DATSUN 240Z NEO RETRO RENDERING

JDM, Nissan, Datsun

Ok, so the yanks did well out of the reissue of their signature muscle cars. Neo retro rendering of classics have obviously got a big potential market out there. They tap into that dollar bill that presumes that the first-editions of classic cars will be murder to live with. We might want the panache and inherent style of motors with true soul, but imagine having to drive down to Tescos in them!

In response to this, design-oriented petrol heads of every flavour have been attempting to turn their dreams into reality by creating virtual renderings of their own classic obsessions. In this case, the delectable staple of Japanese sports car lovers’ fantasy, the Datsun 240Z.

With word out that Jaguar intends to release a new version of the D-Type and perhaps even the E-Type, it can’t be long until a tenured designer in the Nissan corporation and other is briefed to recreate some of their past masters. With curves like these, it’s got to happen.

If you dig this, there’s more Eastern loveliness at Japanese Nostalgic Motors...

LEXUS LFA CROWNED KING OF THE ‘RING

For any of you who didn’t follow last Friday’s tweet, we thought this footage is more than worthy of a daily post. Especially as the car is so brutally lovely.

Lexus’s LFA Nürburgring Edition has just run the ‘ring in 7:14 at the hands of driver Akira Iida.

This is quickest time from a mainstream carmaker and beats the previous record, set by a Porsche 911 GT2 RS, by four seconds.

Obviously this is a tweaked version of the LFA, which will cost you £55,000 more than the ‘bog standard’ (!) £345,000 LFA.

Apart from general record breaking kudos, for that extra money you get a bunch of aerodynamic carbon-fibre add-ons, including a jutting front spoiler, fins ahead of the front wheel and a massive rear wing.

This downforce-heavy package is counteracted by a set of tuning tweaks that squeeze 562bhp out of the 4.8-litre V10. That’s 10bhp more than in the standard car.

There’s reworked suspension too that slings the body 10mm lower than the standard LFA.

You could of course score a very nice nearly new 911 with the difference..but hey, we’re in the world of automotive fantasy here, so you might as well just sit back and mind drive a very hairy (but remarkably smooth) seven minutes.

BIKE CRUSH: HONDA GOLD WING – STRIPPED

I always had the feeling that Honda’s staple tourist superstar the Gold Wing would look better naked.

And this example certainly confirms our intuition.

Spotted recently on Bike Exif – it appears that this 1975 GL 1000 was built for an Italian customer for a trip from his home to Norway – and the stripped back matte frame and custom everything else reflects the need for cruising utility.

And added lights for longer shadows

I’ve often wondered why long distance tourers would want to sheild the rider so much from the wind in the face. Surely, the whole point of a long distance ride is to feel the the breeze – and a stripped down long hauler like this must surely be the way to be practical –

– and lose nothing in the aesthetic stakes.

Great detail.
When a Japanese bike does germanic
A real sense of utilitarian chunk
And added lights for longer shadows
Haulage bespoke
Racks with a military edge.

SENNA’S NSX MASTERCLASS

In 1991 the launch of Honda’s NSX had a tectonic effect on the world of supercars. Japan’s first pretender to the throne of track bred, street-legal speed was light and preternaturally responsive – but was also rigorously reliable and easy to live with. It was built and delivered with same indestructable yet passionate engineering as a Civic. It didn’t matter that the NSX had almost the same basic interior and little more badge appeal than Honda’s mass market everyman – if driving was your thing, nobody did it better.

This car was responsible for raising not only Honda’s performance kudos, but made the boys at Maranello tremble. Their current Berlinetta, the 348, was as quick but sloppy in its handling and finish. The European aristocrats were forced to raise their game.

In 1989 the Brazilian maestro Ayrton Senna had been at Suzuka to test the McLaren Honda, but he ended up doing a few laps in the prototype NSX. His critique was brief and relatively humble: “It feels a little fragile,” he said.

The story goes that the Honda engineers went back to the drawing board and came back eight months later with the prototype’s body stiffened by 50%. The torsional weakness that Senna had identified in the long, low slung NSX frame was gone. Senna went on to help Honda develop the suspension settings that helped make the car a brilliant handler.

The testy Brazilian driver wasn’t universally loved by F1 fans before he was tragically killed at San Marino in 1994, but all we remember of him is the way he applied his natural gifts. And rightly so.

Similarly the ‘plasticky’ feel of the NSX and its lack of European panache are all put into shade by the incredible driving experience it gave its pilots. Even the car’s looks, which were rooted more in the eighties than the nineties, conjure these days a retro kind of cool.

We’re not sure if the footage below is from the original Suzuka session or from one that came later. Whichever it was, it’s a thing of beauty to watch.

FERRARI FUEL

Not sure why we haven’t seen this before, but this is undoubtedly some of the nicest pieces of automotive action we’ve come across for a very long time.

One possible reason for this exquisite (and doubtlessly extremely expensive) commercial’s lack of widespread release might be that it recalls the brilliant

that took viewers through the brand’s noble engineering lineage across platforms, genres and formulae.

Who know which came first?

With Honda’s recent sad and ignominious retreat from motorsport, it might be time to resurrect this beautifully rhythmic, sonically delicious piece of work.

Lancia Fulvia

CAR CRUSH REDUX

fulvia_barchetta_2fulvia_barchetta-3fulvia_barchetta_5

We know we’re being a bit boring about our love for the Lancia Fulvia.

But now, remembering the dictum that less is sometimes more, we think we’ve fallen in love all over again with the pert little Italian. And this version is topless. And if you’ve been aware of these things, then you are more of a Fulvia geek than we.

Thing is, you can see from the structure of the Fulvia coupé’s body that the torsional stiffness of the chassis would probably not have been affected by the absence or the presence of that boxy canopy. Look at those hard-edged flanks!

And the proof of the theory seems to have been demonstrated by the fact that a handful of chop-topped Fulvia’s were campaigned hard on the road race curcuit of 1970s; particularly successfully apparently, in the dangerous Sicilian classic the Targa Florio.

According to a Coy’s catalogue from a couple of years ago, there were class victories for these snarling, defaced beauties.

And while you’re here, heck out some devilish Kodachrome onboard from the 1972 Targa Florio. Apparently, Vic Elford ‘hit a local’.
Hehehe!

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