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    samedi 16 août 2014

    4x4 Rigs You Need To Own Before You Die - The Dirty Dozen


    4x4 Rigs You Need To Own Before You Die - The Dirty Dozen
    We took an informal poll amongst our friends with the biggest beards, dirtiest boots, and roughest hands to find out not only what they drive but which previous vehicle they owned was “the one that got away,” the one that makes their neck snap when it passes.
    “These vehicles stand out in a sea of minivans and cute utes”
    Instead of filling the list up entirely with Jeeps or military vehicles, our intention was to create a well-rounded list of vehicles that serve a distinct purpose, not only the specific vehicles that would be on our list but the type of vehicles you should experience in your lifetime as well. Criteria included capability in stock form, simplicity, styling, aftermarket support, and standing out in a sea of minivans and cute utes. Do any of our readers own all dozen of these vehicles?
    Vintage Short Wheelbase: Ford Bronco
    We could have filled a whole Top 10 list just with this category, as there are many choices with classic styling, solid axles, and metal dashes. Land Cruisers are great. Scouts are great. But the ’66-’77 Ford Bronco gets the nod for its coil front suspension, optional V-8 engine, and excellent axles.
    Alternates: Chevrolet K5 Blazer, International Scout, Jeep CJ5, Land Rover Series I, Toyota Land Cruiser FJ40
    Cheap Beater: Suzuki Samurai
    While you might be afraid to dent your Early Bronco and hurt the resale value, that is never an issue with a Samurai. If you can fit behind the wheel of one of these pint-sized wheelers, you owe it to yourself to drive one. They are inexpensive, easy to modify, and surprisingly capable, and they provide more smiles per dollar than anything else we have ever driven.
    Alternates: Geo Tracker, Jeep Cherokee, Suzuki Sidekick, Toyota pickup
    Military Machine: Deuce and a Half
    Anything with Olive Drab paint and numbers and letters stenciled on the side is cool. The common theme with military vehicles is that they are overbuilt and underpowered and can handle whatever you want to throw at them. But if you are going to do it, you might as well go big, and the M35 Deuce and a Half is big—really big. Don’t try and park one of these in your driveway in the city. Better opt for a Mighty Mite.
    Alternates: CUCV, HMMVW, M37, M38A1, M151, M715
    Diesel Truck: 12-Valve Dodge Ram
    Modern diesel trucks are quiet and powerful, but they lost the simplicity, mileage, and pleasing clatter of early diesels. The Cummins 6BT is the engine that started the modern diesel revolution. It is possible to triple the original horsepower without taking the valve cover off. The transmissions used behind these engines don’t like triple the horsepower, but the rest of the drivetrain is plenty stout.
    Alternate: 7.3L Ford Super Duty
    Portal Axle’d: Mercedes Unimog
    Portal axles are like cheating on the trail. They move the centerline of the axlehousing higher and have reduction boxes at the ends for gobs of ground clearance. Plus, Unimogs come with crawl ratios that make Toyota pickups jealous and factory selectable lockers, and have features that fit several other categories on our list (like expedition vehicles and exotic imports).
    Alternates: Hummer H1, Pinzgauer
    Expedition Vehicle: Toyota Land Cruiser FZJ80
    Overland travel is the hot fad right now, and despite appearances it can involve more than just bolting accessories to your vehicle and going camping. A proper expedition vehicle is comfortable enough to drive every day and capable enough for whatever challenges might present themselves. The coil suspension, ladder frame, and solid axles of the Land Cruiser make it our top pick. Like most Toyotas, these things are way overbuilt.
    Alternates: Land Rover Discovery, Mercedes Gelandewagen
    Modern Truck: Ford Raptor
    There is something to be said for a truck you can finance at the dealer, is covered under warranty, and still has the chops to hit the trail. The Raptor is an amazing truck right out of the box, with a 400hp V-8 engine, Fox bypass shocks, and 35-inch BFGoodrich All-Terrain tires. Strong aftermarket support makes owning the Raptor even better. Kudos to Ford for building this truck. We wish that other manufacturers would follow Ford’s lead.
    Alternate: Dodge Power Wagon
    Vintage Truck: Chevy K1500
    Stepside Any pickup from the ’70s is cool, particularly if it’s a stepside. Chevy takes the cake though with the legendary small-block engine, excellent transmission options, and ability to bolt in 1-ton axles from a K3500. Just do us a favor and skip the modern paint jobs and 20-inch rims.
    Alternates: Dodge Ram, Ford F-150
    Über-Capable: Rock Buggy
    Until you have driven a legit tube car, it is hard to fathom just how capable they are. The stability and visibility are unmatched, making hard obstacles easy and the impossible possible. We aren’t talking about a leaf-sprung pickup with the body replaced by some tube, but an actual well-engineered buggy like the Twisted Customs rig shown here.
    Alternate: Cab truck
    Car That Thinks It’s a 4x4: Baja Bug
    True, these VWs are not 4x4s, but what they lack in low range they make up for in ground clearance. Bugs rival the Samurai for cheap thrills, and despite being way down on power compared to a Raptor, they have the potential to keep up with Ford’s best in the desert for a fraction of the price. The rougher the terrain, the more the little air cooled Volkswagens shine.
    Alternate: Subaru Brat
    Exotic Import: Land Rover Defender 110
    Anything that we cannot get in the U.S. is automatically desirable and certain to retain its value and appeal. Make it diesel with a storied history and air of luxury, and the desire grows. That is why the long-wheelbase Defender gets the nod over a lot of very cool Toyotas.
    Alternates: Ford Ranger four-door, Nissan Patrol, Toyota BJ70 pickup, Toyota Hilux diesel pickup, Toyota HJ45 pickup
    Infinite Build Options: Jeep Flatfender
    If you only get one vehicle on this list, it should be a flatfender. In fact, you could have 10 different flatfenders built 10 different ways. They are truly the blank canvas of the 4-wheel world. Fully restored. Rockcrawler. Sand drags. Ice racing. Even rat rod. There are just too many ways to build a flatfender. Use caution though, because there are as many ways to build a flatfender wrong as there are to build one right.
    Alternates: None!

    RUSSELL MECANICA KATIUSKA


    Katiuska 1
    The shed is about taking a bike and making it different, making it unique and most importantly making a statement, this Honda nx650 certainly ticks all of those boxes and more. This bike is guaranteed not to be to everyone’s taste, but that’s ok, individuality is what customising is about and if everyone loved the same thing; the shed wouldn’t exist!
    Katiuska 3
    I spent over an hour looking at this bike, my thoughts on it are all over the place, there are parts that I think are pure class and others that I think; why? This build by Eduardo of Russell Mecanica has drawn me in; it has got me thinking not just about the bike before me but also the owner. The bike was built for Ruben, and without Ed telling us; I had already guessed that he was an extreme sports fan, but if it wasn’t for being informed that he already has a Harley 1200 Sportster, I would have assumed he was around the same age as the donor bike, but whether he is a 21 year old lad or a middle aged bohemian, it really doesn’t matter, the bike has enough zest within it to turn back the years on all of us.
    Katiuska 5
    The donor bike was sourced from Nomade Cycles in Madrid and after giving it a thorough inspection to certify it was in good shape, Ed started to strip it down, he knew he wanted to run with a twin exhaust system and that the bike was to be skinny and nimble to give Ruben a different riding style to his current steed.
    Katiuska 4
    The obvious stand out feature is the paint work, both the Lambretta tank and the skateboard were painted by Eduardo’s friend, Genova Bilbao, it’s so vibrant and brings an extended level of fun to a bike that will undoubtedly be a hoot anyway. In addition to the paint, the skateboard… head board also wears a pair of trucks with wheels, these are being uniquely utilised to house the front indicators.
    Katiuska 6Continuing the Lambretta theme, the riders seat is a modified Lambretta perch whilst the pillion seat is handmade, although I don’t see any rear footpegs, so they will have to dangle their legs, or wrap them around the rider; perhaps the later is what Ruben is hoping for!
    Katiuska 2
    The headlight is from… no not a Lambretta, close though; it’s a Vespa, originally mounted on the mudguard of the donor scooter, it continues to be mudguard mounted, only onto a hand made one, offset there’s a generic yellow lensed spot light for additional lighting support.
    The standard rims look to have been subjected to the same treatment most kids skateboards get; plastered with cool stickers from all your favourite brands, I personally love this touch, it adds more vibrancy and uniqueness to the bike… as if it needed it!
    Tyres are purposeful, ready for the city yet capable of taking the rider down some loose dirt tracks when the chance arises.
    Katiuska 8
    The original subframe was ditched and Eduardo fabricated the slender tail unit you see here, it had to house the electrics, the seats and give the exhausts their high level location, it also has a splash guard to reduce incessant air filter cleaner!
    Katiuska 7
    So to sum it up, it’s a youthful, quirky, fun, unique, dynamic, and bold young thing… 21 years young! There will be lovers and there will be haters, but it doesn’t matter, the best customs divide opinion, and the only one that matters is Rubens… and he loves it.
    For me; my favourite bits have to be the spot lamp, the rims, the tank choice and its vibrant paint scheme.
    Huge thanks to Eduardo for sharing, to see more of his work check out the Russell Mecanica page within the shed where we have his last 2 builds.
    via The Bike Shed

    Los Muertos Motorcycles "Bat Outta Hell"

    Los Muertos Motorcycles "Bat Outta Hell" from Los Muertos Motorcycles on Vimeo.

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