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    jeudi 26 mars 2015

    What not to miss at the 73rd Members’ Meeting


    With so much going on, wandering aimlessly around the 73rd Members’ Meeting means you’ll miss out on some of its most extraordinary, ‘only at Goodwood’ moments. Here are the 10 spectacles you really should make time to see…

    Sibling shoot-out

    Handicap races at Goodwood date back to the Golden Era – Stirling Moss chasing two-wheel World Champion Geoff Duke being a memorable example. However, this year’s Meeting will see a single-marque showdown between a Mercedes-AMG F1 car (happily, a V8 example), the new Mercedes-AMG GT road car, and the legendary ‘Rote Sau’ 300 SEL, the latter driven by Jochen Mass. The staggered starts have no doubt been finely tuned, so it's just as well that IWC is in charge of timings.

    High-speed demos

    One of the highlights at last year’s 72nd Members’ Meeting was the high-speed demonstration laps performed by Group C monsters, which were bracketed by a pair of Ferrari F40 safety cars. This year, not only do grids of McLaren F1 GTRs and ‘high-airbox’ F1 machines join the endurance legends in the parade lap roster – but there will also be a notable absence of pace cars. Considering the competitive nature of the drivers in action, this could get very interesting…

    Pre-1967 Porsche showdown

    Interest in early Porsche 911s seems to snowball year on year, and 73MM will see them given their own race in the form of the John Aldington Trophy. The grid is formed of pre-1967 cars, so there will be a refreshing absence of ducktails and Martini liveries. Only the purest, 2.0-litre SWB cars have been invited, so the level playing field will promote fierce competition between the drivers – one of which is Porsche legend Richard Attwood.

    Grid walks

    Members’ Meetings provide a better opportunity to get up-close-and-personal with your heroes (whether man or machine) than the Festival of Speed or Revival and, for the first time, spectators will be allowed to wander round the grid, getting closer than ever before. The grid walks will take place on three occasions across the weekend.

    When darkness falls...

    Last year’s dusk race was the Sir Stirling Moss Trophy: an hour-long race that began as the light was starting to dwindle, and also incorporated a driver change for added drama. The drama was certainly there, with first place decided by a car length. This year’s equivalent is the Graham Hill Trophy, in which Aston Martin DB4 GTs, lightweight E-types and Shelby Daytona Coupés will fight into darkness.

    1981 Spa front row

    The front row of the Gerry Marshall Trophy will replicate that of the 1981 Spa race, with a thunderous, Bastos-livered Chevrolet Camaro Z28 lining up alongside an ex-TWR Mazda RX-7, the eventual winner. Another vibrant sight will be the Ford Escort Mk2 RS2000 – the first Jaegermeister car ever to compete at Goodwood – along with a BMW 530i with UFO Jeans livery, and a Rover 3500 SDi in Sanyo colours.

    Bonhams auction

    Bonhams’ inaugural Members’ Meeting auction begins at 2pm on the Saturday, and includes cars of road, race and rally orientation. A particular favourite of ours is the ‘Bumble’ MG Magnette that competed at last year’s Revival – we’ve highlighted some other interesting lots in our auction preview.

    Dealers become drivers

    It’s not only famous racing pilots and well-heeled gentleman drivers battling it out for on-track kudos – many dealers are in action, too. Gregor Fisken is a returning entrant, as are William I’AnsonDesmond J. Smail, Martin Brewer of Runnymede Motor Co., and the Cottingham brothers of DK EngineeringJD Classics will also field three cars, and Bonhams’ Motor Car Specialist David Swig will drive in two different races.

    Brum and games

    The Members’ Meeting has an underlying theme of rivalry between the four Houses, and those GRRC Members who aren’t driving for their team will have the opportunity to score points in a variety of games. As well as traditional ‘School Sports Day’ activities such as egg-and-spoon races and Tug of War, you can also try duck-herding or a leisurely game of boules on the March Lawn.

    Test your pitstop proficiency

    We’ve all been guilty of sniggering at a pit-stop mishap. Now, karma has indeed come full circle, and is waiting for you to take up the challenge of showing your own timed tyre-changing skills (or lack thereof) on an F1 car. And you never know, an ex-F1 driver might be one of the baying bystanders...

    Party time

    For many, the Saturday night party is reason alone to make the trip to Goodwood. As well as spectacles such as fireworks, fairground rides and a cross-dressing nun who rides around on ‘her’ own mobile piano, you’ll also be rubbing shoulders with Lord March and most of the weekend’s drivers.
    Photos: Goodwood / Rémi Dargegen / Tim Brown /Amy Shore / Classic Driver

    BMW K1600 GTL CUSTOM PROJECT


    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    At the Osaka Motorcycle Show, BMW Japan has just thrown the wraps off two extreme customs based on the K1600 GTL. That’s the range-topping luxury tourer, a road-going spaceship powered by a 1649cc inline six—and probably packed with more electronics than any other motorcycle on the market today.
    Just two builders were chosen for these transformations, and both are legends in the Japanese custom world: Keiji Kawakita of Hot Dock Custom Cycles, and Kenji Nagai of Ken’s Factory.
    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    The results are very different to the four machines we revealed a few months ago for theR nineT Project. They’re not ‘new wave’ or café-style customs: this is free-form building from two of the most radical and skilled craftsmen in the East.
    Let’s take a closer look.
    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    HOT DOCK ‘JUGGERNAUT’ The K1600 GTL is an imposing machine in its own right. Weighing 767 lbs (348 kg) fully fueled and almost 2.5 meters long, it’s a bike for experienced riders.
    Kawakita-san has amped up the visual bulk, with completely new aluminum bodywork from nose to tail. Powertrain mods are restricted to a new airbox and custom-fabricated muffler: the engine already provides a wall of torque, and enough power to propel the K1600 to 200kph.
    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    The exoskeleton effect gives a militaristic, almost steampunk vibe—helped by aluminum pipes following the contours of the new body panels and matt grey paint.
    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    The engine cases have been refinished with an aging effect, which is carried through to the switchgear mounted onto custom bars.
    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    Brass gauges on either side of the tank carry the name Herschel—a nod to the German-born astronomer who discovered Uranus in 1781 and joined the court of King George III.
    We imagine it’s the kind of machine that would star in the upcoming movie Mad Max: Fury Road.
    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    KEN’S FACTORY SPECIAL Kenji Nagai has opted for drastic surgery on his K1600 GTL, creating a low-slung dragbike stripped to the essentials.
    The entire rear end of the frame is gone, and the front has been stretched and raked. There’s a custom-made billet girder fork up front, plus a one-off 23-inch aluminum alloy wheel hooked up to a custom 11.5-inch rotor.
    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    Out back is a solid disc 20-inch wheel, suspended with a stretched swingarm and spectacularly illuminated by a LED brake light. It’s shod with 220-section Avon Cobra rubber.
    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    The bodywork is the bare minimum: raw, curvaceous aluminum forms that throw the emphasis onto the massive frame spars and the equally hefty engine. Even the seat is aluminum—but this is not a bike for long distance touring.
    It’s one of the most inspired styling exercises we’ve seen for years.
    BMW K1600 GTL Custom Project
    via BIKEexif

    Climb astride this 1979 BMW K100 café racer, a true black beauty


    Looking like it just left the set of a Mad Max movie, this sinister all-black BMW K100 custom is a one-of-a-kind stripped-back café racer.
    Powered by a longitudinally mounted, 1,000cc four-cylinder engine, producing around 90bhp in standard form, this shaft-driven K100 is an unusual choice for such a renegade-inspired ride.

    Stripped back for maximum thrills

    The removal of all fairings and the standard headlight creates a daring look that could cause quite a reaction from other motorists and pedestrians. We think it’s fair to say that you won’t find many other BMWs like this. The BMW’s ageing electrical system is also cleverly replaced by modern electronics: minimalist speedometer, tachometer and flashing handlebar-end indicators are highly creative solutions to the fussy-looking originals. It all combines to give the bike a light and sporty elegance, albeit with rugged off-road tyres fitted.
    View a wide range of BMW motorcycles in the Classic Driver Market.

    respiration .........