Posts Tagged ‘bmw’

Europe's Glory

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

Fiat Abarth 750 Zagato
Give a tiny Fiat chassis the Zagato bodywork treatment and a tuned engine and tweaked running gear from Mr Abarth. What more could you want from a pocket rocket for the fifties? Post war Italian austerity gets a shot in the arm, If you couldn’t afford Ferrari’s 250 TR – this was the bargain basement racer of its time.

 

Ferrari 250 TR
With a body by Scagietti and Ferrari’s race-​​focussed engin­eering, the TR was dominant in its various arenas and remains unassailable in its aesthetic appeal. This was the car that announced the true arrival of the prancing horse as a global force. Not surprising, then that the few on the market command as much dinero as a prime Picasso.

 

Mercedes 300 SLR Uhlenhaut Coupé
Benz’s head of motor­sport Rudolph Uhlenhaut bespoke two of these enclosed, gull-​​winged versions of the W 196 SLR for road use. Reputedly the fastest car on the planet in 1955, the coupé version of Moss’s record­breaking Mille Miglia winning car invokes the Ride of the Valkyries with a Gene Vincent backbeat. Scarily teutonic.

 

Maserati Tipo 61 ‘Birdcage’.
Unveiled with Stirling Moss at the helm in 1959, the Tipo 61 got its moniker because of its cage-​​like space-​​frame chassis — which was lighter and stiffer than its compet­itors at the time. We like it, though, because of its arachnid styling and the way its design exemplifies that moment when the fifties with its make-​​and-​​do feel of the ancien régime gave way to the self conscious modernism of the relat­ively affluent sixties. Lecture on social history over. Just look at it!

 

Jaguar XK SS
Contender for sexiest car of all time, let alone the fifties — this was the road-​​going version of the all conquering D Type racer – with a passenger seat, a door and a proper windscreen. Unseemingly curva­ceous and rare – due to a fire at the Jag plant – it remains a totemic road-​​going piece of British automotive crafts­manship. Steve McQueen and his XKSS were, appar­ently the focus of a free donut bonus scheme by the LAPD. The Coolest Man in the Universe and his ride would tool around the Hollywood Hills on the limit it seems…

 

Maserati A6 G
We’re repeating ourselves here a bit but we couldn’t leave this beauty out. The curved propor­tions of the coachwork combined with its laid-​​​​back, hunkered down poise get us in the back of the throat. Those tiny rear headlamps. The huge Maserati trident on the grille. The minimal brushed steel bumpers and the pertly curved boot! Those Webers! Those wire wheels! We’re STILL in love.

 

BMW 507
Originally intended for export to the US to compete with sporty and succesful Mercs and MGs, the 507’s pretty roadster lines live on in the Z-​​series of roadster. Never selling in numbers due to high costs they now fetch silly money. There’s only 200 or so in existence — and we doubt you can name a prettier German car.

Never Mind the AC...

Wednesday, April 20th, 2011

After the unseasonly scorching temps of late I’ve been weighing up the pros and cons of investing something a little more global warming friendly.

My motiv­a­tions are not, you under­stand, simply because the emissions of my old beat up Beemer is probably making the green­house effect worse — but really, I must admit, that the damn thing doesn’t have air conditioning.

Then this morning I stumble upon this very well made Hollywood tale.

It’s the perfect apology for keeping hold of that classic come hell, hot temps or high water.

Spooky synchron­icity on a hot day in the city…

Radio Controlled Drifting

Friday, February 11th, 2011

We’re not averse to the joys of drifting. We can dig the appeal. As the FIA outcast rebel motor­sport, full of counter­in­tu­itive weighted rear ends, welded diffs and an aesthetic of smoke and sideways-​​ness that rubs the old guard funda­mentally up the wrong way, we’re all for it.

But watching this amazing little video confirms that sliding sideways in Radio Controlled cars make even more sense.

Delving deep into this RC subcult you can see that it requires a special kind of dedic­ation — and one that you can’t help admire.

Apparently, it’s all in the creation of the right kind of slippery rubber wear, which when combined with AWD models, make it easy to kick the back out while holding a line.

These guys have also combined the aesthetic of your classic hip hop vid with incredibly detailed modded RC models.

Power to their dextrous fingers. Highlight of the vid comes with the parking skills demon­trated around 2’30″. YouTube Preview Image

BMW: Joy

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011


image via The Always Gentleman

Car companies obviously spend a hell of a lot of money on ad campaigns.

As close watchers of the various ways that car makers seek constantly to reinvent themselves we were of course excited about BMW’s recent JOY campaign (vaguely fascist connota­tions notwithstanding).

It was a bold, top to bottom bit of marketing rather than a simple piece of rebranding. The JOY in BMW was injected in every way the brand was repres­ented; from the colours of their vehicles through to the tone of voice adopted by dealership receptionists.

But it occurred to us also, that they could done a similar job as the HD edit below, in an image as simple as the one above.

The message, after all is simple. You can have fun in your BMW car. The b&w air shot seems to say everything you could ever want to say.

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What is the Cool?

Monday, February 7th, 2011

This weekend, after a wet and windy saturday afternoon session in front of The Thomas Crown Affair (yes, a very blokey indul­gence between rugby matches), we set to thinking that why, exactly, is Steve McQueen so ‘cool’ and what, exactly consti­tutes that most abstract of adjectives?

After a few hour of rumin­ation, we’ve come up with a theory. Here goes.

Cool has nothing to do with what someone is wearing, or, even, how something looks. Surface appear­ances after all wax and wane in and out of popular fashion. What is on trend one season quickly turns out of favour, for example, the next.

When something like, say, the first gener­ation Audi TT was launched, it seemed the essence of cutting edge design and so was instantly classed as ‘cool’ by almost every commentator out there. Look at the car now and it looks really dated; gener­a­tions of designers have aped its nineties period curves and ethos and therefore we are (personally) tired of looking at it.

Some would argue that in these accel­erated times the original TT is already spun through the cycle of trend and is cool again, therefore containing something of the elusive essence that makes something truly cool. A classic, in other words.

If you happen to be one of those far sighted individuals that have kept a first gen TT in storage and has never driven it, its value will be appre­ci­ating as we write. It might be regarded as a good investment but that doesn’t mean it’s cool.

Steve Mcqueen is constantly namechecked as being the quint­essence of cool — but not (all the time at least) because of what he was wearing. Sure he could rock a pair of khakis, a windcheater and a pair of Persols like no other, but these items of garb have migrated from iconic moments on silver screen and Life archive photo­graphs to the department stores and high streets of the world. They are no more essen­tially cool than the old pair of scuffed up Vans I am currently using as my cycling shoes. It was McQueen’s individu­ality and his commitment to living and breathing his passions that consti­tutes his coolness.

Essential cool is about people, ideas, products, music, art, etc. that defies and transcends categories and genres. When applied to cars and bikes, the coolest are the unique and the reson­antly appealing, the hand-​​wrought, or at least the ones manufac­tured with the passionate dedic­ation of the individual artisan or inspired design.

There are a lot of cool cars and out there, and these are the ones in which we are most inter­ested. Apologies for the garbled philo­sophy. Sometimes we just need an excuse to run cool pics.

Friday Car Crush # 9

Friday, January 28th, 2011

We’re usually pretty skeptical about the merits of bonkers track day variants of existing cars. So, when the coming of BMW’s no holds barred trackday monster was announced a while back, we didn’t really take much notice.

But having eyeballed the orange beauty at the recent Autosport International Show, our hearts have been aflutter and we have found ourselves in idle moments straying to the orange-​​hued corners of the internet for illicit viewing pleasure.

There’ll only be 150 built, and each will be costing well over the £100K mark. It claims figures of 4.4secs/190MPH but with the limited dynam­icsim of the standard M3 chassis, this is a tweaked, sticky-​​rubbered version of the ubiquitous playtime tool, most hi-​​end 911s will see them off in all departments.

But the reason we love it is the way it looks. Something about its stance at all angles is accen­tuated by the orange and the black alloys. it seems to distill the M-​​badge essence and make this car an induglence you can imagine partaking in. And with that limited run, you’re unlikely to run into another one this side of wherever…

M5 Love

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

In case you’ve been living under a rock, we though we’d remind you that next month BMW are going to launch the latest edition of their signature loonysaloon the M5.

The M5 badge has always for us been the pure bred BMW; a car that encom­passes the height of the brand values. The five series platform is the workaday exec saloon or family wafter, with sensible form as well as outstanding performance, reliab­ility and build.

It has always then been a momentous occasion when a new M5 is unveiled — it ultimately represents the evolution of the brand’s core.

Beemer lovers will know all there is to know about this, but for the less initiated here’s the basic stats. It seems this ultimate dad wagon will feature a 4.4-litre V8 bi-​​turbo that will pump out 578bhp and 530lb/​ft. It will have a limited top speed of 155, which unlimited could wring 188 MPH, and it will pull away to 62 MPH in 4.4 secs.

The engine will be a tinkered-​​with version of the engine in the current X5 and X6 M cars; making this the first turbocharged M5 saloon. There won’t be an estate version for now, but rumour has it that the car will feature 30 percent emissions reduction over the E60.

However popular this F10 version of the M5 turns out to be, it’ll have to go a long way to beat the E39. The ‘angel eyed’ version of the M5 is our favourite, and this banned BMW ad for this version has to be one of our all time top campaigns.

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