ACE CAFE RADIO

    vendredi 28 août 2015

    ADAC Eifel Rallye Festival (July 23-25 2015) Daun


    The 2015 ADAC Eifel Rallye Festival (23. – 25. July 2015) was a great success and a party for many generations. From toddlers to grandfathers, the Rally Mile in Daun and the demonstration stages were buzzing with spectators. Right from the shakedown on Thursday afternoon and the Welcome Evening presented by the Autostadt, the three-day event that ended on Saturday night with a Rally Party was well-received.

    One hundred and fifty historic rally cars – all of them being famous rally cars or faithful replicas – turned the Eifel region into a mecca for rally enthusiasts. These cars were driven by crews from fifteen countries and four continents. Heading a horde of amateur drivers were the four ex-World Rally Champions Walter Röhrl, Hannu Mikkola, Stig Blomqvist and Timo Salonen. With the addition of Sandro Munari – the winner of the 1977 FIA Cup for Rally Drivers – you had five of the world’s best rally drivers ever in this fifth edition of the event.

    The winners of the event
    One of the key elements of the event is that there is no competition and no sportive winners. Thus winners were selected by a jury of experts in different categories. The Nissan 240RS of Achim Loth and Sebastian Jeub was selected as the „Best original rally car“. This original Safari Rally car was a complete wreck before Loth brought it back to Europe and restored it so nicely.


    The prize for the „Best replication“ went to the Fiat 131 Abarth shared on the stages by Walter Röhrl and Timo Salonen. The car was built completely new from a road car shell by Kevin Theaker of Rally Sport Developments. The English company designed and produced all the special parts itself and have already made three others.

    Austrian film-maker Helmut Deimel was garlanded as „Rallying Ambassador“ for his outstanding rally films such as The Evolution of Rallying Vol. 1 and 2.


    The five champion drivers Röhrl, Munari, Mikkola, Blomqvist and Salonen also selected their favourite rally car and gave it the “Champion’s choice” award. This went to the original 1977 Monte Carlo Rally winning Lancia Stratos owned by Guido Avandero.


    Europe’s biggest classic car magazine, Oldtimer Markt, gave out its own prize, the so-called “Durchhalte-Pokal” (Endurance Cup) for a team that really had to fight to get to the finish of the Festival. This was awarded to Friedhelm and Julian Pinnen and their Talbot Sunbeam Lotus. After they had broken the Talbot’s steering following a hard landing on the Bosch Super Stage, the owner immediately drove to Duisburg (180 km north of Daun), picked up a new steering and came back. On Saturday morning, the new steering was built into the car and the father-and-son-team drove the rally to the finish.

    Enda Garvey from Northern Ireland was less lucky. The winner of the “Unlucky fellow award” had brought a Peugeot 405 T16 and a Toyota Corolla WRC but could hardly drive these. One reason was that the Pikes Peak Peugeot – the highlight of the Festival Parade - refused to run at the start of the stage thanks to a faulty petrol pump. The other was that, Garvey and his whole family were suffering from stomach problems.

     
    Quotes:

    Peter Schlömer, Chief Organiser and President of the MSC Daun: “Already on Thursday, the number of spectators was much higher than last year. And considering the weather on Saturday, we were surprised how many day tickets were sold that day. To have such an enormous following is a great reward for our work. But the best thing is that everyone was happy.”

    Reinhard Klein, Head of Slowly Sideways: “What is happening here is simply incredible. We have received an entry full of unique cars. By now, all drivers and spectators know that the Eifel Rallye Festival is an event which is only about fun and without any pressure. This is also the reason why Stig Blomqvist is joined by his wife in the co-driver’s seat.”


    Christian Geistdörfer, part of the organising team: “This was already the fifth Eifel Rallye Festival and it is really incredible. The great reception by the spectators is simply amazing. There are so many emotions involved between the drivers, cars and fans. We all can be proud of this Festival.”

    Andreas Hornig, Representative of the sponsor Autostadt: “The fascinating thing about this Festival is the proximity of the fans to the cars and drivers. On other events you often find separated VIP areas. But here the drivers are there and ‘touchable’. For us, the Eifel Rallye Festival is a great opportunity the show the Autostadt and the ZeitHaus, a great platform.” Hornig got the chance to join Röhrl in the co-driver’s seat of a Porsche 911 RSR for one stage and was delighted: “This was the ultimate experience. How he controls the car is pure art.”


    Walter Röhrl (Fiat 131 Abarth & Porsche 911 RSR): „It is just wonderful to meet so many of my former colleagues. It felt like a class trip with old friends. The atmosphere was simply fantastic. Already on Thursday there were many, many spectators in Daun and there were big crowds watching the action on Saturday, despite the bad weather. This shows what the people want to see. They love these old cars as their sound and their looks rouse emotions and memories.” 

    Sandro Munari (Lancia Stratos): „This is the best and most beautiful event of its kind. I am very thankful that I could be here. I had never expected that the young people know so much about me and the days when I was driving.”

    Hannu Mikkola (Mercedes 450 SLC & Toyota Celica 2000GT): „Apart from Renault and Saab I probably drove all rally cars in my career. But my favourite is still the Ford Escort. But it is also fascinating to see how well-presented the Quattro is here in Germany.”

    Stig Blomqvist (Ford Sierra RS Cosworth): „This is the first time for 25 years that I drove this Sierra. But I immediately felt at home. I am coming to the Festival every year and always like it here. This is date that I would not miss.” 

    Timo Salonen (Fiat 131 Abarth & Peugeot 205 T16): „This is like a class trip. It is great to experience how many young people are interested in our cars and stories though they weren’t even born back then.” Then the Finn, who was known for smoking heavily and even had an ash tray in his rally cars, added with a smile. “I thought that no one would recognize me after I stopped smoking eight years ago.”

    Mike Kirkland (Nissan 240RS): “I have never seen so many great rally cars in one place and with many of them being driven by their original drivers For me, one thing is for sure, the Eifel Rallye Festival does for the history of rallying what the Goodwood Revival does for the history of circuit racing.”

    Harald Demuth (Audi Sport Quattro): “That was just awesome. It is always impressive how good this car was back then. I hope the fans liked it as much as I did.”


    More information on: www.eifel-rallye-festival.de

    Freefly ALTA: Swing Arm City

    Freefly Systems gave us the chance to take the ALTA for a test spin in the desert.. so we loaded up our friends, forgot all our water and, took it to Swing Arm City.

    Freefly ALTA: Swing Arm City from Camp 4 Collective on Vimeo.

    RM Sotheby’s enjoys World-Record results at $172m Monterey auction


    RM kicked off the multi-million-dollar auction proceedings in Monterey on Thursday, with some strong results (and a few World Records) in the Pinnacle Portfolio sale…

    ‘RON 54’ returns home

    Ultimately, the headline results were the $17.6m paid for the Ferrari 250 LM, and the $13.75m for the ‘LM-spec’ McLaren F1 – the latter all the more desirable with its ‘Brilliant Orange’ metallic paintwork illuminated by the saleroom lights (it looked a little flat in the press shots). The 250 LM is supposedly heading back ‘home’ to England, where it will wear its familiar ‘RON 54’  UK registration plates, as it did when it was raced and driven home in period by its first owner, Ronald Fry.

    SWB slightly short of reserve

    Bidding on the open-headlamp LWB California Spider and the 250 SWB Competizione failed to reach the respective reserves (perhaps RM will wait a while before trying to sell another yellow comp-spec SWB?), but the internal disappointment will no doubt have been cured by World-Record prices for a Ferrari Enzo and F40 LM – the former garnering a whopping $6.05m thanks to its Papal provenance and last-example-built status, and the latter achieving $3.3m against a $2m - 2.5m estimate that we previously suggested might be a little conservative. Other lots that sailed past their high estimates included the $462,000 Jaguar XJ220, the $550,000 Porsche 993 RS 3.8, the $412,500 Dino 246 GTS, and the $495,000 McMerc SLR.

    That Friday feeling

    Friday’s sale saw RM clinch another World Record, this time with the $13.2m paid for the ex-Works/Ecurie Ecosse Jaguar C-type Lightweight (now the most expensive Jaguar ever sold at auction). Other strong results included $2.06m for Ghia’s stunning jet-age Jaguar, the XK120 Supersonic, almost $700,000 for the 2013 Aston Martin Centennial DB9 Spyder, and $242,000 for the ‘matching pair’ of Fiat 600s. The characterfully patinated Ferrari 275S/340 America Barchetta made $7.97m.

    Saturday success

    The conclusion of the three-part sale on Saturday saw the Ferrari 250 GT ‘Tour de France’ sell for a staggering $13.2m – a new World Record for the model, and almost treble the price of a similar example (albeit without the inspiratory TdF win under its bonnet-belts) at RM’s London auction less than a year ago. The impressive sum, along with the $8.5m private post-auction sale of the aforementioned Cal’ Spider, brought RM’s 2015 Monterey sale total up to $172.7m – doing things the ‘the RM way’ has paid off once again...
    Please note, all results are inclusive of buyer’s premium, and do not account for all post-auction sales.
    Photos: Rémi Dargegen for Classic Driver © 2015
    All the news from this year's Monterey and Pebble Beach events can be found in our regularly updated overview.

    Follow a judge at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance 2015


    As I played with the calendar functions on my phone, then ran the sums, it struck me as amazing that this was my 34th Monterey Car Week. The lapel pin marked my 20th year as a judge, and this time around I was a Chief Classic Judge, overseeing three classes of post-War sports and racing cars.

    Embracing evidence of use

    Pebble Beach from the inside is, and isn’t, what you’d think. In my honest opinion, it’s the best and most significant field of 200 great classic cars of all stripe to be found at any time, on any single day, anywhere in the world. It is not, or at least is no longer, a beauty contest purely for trailer queens. In fact, entrants are rewarded for their participation in the optional 80-mile Tour d’Elegance that takes place the Thursday before Concours Sunday. Our chief judge emphasises that we judge cars, not owners, and that over-restoration is neither rewarded nor encouraged. Evidence of use, enjoyment and maintenance are appreciated, and the old rumour about getting points knocked off for blades of grass stuck in tyre treads is simply not true.

    Heavyweight judges

    Our team of more than 100 judges is a knowledgeable, international group of collectors, transportation designers, restorers, racers, authors, historians and otherwise in-the-know types. In other words, they really know their stuff and work hard to judge fairly and even-handedly, to achieve the best and proper result. Which happens far more often than not. Nowadays, the show also wholeheartedly embraces preservation and survivor/unrestored machines with their stories, and often with their hard-earned patina intact.

    The big show goes big

    Pebble bristled with many anniversary recognitions and special categories this year, including a special roster of du Pont automobiles, those fashioned by Touring of Milan, Pope automobiles and the many high-points from the history of Lincoln and Continental. One particularly popular special class this year comprised Mercury customs – lead sleds of the 1950s, custom style by gents such as the Barris Brothers, Dean Jeffries, and other name-brand custom builders of the period. Pebble goes all out for Ferraris about every 10 years, and 2015 was one of them. Great road and racing Ferraris from every era dazzled the field with spectacular coachwork and singing V12 engines.

    Concours-worthy... Mustangs?

    Few thought they would ever see Mustangs on the vaunted greens of Pebble Beach, but this year a category of early and prototype Shelby GT350s put eight of Carroll’s great Mustang ‘sport cars’ on the turf. Sir Jackie Stewart strolled the field, holding court and the rapt attention of the many show-goers appreciative of the three-time F1 World Champion’s viewpoint and impressive career. Sir Stirling Moss, who has long served as an Honorary Judge, also strolled, chatted, and perused the field.

    A wrap for another year

    After all the results had been tabbed, four final nominees gathered at the foot of Pebble’s famous presentation ramp: three pre-War ‘heavy classics’ and an oddly wonderful-looking Abarth sports coupé. When the herald trumpets blared and the confetti and fireworks were launched, an absolutely commanding and uber-elegant 1924 Isotta Fraschini Tipo 8A bodied by Worblaufen took home the heavy crystal as 2015’s Best of Show winner. The triple black and heavily chromed stunner is the pride and joy of the Jim Patterson Collection, coming to Pebble Beach from Louisville, Kentucky, USA. Some consider this rare and perfectly proportioned droptop to be among Pebble’s best-ever overall winners.
    Special classes and commemorations for 2016 are pending and will be announced soon. And with luck, I’ll be back to judge for my lucky 21st time.
    Photos: Rémi Dargegen for Classic Driver © 2015
    All the news from this year's Monterey and Pebble Beach events can be found in our comprehensive overview.