ACE CAFE RADIO

    vendredi 12 septembre 2014

    VINTAGE EDITION - SIDEWAYS


    Editor’s Note: While shooting the trail ride for the story “Old School is in Session” (Nov. 2007), one of the participants, Reid Norden, shared with us some vintage race photos taken of his dad, Orrin, back when he raced Jeeps for Brian Chuchua’s Jeep in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He graciously offered to share the photos and stories behind each with all of us.
    This one is from the 1967 Baja 1000 is of my dad and his co-driver on their way to LaPaz in their Brian Chuchua, 2WD CJ-6. Brian thought it would be a good thing to run a two-wheel-drive Jeep in this class. From the story I was told, they won their class, but Jeep would not say anything about it because the Jeep was only two-wheel drive during a time when they were really pushing the capabilities and adventure of the 4WD.
    This is Brian Chuchua’s Jeep Wagoneer that’s prepped and ready for a race with my mom standing by it looking like an early 1970s model. I’m not 100 percent sure what race they were getting ready to go to, but I remember the Waggy and a fiberglass-body Holy Toledo going as well.
    The No. 8 CJ-5 was the first Jeep my dad bought new. He used it for hunting and salvaging crashed war planes in the Southern California area. The race was the short-lived Riverside GranPrix that was held in the riverbed of the Santa Ana River near Riverside, California. This Jeep was tuned by Richard Umphress (Dicks Automotive) in Westminster, California, and was a class winner many times on the figure-eight course.
    The No. 90 Jeepster was at the Parker 400 in 1972 when they actually drove half the race in California and the other half in Arizona. This Jeepster was part of something my dad and his crew were promoting as the Americana Jeepsters.


    From: http://www.fourwheeler.com/whoops/1419-vintage-edition-sideways/#ixzz3Cx4h6PqB
    Follow us: @fwmag on Twitter | fourwheelermag on Facebook

    Aston Martin Lagonda Shooting Brake digitally imagined


     Aston Martin Lagonda Shooting Brake digitally imagined

    Should happen

    The 2014 Aston Martin Lagonda has been rendered by Theophilus Chin in the appealing Shooting Brake body style.
    Aston Martin sold the classic Lagonda between 1976 and 1990 and over the years it received special variants including a Shooting Brake conversion by Swiss company Roos Engineering using a 1987 series 3 Lagonda. Now, Theophilus Chin has decided to apply the same body style onto the revived Lagonda, creating what looks to be one of the biggest and sleekest wagons ever.
    Aston Martin Lagonda Shooting Brake render
    It’s too early to say whether Aston Martin will create such a version taking into account the regular four-door sedan hasn’t been launched yet in production guise. Since the standard Lagonda was developed to meet a “specific market demand”, the same thing could happen for this potential Lagonda Shooting Brake if there will be enough requests from the Middle East where the sedan will be sold in a limited series of less than 100 units at an undisclosed price tag probably topped only by the One-77.
    Aston Martin Lagonda Shooting Brake render

    plage

    jeudi 11 septembre 2014

    Day 4 | BMW GS Trophy 2014

    The GS Trophy enters its second half and Team CEEU strengthen their lead.
    After three consecutive high-mileage days, the BMW Motorrad GS Trophy riders today were allowed some respite, with a stage distance of 230km it was set to be less a strenuous day. Only it wasn’t! The day again featured a ‘black run’ to properly test the riders’ technique and ended with a suitably physical Canadian theme – the ‘Logger Games’.