Posts Tagged ‘Classic’

250 LM Pininfarina Stradale Speciale

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

Last summer at the Silverstone Classic we were lucky enough to get up close and personal with a race prepped 250 LM. It was, predictably, an erotic exper­ience we won’t quickly forget.

But when we stumbled across this SS version we were blown away and had to share.

The rear three quarter profile brings out the heart­breaking lines, set off by that Scuderia style strip, the wire wheels and the dashingly gauche interior. But this thing would be as agress­ively dynamic as it is pretty.

The 250 LM made its official debut at the 1963 Paris Motorshow. The racing evolution of the hugely successful 250 series used a bored out 3.3 litre version of the GTO derived engine.

The homolog­ation author­ities at the time didn’t believe that Ferrari would be able to produce the required 100 cars for homolog­ation, so the 250 LM was only eligible to race in the prototype class.

And the little racer did very well indeed. In fact in 1964 ten victories were scored out of 35 entries and no less than five 250 LMs were entered in the 1965 24 Hours of Le Mans by privateers.

Almost too pretty for words, we’re sure you’ll agree and as immaculate as any car you’ll be lucky enough to encounter, anywhere.

Southsiders at Goodwood

Monday, October 31st, 2011


images: Southsiders

We might be a bit slow off the mark here, but this morning we stumbled across some of the nicest pictures we’ve ever seen coming from the Goodwood revival.

The images come from those fine folks at Southsiders MC, whose blog is on our regular roster of daily browses.

Every year the event is one of the most photo­graphed on the calender and is getting bigger every year.

This set is a testament to the worth of the slow, delib­erate process of larger format film photography.

Bravo Southsiders.

See the full set here.

Angouleme Onboard

Thursday, October 20th, 2011


full set of images from Ian Wilson here.

Every September vintage and classic racers gather in the historic hillside town of Angouleme, which straddles the beautiful Charente River.

At the hub of the town is an amazing 12th century cathedral, but during the middle weekend of September all eyes are on Circuit des Remparts, which has hosted the street race here since 1939.

The weekend opens on Friday with the Concours D’elegance, where the machinery can be ogled, lusted after and judged. Racing proper begins on Saturday and Sunday — and it’s the close up and personal, visceral nature of the tight circuit that brings such good enter­tainment — and great pictures too.

Check out the lovely onboard action from what looks like a venerable prewar car, which is really evocative of racing times past.

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Moggy Love

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011

The Morris Minor holds a peculiar kind of affection in British hearts. There’s something accessible, friendly and comforting about the design. As much as the Mini, the Minor is inter­woven into British culture, welded to the image of ourselves like perhaps no other single piece of English Iron.

It’s1973. My old man inherits an ancient moggy in black (of course) from his old man. It is ancient, so old that the indic­ators are those ones that physically drop out of the door pillars. This thing is rusted all around the sills and smells of turps and brick dust inside, the red leather seats fetid and torn.

Somewhere in my five year old mind I associate this car with the Blitz. Dodgy infant chronology notwith­standing there is something about this car that is plucky, resilient; something stoic and rooted in the English earth.

But the thing is about the moggy is that it has no power. When me, my baby sister and mum and dad are all loaded up it wheezes and chugs like an arthritic uncle, eliciting the odd backfire and a profanity or two from dad’s otherwise chaste mouth.

It is so badly under­powered that one Sunday, on the way over to my nan’s for the requisite roast, we fail to make it over the big hill that lay between our house and granny’s. Dad does the only thing he knows. He turns round sticks it in reverse, and we scale the hill backwards.

I don’t under­stand of course, that reverse is the lowest gear, and that the fact that we are going backward to go forward isn’t some exist­ential statement of retro­gressive intent.

No. I just think it is cool. I think that reversing over a huge hill is a way of looking back, knowing where you have been so that you are informed of your best way forward. And this strange fragment of automotive memory has stayed with me ever since.

Anyway, this is a nice little video that somehow captures exactly what is so appealing about the Morris Minor. Excuse my self indulgence.

Friday Bike Crush # 4

Friday, October 14th, 2011

Every now and then the distin­guished folk at RM Auctions come up with a doozy we can’t ignore.

We spotted this 1953 Maserati bike in the auction list for their forth­coming London event (26th October) and we had to share.

This is appar­ently one of the earliest motor­cycles to wear the trident badge — and was the product of a time just after the company had acquired the Bologna-​​based motor­cycle manufac­turer Italmoto. Maser then shifted production to their home in Modena.

Despite the lovely detailing of the bikes they made, like that on this little 125 single, the company only made two wheelers until 1960 — by which time the big Italian manufac­turers had made compet­ition very stiff indeed.

Lovely fodder for some weekend daydreaming…

Porsche Factory c1972

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

It’s no secret that we’re ambivalent about the 911. Until we drove a couple, we were a little sneery ourselves. You just see so many of the things that contempt is bound to arise through so much familiarity.

On the one hand, it is of course the ultimate, usable supercar. Most people stumbling upon this blog will have at one point or another fanstasised about being a 911 owner.

They are incredible cars and the formula has been honed to a fine edge at Stuttgart all the way from 1963. And aficionados insist that each Evolution of the rear engined wunderkind is simply better than the previous.

In their stripped down GT and RS guises the 911 is a pure race-​​bred monsters. The Turbos have retained their hooligan chic amid the bug eyed ubiquity and even bog-​​standard spec-​​levels of the contem­porary Carrera can be tweaked easily to create a unique, reliable, usable daily drive of style, speed and panache.

On the other, of course, the Porsche 911 is an over-​​refined evolution of the Beetle format, the impulse buy of the bonus jockey and mainstay of high-​​earning yummie mummies in the Waitrose carpark.

It’s testament to the brilliant longevity of the idea that is the 911 that each part of this broad spectrum holds more than a grain of truth.

We when we stumbled upon this set of amateur snaps from a factory tour some time, we reckon, in the early seventies, you realise that there was a raw artisan element to Porsche’s of that early period that laid the found­a­tions of the brand and facil­itated all those technical evolutions.

Nostalgia again — for a time we barely knew. We’d like a 1972 RS Coupé. In orange with blue rims. Please.

Photos via Cinelli Guy

Royal Enfield: handmade culture

Friday, August 12th, 2011

Whatever you feel about retro culture in general — and the various obses­sions car and bike heads have about all things vintage, you have to admire the crafts­manship repres­ented in this video.

It’s evident that not all Royal Enfield production bikes have hand painted tank and trim: but this Indian craftsman has a mind-​​blowing stead­iness of hand.

For us it makes sense to go retro if the simplicity and lo-​​tech embedded in these bikes would mean low maintenance costs and increased reliability.

We’re not sure if this is the case, but MCN certainly seemed to like the Caffish Royal Enfield Clubman (above).

But these practic­al­ities aside, if you knew that this sort of love and care went into every part of your new bike, you’d be tempted to trade, wouldn’t you?