Archive for July, 2009

The Ferrari 458 Italia

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

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When Ferrari make a press release announcing a new member of the family, the world listens. The gestation of a new Prancing Horse-​​badged car is riven with rumour and specu­lation. But there’s one thing that always happens, no matter what emerges from the Maranello womb: there are gasps of delight.

We could wax lyrical endlessly having stared at these first few pics all day, about the audaciously sweeping lines that evoke the epoch-​​making Enzo Ferrari crossed with almost feminine prettiness of the 360 Modena. We could blather endlessly about the incredible F1-​​derived technology that, with the help of Michael Schumacher and the FXX programme, has filtered down into this latest apogee of road going excel­lence. Be prepared to read a mile of column inches about the new Berlinetta. But, on this occassion, we are going to simply show you our favourite passages from Ferrari’s press release. It has a certain pared down poetry to it, a technical set of clauses and tropes that are shot through with love. Enjoy.

“The Ferrari 458 Italia’s Pininfarina design provides further evidence of the complete departure from the past that this new car hails. The Ferrari 458 Italia has a compact, aerody­namic shape, under­scoring the concepts of simplicity, efficiency and lightness that inspired the project. As with every Ferrari, the car’s styling has been very heavily influ­enced by the require­ments for aerody­namic efficiency, as can be seen from the downforce of 140 kg at 200km/​h generated by the new model. The front features a single opening for the front grille and side air intakes, with aerody­namic sections and profiles designed to direct air to the coolant radiators and the new flat underbody. The nose also sports small aeroelastic winglets which generate downforce and, as speed rises, deform to reduce the section of the radiator inlets and cut drag.”

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“The new 4499 cc V8 is the first Ferrari direct injection engine to be mid-​​rear mounted. It has a very low piston compression height typical of racing engines which contributed to achieving its compression ratio of 12.5:1. Equipped with the tradi­tional flat-​​plane crank­shaft, the engine delivers 570 CV at 9000 rpm and, with an outstanding power output of 127 CV/​litre, sets a new benchmark not only for the whole Ferrari range and the history of company, but also for the entire market segment. Maximum torque is 540 Nm at 6000 rpm, over 80 per cent of which is available from 3250 rpm. Specific torque is a record 120 Nm/​litre. However, what is truly extraordinary is the amount of torque available while still maintaining high levels of power at low revs.”

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“The 458 Italia is equipped with the seven-​​speed dual-​​clutch trans­mission which increases performance whilst providing very smooth shifts even at full throttle. The engineers have developed specific, sportier gear ratios to match the power and torque curves of the new V8, guaran­teeing high torque even at lower engine speeds and allowing the car to reach its maximum speed in top gear. The engineers also focused on weight reduction during the design phase for similar reasons. Consequently, the Ferrari 458 Italia has a dry weight of 1380 kg with a power-​​to-​​weight ratio of 2.42 kg/​CV. Weight distri­bution is also optimal with 58 per cent over the rear axle. The result of the engineers’ endeavours can be summed up in to two simple statistics which together perfectly encap­sulate the Ferrari 458 Italia’s excep­tional performance: 0 – 100 km/​h accel­er­ation in under 3.4 seconds and a maximum speed in excess of 325 km/​h.”

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IS-F Lexus for Humberside Police

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

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Let’s face it. Every one of the nation’s finest joined the police force so he or she can speed along on the blue light, breaking as many laws as the neenarr will allow. Come on, you know it’s true.

But until now, the Range Rover and the Volvo estate was probably the best the aspiring British cop could hope for. But now, Humberside Police have gone and taken delivery of a Lexus IS-​​F, thereby making the rest of the nation’s rozzers supremely jealous, and setting a new gener­ation of Humberside’s joyriders to quake in their classic Reebox.

According to press releases “specially trained” officers spent 12 months evalu­ating a number of high performance vehicles in a bid to find the perfect speedster to replace the existing Subarus that the force employs.

Tough work, but someone had to do it.

The Lexus IS-​​F surely outdoes Regan & Carter’s Ford Granada, and even Bodie and Doyle’s RS 2000. It has, after all, a performance tuned 5.0-litre V8 engine capable of reaching 62mph in 4.8 seconds and a top speed electron­ically limited to 168 mph.

The question remains: What would you rather be staring at in the rear-​​view mirror – the lexus or inter­ceptor from Mad Max?

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Mark Gonzales: Skateboarding and Cars

Friday, July 24th, 2009

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Skateboarding and petrol head-​​ism are two cultural spheres that seldom cross over (apart perhaps from when prepu­bescent playstation skaters crash into that incredible Pontiac Firebird that macks it down mainstreet in Skate).

Interesting then, to see that legendary US skate­border Mark Gonzales is about to exhibit a collection of his sought after art that includes inter­esting repres­ent­ation of the other four wheel steed with which he is, appar­ently, obsessed.

The Gonz, now in his forties, is one of the original heroes of the skater creed, known for his incredibly smooth style and the creative lines he drew, re-​​imagining the archi­tecture of the every day as places for which to play.

When we came across this recently, it reminded us, of the time we saw Gonz skate when on tour with one sponsor or another back in the eighties. What stuck in our minds, as well as the audacious radic­alness of his riding, was the jacked up sixty-​​something Ford Consul in yellow, with a red flame job and chrome slots, that he was picked up in after the skate demo. It couldn’t get any cooler.

Sometimes memories blur and the associ­ations between time and place come back together. The web is good for this. Four wheel serendipity.

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Alfa Romeo Navajo by Bertone

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

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Of all the futur­istic concepts generated by the venerable carrozeria of Bertone in the seventies, the Alfa Romeo Navajo is one of our favourites.

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The Navajo was ased on the mechanics of the venerable object of beauty that is the ‚Alfa 33 Stradale . Bertone lengthened the original chassis to create a more spacious two-​​seater cabin than exists in the Stradale.

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That outrageous, Battlestar Galactica–style bodywork was super light, having been wrought completely in fibre­glass. This of course meant that with the powerful Alfa engines would have made the Navajo a real futur­istic pocket rocket.

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The front and rear spoilers were designed to adjust automat­ically according to the speed of the vehicle, which was a real innov­ation in the mid seventies. The rear wings provided an inter­esting flourish as well as support for the aft wing.

And as for the name: there’s something that hints at the tribal about the design – kind of a modern primitive grimace in its front, and you can imagine the shape hewn out of dark wood.

Classic Bertone, we think you’ll agree.

Steel Beauty

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

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Now don’t get me wrong. We love cars and girls. We don’t think we’re being partic­u­larly anachronistc or sexist to say that the offset of a beautiful woman with a beautiful piece of automotive design can lead to pleasing aesthetic results.

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But, stumbling across these Audi press images, recently released to celebrate the four rings’ centenary, it seems to me that if you get the juxta­pos­i­tions wrong, both female and auto form can be messed about in a field of misun­der­stood aesthetics. Images date. Fashions change. Cars and girls take on associ­ations that were never intended by either the designers of the cars or the stylists of the girls.

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Wether you were bought up on a diet of seventies pigtailed beauties in Custom Car magazine, leather and tatted Back Street Heroes, or slick and ghetto­fab­ulous Lowriders, there is an associ­ation with cool motors and hot girls that we’re not going to banish.

We think cars and girls are cool. You just have to get it right. We think photo­grapher Neil Stewart , amongst others, does exactly that.

English Revolutionaries

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

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It occurred to us here at Influx towers that with the release of the new XJ imminent, that it is time to celebrate the passion for innov­ation and design in British cars. The XJ did after all, achieve its desig­nation because it was thought of as an ‘Experimental Jaguar’.

It feels good to feel good about Jaguar again, and with a new corporate partner in Indian company Tata, an exciting projected lineup that includes a D-​​Type reima­gined on modern mechanics, as well as a boxster-​​beating drophead in addition to continuous evolu­tionary manifest­a­tions of the superb XF, the future seems to be looking increasignly bullish for the cat badge.

This new-​​found fascin­ation with the forth­coming fleet of new Jaguars have had us lusting after all sorts of old Jags, especially the playboyish XJ12C and the beefy XJ40 their erstwhilet Arfur Dalyish image notwithstanding.

Though the visceral reality of the new XJ is in Orwellian lockdown for the moment, we love the idea of it, and the more we look at it’s aggress­ively stylish nose, the pulch­ritudinous rear three quarter and the sweeping lines that link them, the more excited we become.

Hail the power of automotive design and branding.

Here are five more British cars that should be celeb­rated for their boldness, innov­ation and forward thinking vision:

1: The Aston Martin Bulldog

Cancelled custom order or doodle-​​time indul­gence. The Aston Bulldog was the revolution that never was

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2: The Farbio GTS

Carrier of the Marcos legacy Chris Marsh’s lovely pocket supercar, pieced together in a stable in South Gloucestershire.

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3 TVR Tuscan

Full bloodied English hooligan, and as fashion-​​conscious as a football casual too.

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4 Bristol Fighter

The height of British eccent­ricity. The fighter looks madly strange, but we want one anyway.

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5 Lotus 7 Series 1

Stripped down and peren­nially outrageous. Simple and superb as egg and chips.

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Honda RC-166: Hailwood's Hornet

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

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If you’re a lover of the classic and a have an inbred desire for things mechanical, the Honda RC 166 is a thing of true, timeless beauty.

The inline six 250 was winner of 10 out of 10 races in the 1966 World Championships series and captured the Manufacturers’ and Riders’ Championships in the 250cc class for two consec­utive years, as well as the Isle of Man TT of that year.

Seen here in the Guise of Mike Hailwood’s no 7 machine, one of the things that distin­guished the bike was its incredible engine note, thanks in part to its aesthet­ically pleasing battery of six pipes (below).

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The sound is so good that, according to Hell for Leather magazine (one of our favourite bikey portals) the sound of the RC166 is now available as a ringtone!

Not sure if the fans in the Japanese TV studio in the clip below will be signing up.

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