ACE CAFE RADIO

    dimanche 19 juillet 2015

    Here For Your Soul - The Devil’s Own Tow Truck


    by
     

    Imagine you’re the Devil. Keeping all those badasses in line that have descended through the gates of hell is hard work. Now imagine how annoying it would be when occasionally one of them breaks out of purgatory and returns to walk among the living? Now that’s just plain bad for business. You’re the original sinner, right? Something has to be done. People need to know who’s the boss…
    The Devils Tow Truck Finland-4
    What’s needed here is a mercenary who can go and catch those errant souls and return them for an eternity of lockdown. What would he drive? Only the baddest, toughest tow truck known to man, woman or beast. A vehicle that would make Chuck Norris quake as it pulls up.
    The Devils Tow Truck Finland-1
    Which is exactly what I found in Finland last summer. Whilst driving back  to the UK in a Mk1 Cortina I’d bought, I stopped in for some Friday night cruising in downtown Helsinki. There I stood wide-eyed, while the amazing atmosphere of a couple of hundred like-minded gearheads was shattered as this Chevy-cabbed creation rolled into view.
    The Devils Tow Truck Finland-7
    I say shattered because that’s exactly what it did. There are strict laws in Finland when it comes to modifying cars, but older commercial vehicles? Well it’s almost a free rein when it comes to those, which is why you may have noticed the alloy radiator dominating the front end view of the six-wheeler. Peering inside, I catch sight of the AutoMeter gauges as the waft of methanol lingered in the slow summer evening air.
    The Devils Tow Truck Finland-8
    Glancing up at the row of battered and dusty sunglasses gave me the idea that this would be the perfect vehicle for collecting souls – as though they’d been left there as trophies.
    The Devils Tow Truck Finland-2
    I managed to convince the owner it would be a good idea to meet up over the weekend so I could take a closer look. Amazingly, the truck has been finished for nearly three years and he’s never let anybody shoot it before. I’m not sure quite what swung it for me, but I’m sure glad he agreed. The cab had sat around for ten or fifteen years – hence the weathered look – and those four rear wheels are full-size lorry items. Just check out the clearance on the front pair! The virtually non-existent rear suspension means rubbing isn’t an issue.
    The Devils Tow Truck Finland-3
    There are old oil cans and a box of bits on the back, but what’s obvious is that none of this is contrived. Far from it – this is the real deal. The owner has been been and done it, raced it and blown it up. This is how he’s lived his life for a long time and there’s no reason to change now because somebody came along and gave it a label.
    The Devils Tow Truck Finland-10
    There’s only one area I’m not allowed to show you and that’s under the bonnet. Normally this would mean a no-go for me and I wouldn’t have pursued a shoot, but really? Look at this thing. How could I walk away? The owner waited until I didn’t have a camera anywhere near me and briefly lifted the bonnet. I can assure you this thing is the real deal. A blown methanol big block? Rumours have it over 1000hp is on tap.
    The Devils Tow Truck Finland-5
    So instead of showing you the engine, as our driver went to leave I shot a short video.
    There are a couple of things to look and listen for: first up is the pair of almost unnoticeable fire bursts that leave the exhausts just after start up. Then there’s the engine tone of course, then the haunting noise of the towing hook clanking on the metal spar after he guns the engine. Make sure you listen until the end too – that last blast of acceleration is over a half mile away by the time it echoes back. Badass? 100%. Please excuse the shaky camera action, I had the wrong lens on for filming and this was a case of take what you’re given… Now are you a believer?
    Because there are souls out there that need collecting. Adios.
    Bryn Musselwhite

    Will the McLaren F1 ever be surpassed?


    Conceived during an off-the-cuff conversation between Ron Dennis, Gordon Murray, Creighton Brown and Mansour Ojjeh while waiting at Milan airport in 1988, the McLaren F1 was (and quite possibly always will be) the ultimate, zero-compromise driver’s car…

    Driver-centric

    The McLaren F1 is special for myriad reasons, not least for the fact that it was the world’s first carbon-composite production car. From the outset, the driver was at the forefront of the design process, with almost every part rigorously thought out, and produced in-house to Dennis’s near-obsessive standards. The beautifully finished cabin, in particular, is the work of genius, with everything that you need– space, air-conditioning, satellite navigation and a CD-changer, for example – and nothing that you don’t. It was this thought process that made the F1 so versatile; as at home on a cross-continental road-trip, as pounding around a racetrack. 

    Bonus brake horsepower

    With this in mind, outright speed and performance were never the key factors in the early days of the project. But when Murray heard that Paul Rosche’s new, naturally aspirated BMW V12 was producing 627bhp, some 75bhp more than what had been specified, he quickly forgave the fact that it was 16kg overweight – ultimately, the speed was just a bonus. Revealed for the first time at the Sporting Club in Monaco during the 1992 Formula 1 Grand Prix weekend, its worldwide reception was said to be ‘simply ecstatic’, and perhaps inevitably, prices have been creeping up ever since. 

    That personal touch

    The dark tangerine-coloured car presented here – chassis 073 – was the 63rd F1 built, and is one of just two road cars fitted with the 691bhp engine from the LM, a special road-going version of the race-going GTR, built by McLaren to commemorate its 1995 Le Mans victory. Additionally, it has the GTR-inspired High-Downforce Kit (with extra louvres atop the front wheel arches and a Gurney flap at the rear), and a number of unique touches such as black dials (complete with engraved chassis number) and forged multi-spoke OZ wheels. What’s more, Gordon Murray himself has hand-signed the exposed tub in the cabin – a mastermind’s seal of approval, if you will.
    Delivering the best of both race and road F1 variants, #073 will be offered by RM Sotheby’s as part of The Pinnacle Portfolio at its Monterey sale on 13 August 2015 – a rare opportunity to own what is commonly considered the holy grail of modern motoring...
    Photos: Darin Schnabel courtesy of RM Sotheby's © 2015.
    You can find the full catalogue for RM Sotheby's Monterey Sale listed in the Classic Driver Market. 

    Make the most of your time off with Weekend Heroes

    Been up to much this weekend? After watching this beautifully shot short film from Weekend Heroes, featuring two 1980s Bavarian legends, we suspect you might steal one last drive before Monday morning arrives...

    Weekend Heroes - BMW M1 / ALPINA B7 from Weekend Heroes on Vimeo.

    Dream.......