ACE CAFE RADIO

    dimanche 29 décembre 2013

    BMW R 1200 GS LC a Wunderlich-Scrambler



    With our “SpeedCruiser” on the base of a HP2 Sport and our Nakedbike “Piranha”, which arouse from a S 1000 RR, we have already proven our competence in creating brachial conversions. Both motorcycles convince optically and set new standards regarding performance and handling.

    Our Scrambler is now the evidence that our ideas are still expandable. In cooperation with our partner Sport-Evolution, a motorcycle specialist from Koblenz, we have completely disassembled the water-cooled 2013 GS, right after its release and constructed a genuine and impressive Scrambler.

    We have exchanged nearly everything of the GS. The telelever was replaced by a completely self-constructed top yoke. New camshafts, lighter connecting rods and forged pistons do now their job in a stronger engine, where the cylinder heads and wiring harness have also been completely renewed - inclusive sharper injection electronics. By the way, the framework, suspension, tank, wheels, seat and many other parts were also replaced.

    Now, the GS is definitely no longer a GS, it is a real Scrambler – to one hundred percent. Steve McQueen, the “King of Cool”, would have been delighted. And if not for this scrambler, to which other would the motto of the Scrambler icon McQueen fit better? „Racing is life, everything before and after is just waiting!“

    Auto Aerobics: ... and one, two, three, four, lift that wheel!


    Cars are solid, bulky objects, yes? Then you probably haven't come across Chris Labrooy's aerobic automobiles...
    Originally intending only to create a digital model of Brooklyn on a cold winter's day, English artist and 3D designer Chris Labrooy found things getting a little out of hand - as a roadside Pontiac suddenly developed a bizarre life of its own. 

    The Pontiac ballet of Brooklyn

    The idea of ​​auto aerobics was born. And things grew (and rolled, and stretched, and flexed) from there, as the Seventies road cruiser found new forms in the warm evening light of New York. Crazy, but also rather good, we think.
    For more artwork from Chris Labrooy, see chrislabrooy.com.

    PreviousNext Previous Next Alfa-fever at Artcurial's 2014 Retromobile sale in Paris


    The Artcurial auction on 7 and 8 February 2014 in Paris sees not only a stunning Alfa Romeo 6C 1750 SS for sale, but also a complete Alfa Collection with 43 post-War models from 1900 Super to TZ1...
    While Artcurial has not yet published the full auction catalogue, there is already enough to give Alfisti sweaty palms: such as that 6C 1750 SS, with its unique body. The car was in the hands of one owner for a full 58 years and has recently been comprehensively restored. 

    An Alfa TZ1 - and 42 other post-War models

    The complete Alfa Collection includes an example of every major model of the post-War period. The 43 Italian cars, including an Alfa Romeo TZ1 for an estimated 800,000-1m euros, are being offered in an Alfa-only auction on 8 February.
    More details at artcurial.com.

    repos !

    samedi 28 décembre 2013

    AUTO POLO


    Auto Polo Vintage Auto Polo
    There’s a a lot to be said for the sporting endeavours of the first motorists, “Auto Polo” is a long dead sport that set off in the early 1910s with one event even taking place at Madison Square Garden in New York City.
    The rules of the game were much as the same as for the horse based original version, there are goals at each end of the field, men with mallets and a ball that needs to be smacked around. The sport took it’s toll on men and machines with a fairly significant crash taking place in the photographs above and below, you may recognise the pattern on that ball, the sport called for the use of regulation American basketballs.
    If you scroll down, you’ll find an article about Auto Polo from The Kansas City Star Magazine from November 14, 1971. It’s an in-depth look into the sport and if you scroll down further still, you’ll find a video of the mad men in action.
    Vintage Car Polo Game Auto Polo
    Here’s an excerpt from The Kansas City Star Magazine, November 14, 1971, by Floyd L. Hockenhull;
    “The game was played on a football field or in a fairground or park where goalposts were set up. As in polo on horseback, the aim was to drive a ball through the goal, or to keep the opposing players from doing so
    Two men formed a team, the driver and his mallet man. The ball, a regulation basketball, was lively upon impact of the mallet and hard to follow and to keep in a team’s possession.
    The driver’s skill was a top factor in winning. He had to manipulate his car into leaps forward and backward, to make twists and turns so sharp that sometimes the car rolled over, to race down the field to the opponents’ goal, to protect his own goal and to shimmy back and forth to block the ball driven hard and fast by the other team.
    No car but the Model T Ford of the early 1900s had the forward speeds and reverse and brake applied by foot pedals, plus throttle operated by hand, and the transmission system that made such maneuvers possible.
    The skills of the young drivers and their mallet men of Natoma’s auto polo teams synchronized like gears of a smoothly-running machine.
    As the driver whipped his car back and forth, stopped and twisted and turned, his mallet man, standing on a step at the car’s right side, leaned and turned to hit the ball or to take it from his opponent. To block a drive by the other team, he used arms, legs, all his body. And at game’s end, he usually was bruised and often was bloody.
    The mallet man, too, frequently was thrown from the car. He had little to hang onto. Although the driver used no seatbelt and in rollovers often was thrown out, his seat and a rollbar on the car gave him more protection.
    All the players wore heavy leather leggings. These helped to prevent sprained and broken legs. Some, such as Ray Hall, wore helmets but others at first scoffed at helmets&endash;then after they got hurt they changed their minds. Red Lyon was a driver who came to be a believer: He wore this helmet every game after being knocked unconscious by a blow on the head in a free-for-all tangle of cars and players.
    Playing time was 60 minutes. Quarters and halves, with rest periods between halves, were as in football. The teams changed goals at the half.
    The game began with each team at its own goalposts, the ball in the center of the field. At the drop of the referee’s red flag, the cars came charging, the drivers striving to block the car of their opponent.
    After a score, the team that made it had a try for an extra point as in football. This field-goal try was from the 25-yard line. On the 10-yard line, the opposing team lined its car crosswise of the field and attempted to block the ball. The result usually was another noisy scramble, often a collision.
    The auto polo cars had no mufflers and the roar of the engines, the screech of skidding tires, the shouts and screams of the spectators, helped keep interest at fever pitch.
    The auto polo cars were designed largely by Natoma’s first Ford dealer, R.A. “Dot” McEwen and his right-hand man, Ray E. Hall “
    via SILODROME 

    Sellers and seduction: From humour to heartache


    Being able to make women laugh is an irresistible attraction, if Peter Sellers is anything to go by. Take his second wife, Britt Ekland, whom he married in 1964 – just 10 days after the pair first met…

    Britt Ekland

    It’s said that a few weeks into the marriage, Sellers took sexual stimulants to help him achieve “the ultimate orgasm” with his beautiful new wife – and suffered eight heart attacks in three hours as a result. Their marriage lasted only four years.
    The search for his ideal woman was a significant part of Sellers’ life. “I need the help of a woman,” he said. “I’m continually searching for this woman: they mother you, they’re great in bed, they’re like a sister, they’re there when you want to see them, they’re not there when you don’t.” Perhaps this unrealistic optimism was a root cause of his many failed marriages – four in total, though his treatment of his various wives was notoriously harsh.

    Sophia Loren

    During his first marriage, for example, before he met Britt Ekland, Sellers fell heavily for Sophia Loren, his co-star in ‘The Millionairess’. Indeed, he only agreed to act in the film after learning of Loren’s involvement and he later declared his love for the actress – in front of his own wife. While Loren never became his wife, he later admitted (and regretted) an extreme infatuation for her.

    Ursula Andress

    And then there were the on-screen relationships – such as with the stunning seductress Ursula Andress in the 1967 spoof version of ‘Casino Royale’. This time, it wasn’t Peter Sellers’ relationship with a woman that failed – it was the film itself that flopped.

    Miranda Quarry

    Wife number three, whom he married less than two years after his divorce from Britt Ekland, was the 23-year-old model Miranda Quarry. Even before their wedding in August 1970, Sellers was expressing private doubts about the wisdom of marrying again - doubts that were sadly proved right when, in early 1973, he became engaged to Liza Minnelli. This was despite the fact that he was still married, and Minnelli was engaged to someone else. 

    Liza Minnelli

    Even by Peter Sellers' standards, his relationship with Liza Minnelli was a short-lived thing. His engagement to the troubled star, who battled her own drug addiction demons, lasted less than a month. It's said by some that he ended the affair when she jokingly pulled off his toupée... but whatever the truth, Minnelli was yet another in the long list of beautiful women who first intrigued him, and then fell by the wayside.
    A comic genius on film, it’s painfully clear that Peter Sellers’ own life wasn’t so humorous. His love affairs repeatedly ended in disaster, while he constantly strove to tackle depression, alcoholism and drugs. He finally died of a heart attack in 1980, at the age of just 54. 
    Photos: Getty Images

    Land Rover by Studio Job: Birthday cake on wheels


    Land Rover Defenders are frequently endowed with additional features, designed for a specific purpose, such as snorkels for wading or bullbars for intimidating. But nothing will prepare you for the artistic addenda that Studio Job applied to this example...
    Formed in 2000 by a pair of Antwerp-based graduates, Studio Job has gained fame in art and design circles, partnering with the likes of Bulgari, L’Oreal and Swarovski. For its latest collaborative project, the studio was given a Land Rover Defender in order to create a 65th anniversary tribute to the pensionable workhorse. Land Rover’s only condition was that it remained ‘drivable’ - a line which was toed with as much leeway as possible, as you can see.

    Opulence, intricacy and irony

    Studio Job has become known for its “high levels of craftsmanship with extreme ornamentation”, with a calling card of “opulence, intricacy and irony”. The Defender employs flourishes of each: the bonnet-mounted globe and comically oversized wing-mirrors are inlaid with Swarovski crystals; the windows are replaced with stained glass; and one of the headlights has been supplanted by a candle, giving only minimal night-time illumination. The implementation of ironic imagery is perhaps the most interesting, a good example being the hand-beaten aluminium tongue protruding from the grille. “The numerous elements kept accumulating,” says Job Smeets, co-founder of the studio. “The car literally sticks its tongue out. It wants to be something that it actually isn’t. It’s become a great concoction, monumental and cynical. But isn’t that also true for power and class structures?”

    Popemobile for an African chief

    Along with several geographical references (the United States Capitol and Roman Colosseum each decorate one wheel), the Studio Job Defender also pays homage to African culture. “I imagine this car as a Popemobile for an African chief, personalised in a bizarre way,” says Smeets. "It's a caricature of a status symbol.” As a result, you’ll find that one of the chunky wheels has been replaced with a simple cartwheel, while flags of Zimbabwe and the Congo 'fly' from the bumper-mounted poles. Inside, seat and curtain fabrics - look closely and you’ll see various car parts among the African imagery - have been provided by Vlisco, a company which provides exclusive materials to wealthy Africans. Meanwhile, a gilded rhino tusk sculpture sits proudly on the bonnet.
    One of the car’s purposes is to launch an “unsubtle protest” at the lack of imagination in today’s car industry. “We didn’t want this to be a simple styling task - there are better people for that than us,” says Smeets. The result might be harder to swallow for Defender devotees than the wheel-mounted ‘sex cake’, but the crazy Dutch duo certainly represents a more interesting design force than Victoria Beckham.
    Photos: R. Rezvani (black Defender, photographed March 2013 during ‘making of’) and Zero40 (white Defender, photographed November 2013. Now Studio Job is planning to papier-mâché the entire car...) for Studio Job.
    A selection of slightly more discreet Land Rover Defenders can be found in the Classic Driver Market.

    Automotive milk bath: The sinking Beetle of Ivan Puig


    Milk makes you beautiful - as Cleopatra well knew, when she bathed daily in fresh ass's milk. But whether this approach works for automobiles, we're rather less certain...
    The Mexico-based artist Ivan Puig clearly felt it a good idea, however - and sent a VW Beetle to the spa. Whether it emerged as a Porsche 911 is not known. 
    More details at ivanpuig.net.

    grand ménage

    vendredi 27 décembre 2013

    Auction highlight from RM in Arizona: Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider


    1958 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider
    RM's traditional start to the year in Arizona, this time taking place on 16 and 17 January, includes a further highlight in the form of a 1958 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider, which it's hoped will sell for between $7m and $9m...
    1958 Ferrari 250 GT LWB California Spider
    The Porsche 718 RS 61 Spyder and 906 Carrera (recently covered in Classic Driver) are just the start of the blue-chip classics earmarked for the RM Auctions sale. Held in Phoenix, at the Arizona Biltmore Resort & Spa, the mid-January auction is traditionally RM's annual start to the season, and there are once again plenty of gems among the 120 hand-picked lots. Perhaps the highlight of the entire sale, however, is this just-announced Ferrari, chassis 1055 GT. The 11th built of only 50 Cal 'Spiders with the long wheelbase is a matching-numbers example, factory-fitted with closed headlights.
    Renowned importer Luigi Chinetti Motors originally supplied the Spider to Fawcett Motors in Lubbock, Texas, where the first owner, a local lawyer, bought the sports car. That was in 1959. In 1962, the Ferrari saw its only appearance in motorsport, with a first in class at the Osceola Grand Prix in Geneva, Florida - driven by Ross Durant. After a restoration in the nineties, the Ferrari won a trophy at the 1994 Cavallino Classic III Concours d'Elegance and later appeared at the Pebble Beach Concours. Recently, the Ferrari's engine was rebuilt at Roelofs Engineering in the Netherlands, while the car received a full service at Ferrari in Newport Beach. Hence chassis 1055 GT should be in exceptional condition.
    Photos: Patrick Ernzen - Courtesy of RM Auctions
    The car and all other lots in RM's Arizona auction can be found at rmauctions.com.

    'Metal underwear': A glance into Peter Sellers' garage


    Sellers on the bonnet of his Ferrari 500 Superfast
    Cars played a major role in the life of Peter Sellers. Classic Driver takes a look into his garage – with the help of the man who managed his collection while the limelight shone brightest…
    That man is Richard Williams, who subsequently set up Classic Driver dealer R.S. Williams. “I got to know Peter when I was doing my Aston apprenticeship at Feltham; I then finished my apprenticeship at Newport Pagnell and was offered a job looking after his cars,” says Richard. 
    Being a celebrity in the 60s, it’s little surprise that Sellers had a thing for Ferraris. Among his collection was a 500 Superfast, a 275 GTB and a 250 GT/E, the latter making a cameo appearance in ‘The Wrong Arm of the Law’ – a film which saw another of Sellers’ cars, an Aston Martin DB4 GT, put to work as a getaway vehicle.

    Everything English

    Sellers also had a taste for Bentleys and Rolls-Royces, owning a Park Ward S1 Continental, a ‘Chinese Eye’ S3 and several Silver Clouds. But his love for traditional British machinery didn’t end there: “Peter was a huge Bristol fan, and also had several Radford Minis,” says Williams. In fact, some credit Sellers with creating the market for customised Minis, having commissioned Hooper to build him a bespoke version in 1963 – the final cost amounting to almost four times that of the standard car.
    “It’s pretty strange that out of all these cars, a 1930 Austin nicknamed ‘Old Min’ was his favourite,” says Richard. “He called me one day to ask me to deliver Old Min to Spike Milligan’s house as a present – the two were great friends. About a week later, he called me again: ‘I want you to collect Old Min from Spike’s house, I’m having it back. He’s left it out in the rain, and replaced the temperature gauge [mounted where a Spirit of Ecstasy would usually sit] with a coffee percolator’."

    From Austins to Rivas

    Williams has less fond memories of Peter’s Riva Junior boat: “I was flung off it in the bay of St Tropez,” he remembers. “It had just been put on the water, and his chauffeur was moving it clear of the mooring. Seeing me standing up, Peter took the controls and opened the throttle.” Peter was known for his pranks, having previously asked Spike Milligan to climb into the boot of his 500 Superfast with a torch to look for a non-existent squeak – perhaps as payback for the mistreatment of ‘Old Min’.
    Photos: Getty Images

    Bad and Bold Biker's Fashion Lookbook Herbst/Winter 2013


    RM to auction extraordinary racing car collection in Paris


    RM has announced some significant entries to its inaugural Paris sale – taking place during Rétromobile week 2014 – including a bevy of competition cars from the famous Harburg collection…
    Described by the Canadian auction house as including “some of the most desirable and iconic racing cars ever made”, the Harburg collection boasts no fewer than five Porsche competition cars. Among them are not only a pair of sports-racing prototypes in the form of a 917/30 (estimate: 2.2m euros plus) and a 956 (estimate: 2.2m euros plus), but also a 1964 904 Carrera GTS (estimate: 1.1m euros plus).
    Also from the collection comes Jaguar D-type chassis XKD 520 (estimate: in excess of 4.1m euros), and an ex-Phil Hill Ferrari 750 Monza Spider (estimate: in excess of 1.8m euros) which was delivered new to Luigi Chinetti Motors in 1955.
    Photos: Simon Clay for RM Auctions
    The auction will take place on 5 February 2014 at Place Vauban in Paris. For further information, please visit www.rmauctions.com.

    cocooning

    jeudi 26 décembre 2013

    The coolest snowmobiles of all time: Let it snow!


    The desire for ​​motorised transport on snow and ice has seen the creation of some incredible snowmobiles - be it for the conquest of the polar ice caps or simply for stylish sliding in snow-covered North America in the 1970s. We present the coolest companions of all time...

    1939 Antarctic Snow Cruiser: Much did little

    The failed Snow Cruiser was abandoned in Antarctica
    At more than 15 metres long and nearly 4.5 metres high, the Antarctic Snow Cruiser was huge, but its performance never matched its size. It suffered technical problems even on its maiden trip from Chicago to Boston in 1940. But on arriving in Antarctica, things got very much worse for the 37-tonne behemoth. It hadn't sufficient traction to cope with snow and ice and the failed Snow Cruiser was abandoned in Antarctica.

    1937 Bombardier B7, B12 and C18 Snowmobile: Before the Airbus came the snow bus

    Inventor and designer Joseph-Armand Bombardier, founder of the Canadian aerospace and transportation company which bears his name, created his first snowmobile in 1937. The B7, as it was called, was followed by the 12-seater B12 and the 18-seater C18, which brought the hoped-for financial success in the decades to come.

    Sno Coupe (1970 - 1973): Gliding like a gentleman

    In the early 1970s, the Innovar Corporation of Dunnell in Minnesota recognised the potential for ​​an elegant, gentleman's snowmobile with side-by-side seating, rollover protection, plenty of luggage space and much more besides. A great idea, yet only 200 units of the fashionable Sno Coupe were ever built.

    1955 Tucker Sno-Cat Type 743 Double Drive: Blame the nut

    Even if the Tucker Sno-Cat actually made it across the gorge in the end (video), the Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition (CTAE) from 1955 to 1958 made very little use of it. According to rumour, the engine never ran right after a nut fell into it during assembly.

    1970 Rupp Super Sno-Sport: 150mph on snow and ice

    Did you know that by the end of the 60s, quarter-mile races on frozen lakes had become popular? And since there were virtually no rules, Mickey Rupp, founder of Rupp Manufacturing, built a dragster with chain-drive and runners. Equipped with an approximately 500HP Ford V8, the Rupp Super Sno-Sport of 1970 reached a staggering 150mph on snow and ice. The following video shows the dragster at start-up.

    1958 Cuthbertson Land Rover: Long legs

    In 1958, Scotsman James A Cuthbertson presented this Land Rover tracked vehicle. It had great benefits on swampy ground, but the height did make it rather unstable. Ultimately, only 15 were built.

    1966 VW T1 'Snowmachine': VW bus for après-ski

    Bored with the usual après-ski party? The tech-savvy owner of this 1966 T1 has done a great job: not only is the microbus a chain-drive, it also has a 1,600-Watt sound system. An après-ski party in the slopes-grade T1 is truly hard to beat.

    Tundra Buggy: Polar bear safari

    The ten-tonne Tundra Buggy, now produced in Churchill, a small community in the Canadian province of Manitoba, can accommodate a whole school class - and return them safely across the snow. Why? To explore the life of endangered polar bears up close.
    In the Classic Driver Market you can find not just snowmobiles, but numerous off-roaders and other classics ideal for conversion. Just think creatively!
    For inspiration we recommend the following websites:

    1939 ALFA ROMEO 6C 2500



    1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 740x430 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500
    This 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C with coachwork by Carrozzeria Touring is a car I haven’t come across before, it’s a visually stunning piece of design, largely due to the fact that it was formed with the aid of an early, pre-war wind tunnel.
    The 6C 2500 was to be the last of the 6Cs, WWII was fast approaching and the model had been in non-stop production since 1925, making it one of the longest production runs of any Alfa. The 2500 was to be the ultimate iteration of the car, it was offered in 3 three wheelbase lengths – 3250mm/128.0 inches on the Turismo model, 3000mm/118.1 inches on the Sport model and 2700mm/106.3 inches on the Super Sport model (pictured here). The Super Sport was also fitted with a triple carburettor set up and higher compression pistons than the more touring oriented, longer wheelbase models.
    As with many cars of the era, the name was direct reference to the car’s engine. The “6C” meant 6 cylinder and 2500 was a reference to the engine’s capacity of 2443cc. This was the highest performing road specification engine that the car was ever fitted with, it could produce a maximum output of 120hp at 4750RPM, making it quite a sprightly performer.
    The immaculate 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 you see here is being offered for sale by its current owner, he’s an Italian collector who’s owned the car for decades. Interestingly, the car has never had (or needed) a restoration, making it the most original surviving 6C 2500 and doing absolutely no harm to its resale value.
    If you’d like to read more about the car, or enquire after it as a potential purchase, you can click here to visit Classic Driver.
    1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 1 740x392 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500
    1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 4 740x428 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500
    1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2 740x493 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500
    1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 3 740x493 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500
    1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 5 740x493 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500
    1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 7 740x493 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500
    1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 6 740x493 1939 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500
    via SILODROME