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    samedi 25 avril 2015

    ’74 Rickman Metisse by 66 Motorcycles


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    Written by Martin Hodgson.
    The name Rickman carries a pedigree like few others in the motorcycle industry, when it is followed by Metisse you are dealing with royalty, the king of custom frames built by two genius brothers with racing in their DNA. But what you have before you is no off road scrambler, but a 100% street legal urban tracker that can be easily returned to its roots in no time at all. An original classic or a ball tearing street weapon, it’s a 1974 Rickman Metisse with Triumph power built by Australia’s 66 Motorcycles and is simply known as “The Brit”.
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    For those not familiar with the Rickman brand it was a creation of two very successful Scrambles racers of the Golden Era, Don & Derek Rickman. Despite great on track success throughout the late 50’s and into the 60’s they became less and less impressed by the machines the big factories were turning out. So rather than complain they put their engineering minds together and started building frames and components that could accept an array of factory engines. Instantly they were on track winners and every man and his dog wanted one, so they entered into limited production runs and the rest they say is history. The bike before you sports one of Rickman’s Metisse frames built in 1974 to accept a 750cc Triumph engine, a popular combination at the time. Normally a Rickman Matisse would stay untouched, but the owner wanted his Metisse street legal, designed for on road rather than dirt bike riding and it had to be able to be converted back to original specs.
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    That’s no easy task but 66 Motorcycles are masters of turning wrecks to riches, now starting with quality they built a masterpiece. The bike was stripped down to its bare frame and some serious elbow grease was put in to restore the shine of the nickel plated frame. The recently rebuilt engine to competition specs was in fantastic condition internally but needed work to bring its aesthetics up to Metisse style standards. To give the front end more road appropriate performance a set of Yamaha XS650 forks have been rebuilt to the desired specs. A set of custom triple trees have been modified to accept the XS stem while modern tapered bearings provide precise steering. To pull this urban warrior to a rapid halt is an industry leading 4 pot Brembo caliper mated to a 320mm disc with power provided by a Nissin master cylinder.
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    The Metisse frame by the Rickman brothers is a thing of beauty, over engineered, welds to die for and nickel plating mean the body work needs to be first class to match. 66 Motorcycles picked up a highly polished aluminium tank from Japan and then set about modifying it to fit the frame and give the look they were after. The tracker rear is also aluminium but was designed to fit a Triumph Thruxton, but with considerable work including narrowing and shortening, it now fits the frame like it was meant to be. The seat is upholstered in period leather with just enough padding to soak up the odd bump.
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    Making the Metisse street legal required the fitting of indicators, horn, headlight and tail light, a set of idiot lights and a mirror to see the traffic disappearing behind you. And while the Metisse frame is magnificent, 1970’s electrics are not, so a new wiring harness was made to run all the road going requirements and an Anti Gravity 4 cell Lithium battery has been located under the seat to provide a strong 12v.
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    The front rim is a Morad item laced to an XS hub while the Dunlop K180 tyres provide both the look and the grip that are befitting of this modern Metisse. The finished machine by 66 Motorcycles is simply a thing of beauty and one the Rickman brothers would no doubt give their approval. Now its owner has the keys to an urban assault warrior that can easily be converted back to the original scrambler classic just the way it was born, as Don used to say, job done!
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    via PIPEBURN

    WRC, Argentine : Serein, mais tendu…


    Il faisait encore nuit noire quand les DS3 WRC/Michelin leaders du Rallye d’Argentine 2015 ont quitté le parc d’assistance de Villa Carlos Paz. Direction Capilla del Monte, tout au Nord, et deux heures de liaison avant l’ES7. 
    Prévue à 7h00, la première assistance a été avance de 40 minutes suite aux modifications du parcours de cette 2e étape du Rallye d’Argentine. En effet, celle qui devait être la plus longue spéciale du rallye (San Marcos-Characato, 56,77 km), a été ramenée à 42,50 km, les 14 premiers kilomètres étant un bourbier impraticable.
    Kris Meeke et Mads Ostberg sont sortis leaders du chaos de la première journée qui a éliminé ou retardé huit pilotes officiels. Sébastien Ogier, Andreas Mikkelsen, Ott Tanak et Hayden Paddon sont repartis en Rally2 ce matin. Meeke devance Ostberg d’1min08s, alors que Latvala est 3e à 1min23s5 du leader.
    Chez Citroën Racing, on ne se souvenait plus vraiment depuis quand deux DS3 WRC avaient été en tête d’un rallye WRC. Et bien c’était ici, en Argentine, il y a deux ans, quand Sébastien Loeb et Mikko Hirvonen avaient bénéficié des déboires de Seb Ogier dans l’ES7.
    Ce matin, l’ambiance était à la fois sereine et un peu tendue chez les Rouges. « Kris a bien dormi », affirmait Marek, le Team-manager. « Il est très concentré. On sait que la journée va être difficile ». Appuyé contre un montant métallique de la structure Citroën, Kris Meeke avait les yeux rivés sur sa DS3 WRC que les mécaniciens terminaient de bichonner. Pour eux aussi, la pression était forte.
    Mais elle l’était encore davantage sur les épaules du Britannique, conscient que ce rallye est encore long, mais aussi du fait qu’avec 1min08s d’avance, il n’a jamais été en aussi bonne position pour remporter son premier rallye mondial, le premier pour la Grande-Bretagne depuis le Safari Rally 2002 (Colin McRae). Et ce week-end, c’est un peu de Safari dont il s’agit…
    Au signal de Paul Nagle, Kris s’est installé dans sa DS3 WRC. Il a quitté le paddock Citroën sans un mot, sans un regard. Serein, mais tendu…

    Barnato's glory lives on in the Bentley Mulsanne Blue Train


    Inspired by the antics of pioneering ‘Bentley Boy’ Captain Woolf Barnato, the Bentley Mulsanne Blue Train marks 85 years since the historic race between Barnato’s Speed Six saloon and the Calais-Mediterranée Express train…
    Attending a dinner in 1930 at the Carlton Hotel in Cannes, the then-Chairman of Bentley Motors, Captain Woolf Barnato, placed a £100 wager among his peers on being able to reach The Conservative Club in London before ‘Le train bleu’ reached its destination in Calais. Barnato and his Speed Six won the race, reputedly with several minutes to spare.

    Unique dashboard veneer

    To celebrate this emphatic win, Bentley has unveiled the Mulsanne Blue Train by Mulliner at the Techno-Classica show in Essen, Germany. Showcasing a number of design interpretations and references from the original race-winning Speed Six, the Blue Train’s dashboard fascia also contains a handcrafted veneer image of the original car. Just four of these limited-edition Mulsannes will be produced.
    Richard Charlesworth, Head of the Bentley Heritage Collection, comments: “The Blue Train is one of the most famous and celebrated cars in the world, and it perfectly embodies the racing spirit of the Bentley. Woolf Barnato was a three-time Le Mans victor, but winning the Blue Train race captured the public’s imagination, and fuelled the legend of the Bentley Boys. By beating the Calais-Mediterranée Express he forever guaranteed the Speed Six’s place in automotive history.”
    Photos: Bentley
    View the full range of Bentleys for sale in the Classic Driver Market. 

    CHEAP, FUN, AND FAST: YOU’RE GOING TO WANT A CYCLEKART


    Cycle Karts
    by Brian Driggs 
    Photography by Brian Driggs
    I’m a gearhead. A proper gearhead.
    My fingernails are almost perpetually greasy. Vehicle maintenance, modification, and repair projects eat into my life in ways I’m still not sure warrant humility or pride. I’m loyal to my brand—Mitsubishi—and have been doing 20 years of DSM chest-thumping, but the right Porsche, BMW, or Alfa Romeo (okay, okay, any Alfa) still takes my breath away.
    I say all this not to assert status, rather to suggest I'm just like you—one who shares your values, sees the world in similar fashion, and genuinely wants to share something incredibly exciting with you. So here we go. How much money would it take to complete your current (or next) project? Go ahead, add it up.
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    So what would it take? $10,000? $20,000? More? What if I told you the singular motorsport experience of your life could be had for $1,500? That's not a typo. One thousand, five hundred dollars.
    Don't believe me? It's true! Just ask Johnny Dumfries, Otto Pilotti, Blackie Carbon, Reginald Molehusband, Alfonse Roche, Wilf Barnauto, Alessandro Cagno, or Guy Gadbois, all infamous CycleKart racers. Never heard of them? I’m not surprised. I hadn’t either, until I met Dennis Thomas, who introduced me to CycleKart, the next big thing in motorsport—and told me how they all take on nom de pilotes behind the wheel.
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    You can do a Google Web Search for "cyclekarts" and read hundreds of pages of forum posts and technical articles. Until you've actually run one down a residential street at speeds of 40mph (60 km/h); but until you've heard the little 4-stroke engine thrumming away right behind you; until you've felt the wind in your face—until you've experienced oneness of man and machine as it was meant to be experienced—you just can’t fully appreciate the excitement of CycleKarting.
    What's a cyclekart? Well, first you need to know what a cyclecar is: One hundred years ago, as vehicles were getting larger and more complex, gearheads like us began building simplified cars to fill the gap between motorcycles and full-sized cars.
    Often small and lightweight, cyclecars, as they were called, were characterized by inexpensive build materials and often dodgy engineering. Their low cost made them accessible to the masses. And what happens when the masses get their hands on inexpensive, lightweight vehicles? That’s right. It isn’t long before we’re racing them.
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    The first formal cyclecar race was held in France in 1913. The Cyclecar GP took place at Le Mans in 1920. World War I, followed by advances in production technologies—which allowed larger automakers to undercut cyclecar prices with models like the Citröen Type C and Austin 7—however, spelled the end of the cyclecar era.
    Until now. Cyclekarts are here, and they’re inexpensive, fun, and fast. The simplest description I might offer, having had only sampled this automotive delight, would be asking you to imagine the most tasteful intersection of go-kart, vintage open wheel race car, and maybe a pirate-slash-cowboy barbecue birthday party.
    We’ll begin with the karts themselves. Mostly built on the Stevenson Formula, named for now departed CycleKart Creator Emeritus Peter Stevenson, a typical cyclekart shares a common wheelbase, drivetrain, and overall mechanical layout. The pull-started, air-cooled, 200cc Honda GV200 4-stroke, with 5.5bhp and 9.1tq on tap, is the hot ticket item, mated to a single rear wheel via clutch pack or—if you're feeling racy like my host, Dennis Thomas—a centrifugal torque converter. The other rear wheel gets a mechanical disk brake setup.
    A modest leaf spring setup and direct steering connections in the front pretty much round out the systems bolted to the weld-it-yourself boxed steel frame. It's all wrapped in an inspired piece of homemade vintage kit, fashioned from hand-rolled aluminum, fiberglass, or vinyl laminate over wood.
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    Inspired? Exactly. Chief among cyclekart baby steps is finding your inspiration vehicle. An 1919 A.V. Monocar? 1925 Ford Speedway Racer? 1930 BMW 318PS Wartburg? Knock yourself out. Find a pre-War open wheel machine that speaks to you, and study it carefully, taking in its shapes, curves and lines.
    While you’re searching, join cyclekartclub.com and start reading. Read until your eyes are bloodshot: learn about the Stevenson Formula and how others design and build their karts. And, perhaps most importantly, find someone in your area who’s building or has already built one.
    This article is easily 30% longer than Petrolicious wanted, so I need to wrap things up.
    I tend to struggle with keeping it brief when I’m writing about something I truly care about. I’ve been chasing drag racing and stage rally dreams for nearly 20 years. The last three years have found me getting into four-wheel-drive off-road machines and overlanding. “Playing with cars” has been at the center of my life for most of my life. But I’m here to tell you—one gearhead to another—nothing I’ve experienced compares to these wonderful little machines.
    It seems a perfect idea for petrolistas. Cyclekarts aren’t about absolute speed or performance. They aren’t about clinical, historic accuracy or matching numbers. One evening in Phoenix, AZ showed me what they’re all about: it’s a light-hearted homage to the early days of motorsport, when building a race car meant more than putting parts onto a credit card. It’s about homemade, 250 pound (110 kg) go-karts with timeless style, bombing quickly around streets, sharing the pure joy of motoring with friends and family—for less than $1500…all-in.
    You want to do this. Trust me. I'm a gearhead like you. And I haven't felt this good behind the wheel in a long time, if ever. Find—or better, be—the cyclekart owner in your town. Just don’t forget to create an exciting nom de pilote for yourself. 
    Cycle Karts