’une bonne avance sur le Champion du Monde en titre. Ce dernier rattrape cependant ses quatre secondes de retard sur l’Italien un peu plus tard et le passe dans le quatorzième tour pour ensuite filer vers la victoire. 
    Andrea-Dovizioso-Ducati-Team-NED-WUP-573340
    Derrière eux, Aleix Espargaró (NGM Forward Racing), qui, comme Dovizioso, roule sur pneu tendre, rivalise avec Dani Pedrosa (Repsol Honda) pour la troisième place mais abdique en fin de course, se contentant volontiers de la quatrième place.
    Passé par les stands sur le même tour que Márquez et Dovizioso, Rossi réalise sur la seconde partie de la course une impressionnante remontée pour finir dans le Top 5 après s’être battu avec Andrea Iannone (Pramac Racing), Álvaro Bautista (GO&FUN Honda Gresini), Bradley Smith (Monster Yamaha Tech3) et Cal Crutchlow (Ducati).
    Stefan Bradl (LCR Honda) prend quant à lui la dixième place, devant un formidable Broc Parkes (PBM), dans les points pour la deuxième fois. L’Australien termine devant Scott Redding (GO&FUN Honda Gresini) et Lorenzo, qui aura de nouveau connu bien des déboires à Assen après s’y être fracturé la clavicule l’an dernier.
    Mike Di Meglio (Avintia Racing) prend au final la vingtième place tandis que Pol Espargaró (Monster Yamaha Tech3) est le seul pilote à abandon.
    Grâce à cette huitième victoire consécutive, Márquez dispose de 72 points d’avance sur Rossi et Pedrosa, désormais ex aequo. Dovizioso passe quant à lui devant Lorenzo, à la quatrième place, avec dix points de plus que le Majorquin.
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    MotoGP™ World Champion Marc Marquez produced a masterclass in difficult conditions at the Iveco Daily TT Assen to make it eight wins from eight races in 2014, ahead of fellow podium finishers Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) and Dani Pedrosa (Repsol Honda Team) - after an entertaining flag-to-flag contest.
    Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team, NED RACE


    In a race which started after a delay due to wet conditions Marquez judged the 26-lap challenge to perfection, running with Dovizioso at the front in the early stages and asserting his authority as the riders changed to dry set-up machines on the seventh lap.
    Marquez eventually clinched the win by 6.7s seconds to become the first rider since the great Giacomo Agostini in 1971 to win the first eight premier-class races of the year.
    Dovizioso stepped onto the rostrum for the second time in 2014, with Pedrosa completing the podium after holding off the pursuing Aleix Espargaro (NGM Forward Racing) for several laps. Espargaro rode well to hold fourth, having started on pole on the ‘Open’ Forward Yamaha.
    Valentino Rossi (Movistar Yamaha MotoGP) took fifth having shown great pace in the second half of the race, his problem being a late decision to swap back from slicks to wets at the start. Rossi started from pit lane on wets, therefore, and recovered considerable ground before and after eventually the swap back to slicks.
    Andrea Iannone (Pramac Racing), Alvaro Bautista (GO&FUN Honda Gresini), Bradley Smith (Monster Yamaha Tech3), Cal Crutchlow (Ducati Team) and Stefan Bradl (LCR Honda MotoGP) completed the top ten.
    Broc Parkes (Paul Bird Motorsport) rode superbly to 11th having started from pit lane following a problem on the warm up lap. Pol Espargaro (Monster Yamaha Tech3) retired with six laps to go after crashes on slicks and then wet tyres.

    TRIUMPH ENDURO BY 32 TO ONE


    triumph_enduro_motorcycle_3
    The Triumph Scrambler has quickly become a prime target for custom motorcycle builders, it’s based on the Bonneville and because of this, there’s a huge aftermarket parts catalogue rivalled only by the likes of Harley-Davidson.
    The Triumph you see here started life as a Scrambler, before being rebuilt after it was wrecked with just 900 miles on the odometer. Santiago Ares decided to take the project on and it all started with a strip down – to gauge the damage and begin the process of figuring out what could be kept and what needed to be thrown out.
    Santiago is a long time fan of the classic enduro motorcycles of the ’70s and so he saw this build as an opportunity to take a Scrambler and turn it into its own arch rival. One of the first new additions to the bike was that huge Baja 1000 headlight, apparently it throws out as much illumination as a Cessna’s landing lights – meaning that drivers can see the bike coming from a very, very long way away.
    He then called in the services of Mark, a former Boeing engineer with some serious fabrication capabilities. Mark hand-built the new aluminium dashboard and bash plate – Personally I much prefer it to the official Triumph part.
    A new ProTaper handlebar was then added, with Joker levers and grips by British Customs. A set of lightweight scrambler pipes were bolted into place and the bike was finished off in a colour from the Porsche catalogue by the team at Perfection Auto.
    The completed bike is weighs in at 25lbs less than stock and has improved off-road abilities according to Santiago – who makes a regular habit of taking it up abandoned fire roads whenever he has the chance.
    If you’d like to see more from Santiago, you can visit his website here.
    triumph enduro motorcycle 22 1480x982 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    triumph enduro motorcycle 19 1480x1064 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    triumph enduro motorcycle 18 1480x982 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    triumph enduro motorcycle 12 1480x982 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    triumph enduro motorcycle 9 1480x982 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    triumph enduro motorcycle 8 1480x982 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    triumph enduro motorcycle 7 1480x982 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    triumph enduro motorcycle 6 1480x982 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    triumph enduro motorcycle 2 1480x982 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    triumph enduro motorcycle 1 1480x982 Triumph Enduro by 32 To One
    via SILODROME

    A Transformation with a History: 1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona Group 4


    1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona Transformation Groupe 4
    Images thanks to Artcurial
    The only 365GTB/4 with period racing history in Asia, this car has a unique history and is immaculately well prepared. It’ll head to auction at Artcurial’s upcoming 2014 Le Mans Classic Sale.
    It was originally imported into Singapore, where it remained unregistered until 1979 and was used purely as a competition car in events such as the Kallang Sprint, Dover Kilo and Pasir Gudang.
    1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 DaytonaTransformation Groupe 4
    When it moved on to its second owner it was handed to Customer Support at Maranello for preparation work, before changing hands again and going to Stanley Long, who competed with the Singapore Motor Sports Association, Johor Motor Club and Classic Car Club of Hong Kong.
    After an accident in the early ’90s the car was rebuilt to Group 4 Specifications, and 2001 saw it survive an engine fire, for which it received body repairs in Singapore before going to England in 2003 for a complete mechanical re-build by GTO Engineering.
    1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 DaytonaTransformation Groupe 4
    Having survived an eventful three and a half decades the car entered a quiet period in the mid ’00s, eventually being registered in 2012 and making its way to its current owner.
    The car is in great condition with superb Group 4 preparations and FIA documentation that’ll gain it entrance into the world’s most prestigious historic events. Storied and sorted, it looks like a great buy.
    It’ll head to auction on July 5th, 2014, at Le Mans Classic 2014 by Artcurial Motorcars, and you can get the full details at Artcurial’s official website here.
    Via Artcurial
    Images thanks to Artcurial
    1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 DaytonaTransformation Groupe 4
    1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 DaytonaTransformation Groupe 4
    1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 DaytonaTransformation Groupe 4
    1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 DaytonaTransformation Groupe 4
    1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 DaytonaTransformation Groupe 4