Archive for ‘Inspiration Lifestyle’

Arcade Enduro Race

By The Zor, 5 September, 2010, No Comment

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Ian Barry’s Kestrel Falcon motorcycle

By The Zor, 2 September, 2010, No Comment

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Death cars

By The Zor, 1 September, 2010, No Comment

It`s not about the morbid attraction for the death of a star, it`s about the beauty of a car which got an enhanced reputation and collectible value due to the fact that somebody died in the same model.

1961 Lincoln Continental and JFK
A great president, a great myth around him and a mobster style car. Some might say it’s a shoe box on wheels but the midnight blue color, the chrome, front opening rear doors, American car designed by an English man (ok, redesigned in 1961 by an American as a step forward from the chubby American Cars) make it an impossibly cool car.
The model used by JFK was called the SS-100-X by the Secret Service. The vehicle was notorious for its inadequate cooling of the rear of the passenger cabin while the bubble top was in place, particularly in sunshine. In order to prevent excessive heat and discomfort to the passengers, the top was often removed prior to parades, as was the case in Dallas on November 22, 1963.

Mercedes-Benz W140 and Princes Diana

I remember the morning I saw the news. As JFK`s death marked our parents memory so did this event mark ours.

The Mercedes W140, the safest care at that moment and has introduced innovations such as double-pane window glazing, power-assisted closing for doors and boot lid, electric windows which lowered back down upon encountering an obstruction, rear-parking markers which rose from the rear wings and a heating system which, if desired, continued to emit warm air after the engine was turned off. For details like this, the W140 is often known as the last Mercedes to be “over engineered,” a Mercedes trait that was costing the company in product delays and over budgeting.

Porsche 550 Spyder and James Dean

The rebel without a cause for more than one generation and the Porsche 550 Spyder from 1950.

Inspired by the Porsche 356 which was created by Ferry Porsche, and some spyder prototypes built and raced by Walter Glöckler starting in 1951, the factory decided to build a car designed for use in auto racing.  The 550 was very low to the ground, in order to be efficient for racing. In fact, former Formula One racer Hans Herrmann drove it under closed railroad crossing gates during the 1954 Mille Miglia. The Porsche 550 from 1950 “Little Bastard”, serial number 550-0055 is best known for being the car in which James Dean was killed on September 30, 1955. Now that is a lot of fives.

Oldsmobile 88 convertible 1950 and Jackson Pollock

Pollock an influential American painter and a major figure in the abstract expressionist movement, died at the age of 44 in an alcohol-related car accident driving his Oldsmobile 88 convertible a few miles from his home.

The Oldsmobile 88 was a car from the chubby period of American Cars when there was not so much concern about safety. The eighty eight  was one of the best performing automobiles thanks to its relatively small size, light weight and advanced overhead-valve high-compression V8 engine originally designed for the larger and more luxurious 98 series but dropped into the smaller six-cylinder Oldsmobile 76 body, creating what was considered the predecessor of muscle cars of the 60s.

Facel Vega  HK500 1954 and Albert Camus

One of my teenage year`s writers, not that I understood much from L’Étranger (The Stranger)but you had to read it if you wanted to get laid with a nice chick. Camus was the second-youngest recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature – after Rudyard Kipling – when he became the first African-born writer to receive the award. He is the shortest-lived of any literature laureate to date, having died in an automobile accident just over two years after receiving the award.

Facel Vega – the muscle car from France – a 4.5-litre V8 Chrysler Hemi engine in a light but stylish body. Facel’s were advertised with the slogan For the Few Who Own the Finest. What more do you wish for? Maybe a safe ride.

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Intro to the next post

By The Zor, 1 September, 2010, No Comment

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Don`t erase our tobacco habits

By The Zor, 18 August, 2010, No Comment

A dramatically modified history is usually found in former communist countries with a dictatorship and in Orwellian societies, I thought. It never occurred to me that Great Britain could be one of them.

Churchill

At the exhibition “The Winston Churchill’s Britain at War Experience” in one of London`s museums this modified picture of Churchill appeared.  The iconic cigar smoker Churchill was modified in Photoshop to suite the need of today`s fucked up politically correct society, where smoking is becoming a crime.

Kids, don`t forget, Tom is a smoker and so was Churchill.

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New quote

By The Zor, 8 August, 2010, No Comment

“When an affair is past every other remedy It is righteous, indeed, to unsheathe the sword.” – Guru Gobind Singh

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Two wheels on the cover of Popular Science.

By The Zor, 6 August, 2010, 2 Comments

Don’t judge a book by its cover, but exactly that is what I am going to do.

Popular Science magazine covers. The 20`s were all about flying ,the 50`s about the car and the 80`s all about the personal computer. In between there are a few covers with motorized unicycles, motorcycles and other contraptions with two wheels and not to forget Steve McQueen.

To better organize this post and not to ruin the scroll button on your mouse I have moved the collection of covers together with the comments to my flickr account here, and Facebook account here.

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Sleaping butties

By The Zor, 8 June, 2010, No Comment

“These pictures are all taken in an abandoned scrapyard / motorcycle graveyard in Lockport, NY. Apparently the building was condemned, but the inventory was never sold off. If i ever need parts for antique motorcycles, I now know where to go. ”

Taken from  flicker.

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Not that I have a lot…

By The Zor, 26 May, 2010, No Comment

Starting with today I will be a – Intellectual Property Donor, not that I have a lot to donate at this point but I hope that in time there will be some good stuff on this site that others can use.

One step to achieve that goal is to have an organized content with some regular updates. So here we go… I present the four regular articles:

Monday – Title- Weekend warrior tales. Updates from the weekend`s activity .

Tuesdays twice a month  – Title – Dirt on leather. Equipment reviews without any commercial interest, just a short personal opinion about what we wear or should wear.

Thursday – Title – Go fast! Turn Left! Exit the city!- A list of events from the following weekend – if any.

Friday – Title – Bike P_orn – pictures with pin-ups and light e_rotic content and motorcycles.

I hope I will have what to write about.

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Rain

By The Zor, 24 May, 2010, No Comment

The rain is back.

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Classic Motorcycle Coffee Mug

By The Zor, 29 April, 2010, No Comment

What a nice way to kick start the day. Coffee in a classic motorcycle mug. Thank you HNZ.

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Quote for the weekend

By The Zor, 18 April, 2010, No Comment

“A pipe says something about the pipe smoker. It’s permanent. It’s a statement of individuality, and in a sense, is something of a quiet rebellion against the relentless onslaught of “progress.” It harkens back to simpler times.” Greg Pease from G.L.Pease Tobacco

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PS3 Media Server

By The Zor, 7 April, 2010, No Comment

Having a PS3 in the house made us search for a Media Servers which are easy to use and run under Windows XP.

I warmly recommend this PS3 Media Server which can be found here.

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Bultaco

By The Zor, 29 March, 2010, No Comment

Adds and product placement back from the days when society was a little more free than today.  17 years old playmate and cigarettes , what a scandal…

Where there is a Bultaco there is a man and Francisco “Paco” Bultó – the man.

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Jean Prouve

By The Zor, 29 March, 2010, No Comment

“Never design anything that cannot be made.” - Jean Prouve: French Industrial- and Furniture Designer and Architect.

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