ACE CAFE RADIO

    jeudi 14 mai 2015

    Is orange the in-vogue car colour this season?

    Orange has been notably absent from the fashion colour merry-go-round for as long as we care to remember. But why, when the results can be so striking? We’ve picked 10 tangerine treats currently for sale in the Classic Driver Market…
    According to Goethe’s circle of colour, orange represents nobility. In psychology, it’s known as a mood enhancer, a stimulant, and is connected with lust. In Buddhism, the orange robes worn by monks are said to symbolise the highest state of perfection. So, when selecting your steed for the summer, why not be brave and choose a Ferrari, Bentley or Porsche in the eye-catching shade?

    10 orange originals for the summer

    Bicester Heritage celebrates 5th Sunday Scramble

    On 26 April, more than 1,000 vehicles dispersed across the Bicester Heritage site to mark the 5th Sunday Scramble. Classic Driver was there, bacon roll in hand…
    Hosted at the UK’s best-preserved ex-WW2 RAF bomber station, the Sunday Scramble is designed as an access-all-areas open day for historic car, motorcycle and aircraft enthusiasts. Visitors attending in historic vehicles are encouraged to arrive early for a hot breakfast, and to park in and among the roadways of the Technical Site. Now in its fifth successive year, we are happy to report the event was a resounding success, complete with period-correct atmosphere throughout.

    Hidden treasures

    Along with a grass airfield – which received numerous vintage aircraft during the day – the 348-acre site features a number of freshly restored buildings, many of which are now home to historic motoring and aviation specialists including Pendine Classics, Historit and Kingsbury Racing. There are many more untouched buildings (including huge aircraft hangars) yet to be restored.
    Philip White, Head of Business Development and Marketing for Bicester Heritage, told Classic Driver: “There was some spectacular machinery in and around our Technical Site and we were delighted with the turn-out for what was only our fifth Sunday Scramble. We are now focusing on the next event – Flywheel, a festival of pre-jet-age aviation, motoring and military endeavour, to be held at Bicester Heritage on 20-21 June.”
    Photos: Amy Shore for Bicester Heritage

    THE MOTORCYCLE AS ART: HAZAN MOTORWORKS’ DUCATI


    Max Hazan has a motto tattooed on his hand: “Ever forward in creation.” And he’s a man of his word, building intricate, unusual machines that willfully ignore the fickle winds of fashion.

    It’s an intensely individual approach, and one that has positioned LA-based Hazan at the top of the ‘motorcycle as art’ genre. He has entered the rarified atmosphere occupied by top-flight builders like Shinya Kimura, Chicara Nagata and Ian Barry of Falcon Motorcycles.

    This is the second Ducati M900 that’s been through the Hazan Motorworks weight-loss program. The commission came from an enthusiast in England, and Max was understandably reluctant about building a similar bike. But the appeal of the classic Ducati Monster platform was hard to resist.

    “I’ve always gravitated toward carbureted bikes, particularly air-cooled singles and twins,” says Max. “There’s much more creative freedom when you don’t have to factor in the peripheral parts that injected, liquid-cooled four-cylinder engines require. And they also sound the way a motorcycle should.”























    As always with Hazan Motorworks builds, Max began with a full-scale mockup. “I started with the engine, welded up the frame, glued a huge block of foam to it, and let the lines of the bike dictate what shape to make.”
    The foam technique allows Max to work in ‘real’ 3D, so he can analyze the proportions of every part. “I then transfer these parts directly to aluminum,” he says. “I’m often asked if I draw bikes first—and although I do enjoy the idea of drawing bikes and design them ‘in my head,’ it doesn’t translate to the finished product in the way that 3D shaping does.”























    On this build, Max has kept the M900 head tube and front engine mount, but remade the rest of the frame. The swingarm is a beefy Ducati 1098 item, which meant removing about an inch of aluminum from the back of the engine case and machining new pivot bushings. “Not an easy bolt-on modification, but it was worth all the work,” he comments. “The swingarm transformed the bike and gives it the stance that it needed.”

    The next focus was the sound. The full stainless steel TIG welded system may take you a few minutes to process: It looks like a snake wrapped around a tree branch. And it sounds more like a drag-racer Harley than anything else.

    Weight is just 360 pounds—around 165 kilos in metric terms—and the rebuilt engine puts out between 90-95 hp. Wheels are Carrozzeria forged items, with the front taken from a Ducati 916 and the rear from a 1098. They’re running 17-inch hand-cut slicks.

    The tachometer was based on images from the client showing an antique diver’s watch. So Max commissioned Buz Ras of Seattle Speedometer to machine a custom instrument, which is now recessed cleanly into the top of the tank. The rest of the electronics are hidden in a recess under the fuel tank, keeping the clean look around the engine.























    So how does it ride? I can say that it was unlike any Ducati Monster I have ridden before. The bike feels unbelievably light, and the front wheel lifts off effortlessly. The ergonomics are great for everyday riding and canyon carving: Not too low or hard on the wrists, but not too high and clumsy either.
    It was hard to get off this one.
    The motorcycle as art: Ducati MH900 by Hazan Motorworks.
    via BIKEexif