ACE CAFE RADIO

    samedi 27 septembre 2014

    Moto GP : Márquez en pole pour le Grand Prix Movistar d’Aragón / Sensational Q2 performance puts Marquez on pole

    Dani Pedrosa, Marc Marquez, Andrea Iannone, Repsol Honda Team, Pramac Racing, ARA Q2
    Marc Márquez a battu le record du circuit qu’il avait lui-même signé l’an dernier au MotorLand Aragón pour décrocher sa onzième pole position de la saison 2014, devant son coéquipier Dani Pedrosa et Andrea Iannone.
    Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team, ARA Q2

    Marc Márquez (Repsol Honda) partira en tête de la grille MotoGP™ pour la quatorzième épreuve de l’année dimanche au MotorLand Aragón, sur le circuit où il avait remporté sa dernière victoire de la saison 2013. Le Champion du Monde en titre et leader du classement général a établi un nouveau record du circuit en 1’47.187, soit plus d’une demi-seconde de mieux que la référence précédente. 
    Son coéquipier Dani Pedrosa (Repsol Honda) et Andrea Iannone (Pramac Racing), qui était déjà en première ligne deux semaines plus tôt à Misano, sont eux aussi passés sous l’ancien record et s’élanceront des seconde et troisième positions après avoir fini à 0.362s et 0.498s de Márquez.
    Relégué à la quatrième position par Iannone, Pol Espargaró (Monster Yamaha Tech3) mènera la deuxième ligne devant Cal Crutchlow (Ducati), auteur d’un excellent dernier tour, et Valentino Rossi (Movistar Yamaha MotoGP). 
    Ce dernier avait dû participer à la séance Q1 et en signer le meilleur temps avant de rejoindre la Q2 et de finalement terminer sixième sur la grille, devant son coéquipier Jorge Lorenzo (Movistar Yamaha MotoGP), septième à 0.020s de l’Italien.
    Stefan Bradl (LCR Honda) et Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati), tombé sur son dernier tour, complèteront la troisième ligne. Premier pilote Open, Aleix Espargaró (NGM Forward Racing) sera dixième sur la grille de départ, devant Bradley Smith (Monster Yamaha Tech3), qui a chuté, et Héctor Barberá (Avintia Blusens), qui a profité de sa nouvelle Ducati pour se hisser en Q2 pour la première fois de l’année.
    De retour de blessure, Nicky Hayden (Drive M7 Aspar) et Mike di Meglio (Avintia Blusens) partiront respectivement des dix-huitième et vingt-troisième positions.
    Rendez-vous sur bwin pour découvrir les cotes de vos pilotes préférés et cliquez ici pour empocher votre bonus de bienvenue !
    Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team, ARA Q2
    The MotoGP™ Q2 session on Saturday afternoon in Spain resulted in Marc Marquez taking pole at the Gran Premio Movistar de Aragon, with Dani Pedrosa and Andrea Iannone also achieving front row slots.
    A new pole position record of 1’47.187 gave Marquez his 11th pole position of 2014 - and his 20thMotoGP pole in total - ahead of Sunday’s 800th premier class Grand Prix.
    Marquez led the way by a 0.362s margin having broken the pole record earlier in the session, only for Pedrosa to move into provisional pole position with a 1’47.549s, with Marquez responding on his final lap. Marquez was 0.617s quicker than his own pole record from 2013.
    The front row was completed by the consistently impressive Andrea Iannone (Pramac Racing) who has a new GP14.2 bike this weekend and qualified just under half a second behind Marquez.
    Row two will comprise rookie Pol Espargaro (Monster Yamaha Tech3),
    Cal Crutchlow (Ducati Team) and Valentino Rossi (Movistar Yamaha MotoGP), the Italian having earlier made it through from Q1.
    Valentino Rossi, Movistar Yamaha MotoGP, ARA Q2
    Jorge Lorenzo (Movistar Yamaha MotoGP) qualified at the head of the third row in seventh place, 1.059s behind the rampant Marquez. Stefan Bradl (LCR Honda MotoGP) and crasher Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) complete the third row.
    Aleix Espargaro (NGM Forward Racing) was unhappy at the end of the session as he was held up by another rider and qualified tenth.
    Bradley Smith (Monster Yamaha Tech 3) crashed with just three minutes to go, leaving him 11th on the grid and Dovizioso (Ducati Team) also fell minutes later. Despite advancing through Q1 on his new Ducati, Hector Barbera (Avintia Racing) was unable to set a lap time due to front end chatter problems – thus being classified 12th.
    Nicky Hayden (Drive M7 Aspar) qualified in 18th place in Q1 as he returns to Grand Prix action this weekend, whilst Karel Abraham (Cardion AB Motoracing) had big crash at the end of Q1 and ended up 17th.
    Jorge Lorenzo, Movistar Yamaha MotoGP, ARA Q2


    ‘12 Triumph Scrambler – See See Motorcycles


    Triumph0262.web
    Portland’s Thor is an interesting character with an even more interesting name. Not only does he run one of the largest custom bike shows in the world – The One Show – he also builds top notch bikes out of his shop, See See Motorcycles. He recently sent us this bike and included such a comprehensive write-up that we thought we’d run it as is. So we’ll pass you over to Thor to take you through his latest build, this tough looking Triumph Scrambler entitled ‘Gap Tooth.’
    Gap Tooth is a strange name for a custom built motorcycle. This is a fact I won’t dispute. Named Gap Tooth because Thor, the God of lightning, had a goat named “Tanngrisnir” which translates loosely to Gap Tooth. Tanngrisnir was his pet goat and when Thor became hungry, he ate ol’ Gap Tooth. After finishing his scrumptious meal, he would simply pile the bones up and poof, Gap Tooth would be resurrected as a live, stinky goat again.
    So I found myself building a 2012 900cc Triumph Scrambler, a bike which needs little modification straight from the factory. Not only that but many, many folks have customized this bike into many, many variations – all equally cool and different. The idea was to tear this beast apart and rebuild it just a tad more off-roady, a smidgen more scrambly. In a sense I wanted to chew up and eat a perfectly new Triumph just like the god of thunder and lightning.
    Triumph0241.web
    The first part of the build was to remove most of the plastic bits: front fender, turn signals, mirrors, headlight, taillight, seatpan, reflectors, side panels, and air box. Pretty standard stuff on most builds.
    We wanted to emulate some of the cues from Desert Sleds and Scramblers of the old days. Finding vintage parts that would work on a newer bike was tough. There are a lot of sensors and electrical components that make fitting old tanks nearly impossible. For one the fuel pump that bolts in the gas tank is entirely bigger than most gas tanks themselves. It is possible, and we had talked with others who had converted to an external pump. But what would be made up for with “looks” would be lost with reliability and usability, so we opted to use the stock(ish) tank.It was then modified with a centerline rib to match the old center welded tanks from vintage Triumphs. A small detail that would bring together the choice for front and rear fenders.
    A set of brand new ribbed fenders from LowBrow Customs had the correct diameter to the wheels and could be shipped in just a few days. After mocking the bike up a few times I had a realization… the tank pinches in at the center of the bike, throwing off all the lines of the frame motor, and seat. A new tank bung was fabbed in and raised the tank at the rear just over 1.5”.
    Triumph0274.web
    The basis of a Scrambler is a bike that could be ridden from home to the track, raced and ridden home again at the end of the day. Back in the day racers would pull the headlight, mount a number plate, and off they went. Keeping with this spirit, both headlight and tail light assembly is simple as possible to remove and install. The tail light was handmade by James Crowe of Crowe Customs – the quality is top notch. The headlight bucket was chopped back to give it the old Lucas style flat bowl.
    Another cluster simplification was to remove the tach. On modern Triumphs the tack is easily removeable however removing the speedo is a different story. The computer in the odometer will unable the bike when removed. Motogadget sells a computer to jail-break everything, but its spendy. A new set of the vintage bike bend Renthals were chosen for bars and capped with retro ODI Mushroom grips.
    Triumph0310.web
    Lets talk about the seat for a minute. The stock seat is BIG, massive in fact. its wide, long and flat. It makes sense why its like that if you have ever torn into a Scrambler, there are sensors, wires, batteries, frame, all kinds of stuff under there. We wanted more padding with a smaller footprint on the bike. The seat had to sit on the frame and cover the necessaries.
    A lithium-ion battery replaced the stock one opening up a bit more room, but necessatating a ton of wiring and wire removal. Digital Directiv Joe is just the man for the job, He is a true wizard with the electrical components. Building a new seat also meant changing the rear frame. About 9” of the stock frame was lopped off and replaced with a loop giving it the classic scrambler look.
    Triumph0319.web
    An Arrow exhaust was necessary because it sounds amazing and gives good amount of added power. The rear frame modification warranted some new exhaust brackets, easy. Suspension, the stock suspension is one area that needs a little modification straight from the factory. Some friends over at Progressive Suspension have the fix: external reservoir 970 series shocks!
    Triumph0353.web
    The wheels are steel, chrome, and clunky from the factory, not only that but the rear is a 16”. Something had to be done, 19” Excel rims were the answer. Given another chance to build the bike, it might be nice to use an 18” on the rear and keep the front at 19”. The overall look of the twin 19”s is great but limits your tire options to any flat track tire, or some obscure retro tires and maybe one or two DOT knobbys and basically any MX tire your heart desires.
    Triumph0405.web
    Removing the airbox looks clean and lightens the bike up by a couple pounds but man oh man does it create a cluster problem. Building the seat with a small hollow space underneath gives you just enough space to stuff in most of the crucial components. The seat cushion was carefully sculpted then sent over to New Church Moto to have the Chrome Bags HD Ballistic Nylon skin expertly applied, the final touch was the “Triumph” on the back painted by non-other than Ornamental Conifer.
    Triumph0388.web
    So how about the finished bike? Absolutely love it! Long distance trips no problem, offroad trails and dirt roads? There isn’t a ton of clearance but behaves a lot like a dirt bike – if you can man handle this beast it has amazing power!
    In the city, it’s surprisingly nimble and comfortable in traffic, ergonomics are upright and give you good visibility. One downside is the knobby tires are a little squirrely at times, but still a good time.
    via PIPEBURN

    bricolage

    vendredi 26 septembre 2014

    Top three pace for Repsol Honda pair

    Repsol Honda’s Marc Marquez and Dani Pedrosa each made a strong start to the weekend on Friday at the Grand Premio Movistar de Aragon.
    Dani-Pedrosa-Repsol-Honda-Team-ARA-FP2-577881

    Marquez, who rates Aragon as one of his favourite tracks, finished a chilly FP1 in third position, behind Andrea Iannone (Pramac Racing) and Aleix Espargaro (NGM Forward Racing). A time of 1’49.290s had Marquez just 0.295s behind pace setter Iannone on his updated Ducati.
    Pedrosa finished further down the order in fifth for the opening session.  FP2 two saw Pedrosa’s time improve by almost a whole second, down to a 1’48.734s. This put the experienced Repsol Honda rider third overall.
    Most of FP2 had Marquez comfortably leading by over half a second, however in the final stages Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) took advantage of a soft tyre to go top. Marquez remained second in the session, and overall, with a 1’48.328 set on his ninth lap.
    “Our first day here went well and I enjoyed riding in front of the home fans. I felt good on the bike and had a good pace, which is what we were focusing on the most today,” commented Marquez.
    He added “The track was quite slippery but I like it like this. However, tomorrow we will try to define which tyres to use and refine the setup, then see if we can get onto the front row for Sunday and have a great race.”
    Pedrosa commented, “We tried the soft and hard tyres and it is still difficult to say which is better on the rear, but the intermediate worked well for us on the front. We have to keep putting in laps at this circuit to improve our feeling, because this is a track where the tyres give plenty of grip at the start and then performance drops off, so you need to get used to finding pace with used tyres.”