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    jeudi 10 septembre 2015

    Expedition Overland's Central America Expedition Ep9

    The crew barely makes their way through the border into Nicaragua allowing the team explore the back roads on active Volcanoes while the girls in Morocco face some serious challenges in the final stages of the rally. 


    Outlaws trailer starring David Beckham

    Outlaws trailer starring David Beckham from Vogue Video on Vimeo.

    A Déesse delight at Bonhams’ Chantilly Sale


    The Maserati Boomerang might have been hogging the limelight of Bonhams’ forthcoming Chantilly Sale, but several other ultra-special classics – including this Citroën DS 19 Cabriolet Pre-Series – will also cross the block, several of which have never come to market before…

    Brilliant Bugattis

    Aside from the one-off Maserati Boomerang concept (which we featured in-depth just last week), two exquisite Bugattis spearhead the 30-lot sale. The earlier car, a regal 1938 Bugatti Type 57 Drophead Coupé (est. €1.4-1.7m), was once owned by French artist André Derain, while the other, a1954 Bugatti Type 101C coupé Antem (€1.5-1.8m), is one of the very last (original) Bugattis built.

    Too close for comfort...

    Claude François fans, listen up: you could drive home in the very Mercedes 450 SEL in which the famous French singer endured an (high-profile) attempted assassination in 1977. The estimate is on request only. Another one-off Maserati protototype to be sold, the elegant Frua-bodied (Gordon Keeble-esque) Mexico, will surely reach its €450,000 lower estimate given its uniqueness and the ‘Best of Show’ at the Maserati Centennial Concours d'Élégance Turin 2014 it carries under its belt.

    The connoisseur's choice

    For the connoisseur, there is the 1925 Lorraine-Dietrich B3-6 Le Mans Torpedo Sport in which Henry Stalter and Edouard Brisson finished third at Le Mans in 1925. Eligible for a host of prestigious historic events and benefitting from the same ownership for 39 years, it carries a pre-sale estimate of €600,000-1m. The savvy collector might have missed his chance to buy a Ferrari 550 Barchetta from new, but the market cherishes these limited-run Ferraris, as evidenced by the €280,000-360,000 estimate on Bonhams’ stunning, one-owner grey car.

    A French Goddess

    The one-of-two Aston Martin Sportsman Shooting Brake (€350,000-550,000) and 1959 Ferrari 250 GT Coupé boasting some unique features (€450-550,000) are both interesting, but our pick of the sale goes to the majestic 1961 Citroën DS 19 Cabriolet Pre-Series, believed to be the oldest surviving Chapron-built ‘factory’ DS Cabriolet (€170,00 -230,000). Cest magnifique!
    Photos: Bonhams
    You can find the entire catalogue for Bonham’s Chantilly Sale, to be held on 5 September 2015, listed in the Classic Driver Market. 

    Bug vs. Zag – the weirdo heroes of the Super Mario generation


    The poster heroes of the ’70s and ’80s have become the rising stars of recent years, but what’s the next hot trend on the horizon? We gathered two bold, brilliant (and strikingly yellow) icons of the Super Mario generation: a Bugatti EB110 SS, and an Alfa Romeo RZ…

    A visual challenge

    Of course, aesthetics are entirely subjective – but both the Bugatti EB110 SS and the Alfa Romeo RZ(Roadster Zagato) are remembered for being the most ‘visually challenging’ designs of the 1990s. While the stylists of the era were moving back towards more organic shapes, Zagato bucked the trend (there’s a surprise…) and stuck to its line-rules, creating a stubby SZ coupé, then an even stubbier-looking convertible version. Meanwhile, the likes of Gandini, Giugiaro, Bertone and Tjaarda all had a go at styling a ‘modern Bugatti’, before the cousin of the would-be company saviour Romano Artioli devised the EB110 as we know it. Consequently, the supercar had a strong Italian influence – indeed, the EB110 factory was in Modena, not Molsheim – but the final design still carried its fair share of French flair.

    Charm in abundance

    What both cars lacked in traditional beauty, however, they more than made up for with charm – each had an intrinsically likeable character, even more so when specified in their respective shades of yellow. Only three EB110 Super Sports were ordered in such a colour (famously, Michael Schumacher owned one of the others), while the Zag’s zesty hue was one of only three available for the SZ’s convertible adaptation, and became a popular choice. On our shoot, the duo’s chosen colour schemes seemed quite attractive to a nearby wasp’s nest, too.

    Yellow perils

    After swatting away our inquisitive flying friends, it’s time to fire up the odd-jects of their affections. If you’re expecting the aural drama to match the visual, then you might be left disappointed. The Alfa’s 3.0-litre V6 purrs quietly into life and, more surprisingly, the ignition of the Bugatti’s 3.5-litre quad-turbo V12 is equally civil. It’s only on the move (and beyond 5,000rpm) that the Bug’s alter-ego reveals itself like some sort of yellow Hulk, the 610bhp smashing your back into your bucket seat, and the whistling wastegates howling in your eardrums with every gearchange. So, there’s the drama you wanted. Keep the turbos placated with lower revs, however, and the Bug is as docile as you’ll ever need it to be – not to mention it has a cosseting cabin, and a clever four-wheel-drive system.

    Decapitating the monster

    Meanwhile, the Alfa’s gloriously smooth V6 acts as a perfect tonic to the jagged styling, filling the air around you with notes stolen from a Pavarotti concerto. What’s more, with the gearbox mounted at the rear, the handling is delightfully neutral, despite the loss of rigidity that’s to be expected from decapitating ‘Il Mostro’. Of course, you’ll have to forgive a few other quirks of 1990s small-scale production – the Zag’s panel gaps are about as coherent as its overall appearance, while the Bug’s air-conditioning loses the battle to the heat of the V12 behind you at low speeds – but ultimately, both are just as usable in the real world as any of their contemporary equivalents. Well, if there are any.

    Analogue excellence

    As such, both represent an epoch in which driving dynamics were all but mastered in analogue form, before the digital revolution prevailed. Plus, as we’ve seen recently with Testarossas and 930 Turbos, it’s the poster cars that come to define an era – and these were the heroes of the Super Mario generation, likely to find further fortune as the ’90s babies become tomorrow’s moneyed enthusiasts. Limited production numbers again help their collectability – both are the rarest members of their model families, in turn making them among the scarcest post-War offerings from their respective marques.

    Ahead of their time

    “Both these cars were ahead of their time. I doubt anyone will ever build a V12, four-wheel-drive, quad-turbo car ever again – the engine was designed from scratch, too, not bought in from somewhere else,” says Max Girardo, the auctioneer who will offer both cars at RM’s London auction on 7 September 2015. “Likewise, with the RZ, it was Alfa Romeo and Zagato meeting again but ‘retro’ wasn’t yet popular at that time. These were the last two wacky designs, just when everyone else was calming down – now, everyone likes a wacky car. People say that this era has a real future, and this is about as ‘Nineties’ as it gets.”
    Photos: Tom Shaxson for Classic Driver ©2015
    EUR 68 353 - 95 694