Rabu, 31 Mei 2017

Sony Dash Full of FAIL

I was really excited to get my hands on a new Sony Dash for $70 from Walmart.com.  I knew that the Dash, based on the Chumby, was not a super-fast device, sporting a middling resolution screen, a resistivle touch panel, and a wimpy 800MHz Marvel processor.  My expectations were for a serviceable clock radio with the added bonus of Facebook and news updates.

But the Dash, well, dashed all hopes of even that.

The Dash, even after a firmware update, was unable to connect to Gmail using the Gmail checker app.  It was unable, despite numerous attempts at registration through the Facebook device screen, to connect to my Facebook account.

OK, I thought, so I cant have email or Facebook, at least I can have news and weather, and internet radio.

But there are many other annoyances.  Any interaction with the thing takes forever.  It doesnt have a light sensor, so to make it to go night mode you have to either program a timer action, or manually hit the night mode button.

Then the dealbreaker.  Sony didnt think to have the device save its settings in non-volatile memory.  As a result, if you have a power glitch or brownout, the Dash wakes up and then sits there stupidly asking you to choose your wireless network, rather than automatically reconnect.

Which means that on some days, you may wake up late in the morning, wondering why your alarm never went off, to find your high-tech clock radio sitting there with a boot screen.

So it isnt really useful as a social networking device, it isnt really reliable as a clock radio.

Back to Walmart it goes.

Now, the Archos 35 Home looks promising...


THE DICTATORS KNUCKLEHEAD

A recent publication from the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC explored the history of one of their motorcycles (yes, they have many, including Sylvester Ropers first ever motorcycle of 1867, and the Curtiss V-8 record-breaker of 1906, which clocked 136.3mph at Ormonde Beach, FL). Their intern Christine Miranda did a little investigating, and came up with this story - it seemed perfect for The Vintagent (and thanks to David Blasco for the nudge!):

Jorge Ubico, president of Guatemala from 1931-44, the Little Napoleon of the Tropics, tearing through the countryside on his 1942 Harley-Davidson EL Knucklehead

"In museums, its common for a single artifact to tell many diverse stories, far beyond the scope of any one exhibition. Christine Miranda, who interned with our Program in Latino History and Culture, explores this idea when she encounters a motorcycle used in Guatemala and digs further.

Our America on the Move exhibition on the history of U.S. transportation is designed to transport you around the United States. As visitors explore all 26,000 square feet of our Hall of Transportation, they "travel across America," entering a variety of carefully curated historical moments. One of the exhi bitions later segments, "Suburban Strip," immerses museumgoers into the life of the "car-owning middle class" in Portland, Oregon, 1949. The display, complete with a replica road, features an array of vehicles typical of the time and place: a pickup truck, a Greyhound bus, a motor scooter, and even a genuine Harley-Davidson motorcycle. Despite the bikes 1949 Oregon license plate, it was never actually ridden in the Pacific Northwest.

Where was it really used? The roadways and landscapes of Guatemala. Whats more, the customized motorcycle was owned for several years by the Central American countrys president, Jorge Ubico.
I discovered the objects mysterious past while searching the item catalogues for traces of hidden Latino history at the museum. I guess you could say I hit the jackpot. Though a Guatemalan rulers motorcycle may seem like an odd choice for the collections at the National Museum of American History, its inclusion in fact sheds light on the global impact of U.S. transportation industries and broadens our understanding of who, what, and where "America" includes.

On the left, the museums 1942 Harley-Davidson motorcycle as it appears in "America on the Move", d esigned to fit mid-century Portland, Oregon. On the right, the motorcycle parked in a driveway with a license plate that reads "Guatemala 1979-1983." 
Jorge Ubico, a well-educated lawyer and politician from his nations capital city, ascended to the Guatemalan presidency in 1931. He would then stay in that post for 13 years and become the self-proclaimed "little Napoleon of the tropics." Besides his flair for the ostentatious and suppression of political dissent, Ubico is best remembered for his aggressive pursuit of foreign investment and close economic alliance with the United States. Notably, Ubico strongly supported the U.S.-owned United Fruit Company (UFCO), the corporate giant nicknamed el pulpo ("the octopus") for its wide-reaching influence throughout 20th century Central America.

During his re gime, UFCO became the largest landowner in Guatemala and enjoyed exemption from taxes and import duties. Via the International Railways of Central America (IRCA), UFCO also owned and operated the nations rail network, which facilitated its own international trade. Interestingly, when visitors first enter our America on the Move exhibition, they encounter the giant steam locomotive Jupiter, ostensibly at home in Santa Cruz, California. Though the train did originate there in 1876, Jupiter actually spent the better part of its career transporting bananas along the IRCA in Guatemala!
The locomotive Jupiter, a freight and passenger train used from 1876 through the 1960s, reveals that Ubicos motorcycle is not the only object in "America on the Move" with hidden Guatemalan history. In fact, Jupiter underscores the connection between domestic and foreign industrial development during the 20th century.
Like Jupiter, Ubico spent many years traversing Guatemala with the help of American transportation technology. His flashy motorcycle, a 1942 Harley-Davidson Model 74 OHV (Overhead Valve) Twin, was infamous. As described by American journalist Chapin Hall in his Los Angeles Times column:
"When President Ubico, of Guatemala, starts on a tour of inspection, which he does several times a year, he doesnt order out the guard and a special train, but hops on a motorcycle, shouts cmon boys, and leads a squadron of two-wheelers, each one manned by a government department head."
Despite the almost comical image conjured by Halls description of Ubico aboard his blue and chrome motorcycle, his "inspections" were the mark of his harsh, militaristic rule. Ubicos Harley-Davidson enabled him to travel to rural communities, where he personally settled local disputes and "imposed his own brand of justice," according to the same Los Angeles Times column. 
Jorge Ubico in his younger days
As president of Guatemala, Jorge Ubico repressed democratic practice and political dissent. His pro-U.S. economic policy worsened the plight of the middle and lower classes, while his labor laws (designed to facilitate the development of public works, like roads) utilized indigenous labor. The image of Ubico atop his motorcycle, shown here, reveals the reality of justice under his rule: "the president might appear suddenly, almost out of nowhere, on his fancy, powerful machine to render judgment". (Quote is from "I Ask for Justice: Maya Women, Dictators, and Crime in Guatemala, 1898-1944" by David Carey.) Image courtesy of Alvaro Aparicio.

To my surprise, Ubico was far from the first to use a Harley-Davidson motorcycle for military purposes. Already used domestically by American police departments as early as 1908, Harley-Davidsons were ridden by General John J. Pershings men in their unsuccessful nine-month pursuit of Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa. Harley-Davidson would go on to supply 20,000 military motorcycles during World War I and 80,000 during World War II. In fact, according to Paul F. Johnston, a curator here in the Division of Work and Industry, Harley-Davidson motorcycles were manufactured almost exclusively for the U.S. war effort in the 1940s, with Ubicos bike being a rare exception.
This 1942 Harley-Davidson brochure, saved in the curatorial file for Ubicos motorcycle, emphasizes the companys role in military and law enforcement.
After the war, Harley-Davidson and other American corporations enjoyed a surge in the motorcycles recreational popularity, with returning veterans bringing their experience and interest in riding back home with them. This is where Ubicos bike enters the story in America on the Move. Stylized with an Oregon license plate, the motorcycle helps recreate Sandy Boulevard, a burgeoning commercial area in the suburbs of Portland during the 1940s and 50s. By bringing to life this history of midcentury suburbanization, Ubicos motorcycle functions as a 1942 Harley-Davidson, not a symbolic set of wheels.
[Guatemalas political scene didnt improve much after Ubico; heres a Diego Rivera mural, Glorious Victory, which features CIA director Allen Dulles (who sat on the board of the United Fruit Co.) just after the US-orchestrated coup of 1954. - pdo]
In tandem, the motorcycles two histories can help expand upon the themes of A merica on the Move and create important, interdisciplinary connections. Transportation history is industrial history is political history, and Ubicos acquisition and use of an American motor vehicle has everything to do with the economic relationship between the United States and Central America during the age of UFCOs prominence. When the tide turned for Ubico in 1944 and nationwide disapproval forced him to resign, Ubico sought refuge in New Orleans, Louisiana, where he lived in exile for two years before his death. Maybe it is ironic that his iconic Harley-Davidson followed him and found a final resting place in the Smithsonian.
Jorge Ubicos chrome-tank 1942 Harley-Davidson Knucklehead at the Smithsonian
Since its donation in 1981, the bike has been on almost continuous display, first in the Road Transportation Hall and now, of course, in America on the Move. Chameleonic, it continues to serve various purposes. Millions of museum visitors enjoy it as a classic American artifact, oftentimes recalling their own stories and experiences with motorcycle history and culture. I look at Ubicos bike and see that. I also see the overlapping social, military, and industrial functions of U.S. transportation, at home and abroad; the story of the man behind the motorcycle; and the multiple layers of history encapsulated by the most unexpected of museum objects. Perhaps, now you can too.


Christine Miranda was an intern in the Program in Latino History and Culture. She recently blogged about eight ways to experience Latino history at the museum."

Subscribe here for TheVintagent.com in your email!

ABSOLUTE SPEED ABSOLUTE POWER PART1 1896 1930

A Short History of the World Motorcycle Speed Records, Part 1 1896-1930
(Originally published in the excellent French magazine Café Racer Speed special issue)
Sylvester H. Roper, inventor of the motorcycle in 1867, here with his second steam-powered machine from 1896.  This is the only known photograph of Roper with his motorcycle.  Roper was the original biker, and original steampunk!
When Sylvester H. Roper attached a small steam engine to an iron-frame ‘boneshaker’ bicycle near Boston in 1867, one question bur ned in his mind; How fast will it go? I have no doubt Guillame Perreaux asked himself the same question in Paris that same year, when he also attached a steamer to one of Pierre Michaux’s pedal-velocipedes.  But it was Roper who was motorcycling’s first speed demon, and its first martyr. Every Café Racer on planet earth should affix to their bike a lucky charm with Roper’s visage. Forget St.Christopher - he never rode a bike; Roper is the true patron saint of motorcycles, and he died for the same sin which stains 21st Century bikers - the lust for speed.
The press of the day recounted Ropers untimely demise at the dawn of motorcycling
On June 1st, 1896, at the tender age of 73, Roper was asked to demonstrate his ‘self propeller’, as he called it, on the Charles River Speedway, a banked asphalt bicycle racing track in Cambridge, Mass.  Roper’s steam cycle had a reputation around Boston as the fastest thing on wheels, being able to “climb any hill and outrun any horse”, as he stated. He was invited to pace a few bicyclists at the Speedway, which became a race, and Roper kicked their asses with the 65kph speed of the steamer. Track officials urged him to unleash the hissing beast, and the septugenarian inventor was excited to oblige. After a few scorching laps, Roper was seen to wobble and slow towards his ‘pit crew’ - his son Charles â€" into whose arms he collapsed, dead. Roper did not crash, but likely had a heart attack from the excitement. Roper became the fir st motorcycle fatality… not from a wreck, but from the thrill. He deserves a sprocket-edged halo.

BURNING DAYTONA SANDS
American engineering genius, motorcycle and aviation pioneer Glenn H. Curtiss, with his V8 dirigible engined Daytona sands racer, which was timed at over 136mph in 1906 
Glenn Curtiss inherited Roper’s lust for speed.  As one of the earliest motorcycle manufacturers in the US, he’d caught the racing bug first on bicycles, then attached an E.R. Thomas motor to his bicycle in 1899, which he called the ‘Happy Hooligan’ (yes, our great-grandpa was cool). Curtiss thought the Thomas engine, which copied Comte DeDion’s design, was crap, so he built his own motor.  Curtiss was a mathematical and engineering genius since his childhood, and his engines were reliable and performed better than anything else when introduced in 1905.  Curtiss engines were so good he caught the eye of the fledgeling aviation industry, and began supplying motors for dirigibles.  But Curtiss was more than an engineer; the question ‘how fast?’ burned bright in his soul, so in 1906 he constructed a spindly motorcycle frame around his V-8 dirigible motor, and travelled to Florida to test his monster on the only speed venue in the US; Daytona/Ormond beach.
The Curtiss V8 record-breaker in original condition, on display at the Smithsonian Museum.  The exposed drive shaft and rear bevel-gears can be seen clearly at the rear wheel...
Timed runs on the sand on that day were conducted with cars and motorcycles, and Curtiss waited until the end of the day’s normal speed runs, with ordinary production bikes, before wheeling out his 40hp Behemoth.  He promptly scorched through a 1-mile trap at 136.3mph - the fastest speed of any powered human to date.  His return run was ruined by the disintegration of the direct shaft drive to the rear wheel (no surprise, with a sand bath for the exposed universal joint) and the rear wheel locked at 130mph, while the drive shaft flailed away at the rider... but Curtiss considerable racing exp erience won out, and he hauled the beast to a stop without crashing. A true American hero.
Gene Walker with the special Indian Chief he rode to 104.12mph in 1920, the first FIM ratified World Motorcycle Speed Record...the last time an American machine would hold the record for many decades
With time, the FIM was created to supervise Speed Records, and the first ‘official’ FIM ratified speed was taken again at Daytona beach, when Gene Walker pushed his Indian Chief to 104.12mph in 1920.   That was the last time an American flag flew over the World Motorcycle Speed Record for 70 years.  For their own reasons, American motorcycle manufacturers, who built the technical equal of any bike in the world through the 1920s, virtually disappeared from global motorcycle competition after 1923, when Freddie Dixon took 3rd at the Isle of Man TT on an Indian 500cc sidevalve single.  America turned inward, to its own style of dirt-track racing, and the World Speed Records of the 1920s belonged exclusively to the British.
Claude Temple aboard his remarkable DOHC Anzani-engined special at speed in 1923
In 1923 Claude Temple stuffed a mighty 996cc DOHC Anzani engine into a simple loop chassis, and bumped along at Brooklands, half airborne on the notoriously bumpy track.  Temple averaged 108.41mph on the magnificent Temple-Anzani, and the FIM didn’t have to cross the Atlantic again for motorcycles until the 1950s, when Bonneville became the location of choice for speed-mad riders.
Worthy of another shot - the Temple-Anzani D OHC special, showing the big Anzani engine, developed by Hubert Huygens, stuffed in a fairly crude chassis in 1923.  Apparently it handled like a camel over Brooklands bumps, but was certainly fast enough to take records.  This machine was destroyed in the controversial National Motorcycle Museum fire, and has yet to be replicated.  It was unique.

ALL ENGLAND, ALL THE TIME

The rest of the 1920s was a fistfight between three tiny English workshops, sometimes called manufacturers, who all used JAP overhead-valve V-twin engines, and progressively made them faster.  The hunt began for a new place to go really fast, as Brooklands was fine for racing, but horrible for speed records. A decent straightway was found near Paris, in the village of Arpajon, the future site of the Montlhéry speed bowl.  The Arpajon road is still there and still very straight; if you got lost on your way to the Café Racer festival at Montlhà ©ry, you probably took the very same road… but sadly, the roaring racers have long since been replaced by honking commuters. 
Bert LeVack, development engineer at JAP motors, aboard a Brough Superior of the type used to take the 1923 World Land Speed Record, using a big OHV JAP KTOR engine.  This machine is used, in silhouette, as The Vintagents masthead!
The immortal Bert LeVack became JAP’s racing engineer in the early 20s, and was hired by Brough Superior in 1923 for a new attempt on the World Speed Record at Arpajon, which succeede d at 118.98mph (or since it was in France, 191.59kph). Claude Temple wasn’t happy to have lost the record to George Brough, so Temple teamed up with the Osborne Engineering Company (OEC), who had unusual ideas about chassis design and steering systems (their nickname was ‘Odd Engineering Contraptions’).  The OEC speed-record racer used a complicated ‘duplex’ front end, which was heavy and didn’t like turning corners â€" perfect for a Speed Record.  Temple used a special 996cc JAP engine to re-take the record at Arpajon in 1926, averaging 195.33kph.
Joe Wright piloting the OEC-Temple-JAP at Arpajon, France, in 1926
Freddie Barnes, the owner of Zenith Motorcycles, sold the only proper road-racing V-twin motorcycles out of all the English factories competing for Speed Record honors in the 1920s. While Brough Superior was flashy and self-promoting, and OEC was preoccupied with bizarre ideas, Zeniths were busy taking more ‘Gold Stars’ for 100mph laps at Brooklands than any other marque, and the tall, lanky Freddie Barnes was their guru.  In 1928, he hired Oliver Baldwin, a Brooklands regular, to ride his 996cc KTOR JAP-engined Zenith to finally break the 200kph barrier, at 200.56kph. George Brough could not bear it - who the hell was Freddie Barnes anyway? â€" and hired LeVack to breathe a little harder on the 996cc KTOR JAP (conflict of interest? Good business for JAP!) and heated up the competition the next year, 1929, in Arpajon.  George Brough himself rode his factory special to 130mph, the ride of his life, but failed to make a return run due to a minor mechanical problem. LeVack had better luck, averaging 207.33kph (126.75mph).
George Brough aboard the Works Scrapper, which he rode at 130mph at Arpajon, and Bert LeVack took the record at 126.75mph.  This machine can be seen at the Brooklands Museum.
That was the last time a normally carbureted motorcycle took the World Land Speed Record until 1955, when Russell Wright took a remarkable Vincent to 185mph. The big old JAP V-twin engines could not breathe a ny harder, and so were forced; the Age of Superchargers had begun. The English builders Zenith, Brough Superior, and OEC all used the same big V-twin JAP engine, and OEC decided to trump their fellow countrymen by attaching a huge blower to their engine, which increased power by 20%, although the science of supercharging was still young; every plumbing modification and carburetion change was an experiment.  Still, OEC hauled their new machine, along with fearless racer Joe Wright, to France; Wright piloted the OEC-Temple-JAP to 220.59kph (137.58mph) at Arpajon, a huge leap in speed, which meant everyone else needed a supercharger to play the Speed Record game.  Wright’s run was also the first time a rider had officially exceeded Glenn Curtiss’ 1907 speed record…
Joe Wright aboard his supercharged OEC-Temple-JAP at Brooklands, ca.1930

THE WAKE-UP CALL

While these three Kings of tiny, dirty, and unheated little English workshops â€" Brough, Barnes, and Temple â€" were having a splendid time in their private fight for ‘fastest’ bragging rights (on French soil), they didn’t hear the whine of a supercharged flat-twin blasting along at 221.54kph in Inholstadt, and knocking the British flag over.  The English had mistakenly believed their own press and advertising, thinking their dominance of road racing and speed records was almost a natural right, a benefit of their extensive Empire and upper-class privilege, but they weren’t the only ones interested in going fast, and certai nly weren’t the only engineers capable of building a really fast motor. The Absolute World Motorcycle Speed Record, of course, was only one of dozens of speed records available, each based on combinations of time, distance, and engine capacity.
Ernst Henne aboard the semi-streamlined BMW WR750 OHV record-breaker, a supercharged machine with a pushrod 750cc engine
Two German factories especially â€" BMW and DKW â€" were busy developing supercharged road-racing motorcycles; BMW since 1927 with a blown OHV 750cc flat twin, DKW since 1925 with their 175 cc and 250cc two-strokes, which used ‘extra’ pistons to pump a fuel charge into their crankcases. Like manufacturers everywhere, BMW and DKW wanted to showcase their engineering prowess through racing and record-breaking, a process which accelerated rapidly in the 1930s, as DKW became the largest motorcycle manufacturer in the world with its simple but elegant two-stroke roadsters, and fiercely fast supercharged two-stroke racers. International road racing and record-breaking heated up dramatically in the 1930s, regardless of the economic depression which gripped the industrial world.
The semi-streamlined DKW 250cc supercharged two-stroke twin built for taking speed records in the smaller capacity
While English factories like Norton and Velocette developed straightforward and very effective single-cylinder overhead-camshaft racers (the International and KTT, respectively), engineers everywhere understood that an engine which moves air most efficiently, and spins at the fastest rpm, is the engine which produces the most power.  Translated into metal, this meant more cylinders, supercharging, and camshafts near the valves for effective management of cylinder airflow.  The science of the internal combustion engine had been laid down by English engineers like Sir Harry Ricardo and Harry Weslake, who published their principles for everyone to read, but it seemed the German and Italian translations were the best-thumbed.
The Brough Superior supercharged JAP JTOR engine, revealing the glorious mess required to drive and lubricate the machinery.  Certainly not scientifically designed, but nonetheless a spectacular and successful machine.
Just because the facts are water-clear, doesn’t mean the horse will drink.  For whatever reasons, cultural or financial, the English motorcycle industry failed to embrace the challenge presented to them in 1930s international motorcycle sport, and carried on with designs penned in the mid-1920s, right through the death of British GP racing in the 1950s.  The biggest English factories â€" BSA and Triumph â€" had no factory race teams by 1930, while the biggest German and Italian factories probably spent too much money on racing.  The British factories who did race (Norton, Velocette, Rudge, New Imperial, etc) had the best engine tuners and chassis designers, with decades of hard experience, who could extract more power and better handling from their reliable single or two-cylinder racers.

THE SCIENTIFIC RACER
Ernst Hennes supercharged BMW at rest, ca.1933
The writing was on the wall, and engineers from overseas approached racing moto rcycle design from an entirely different perspective, science-based machines designed from first principles, with calculated power outputs and target speeds far beyond what any single-cylinder or V-twin motorcycle could reach.  It was only a matter of time before their experiments were successful. The shock of a BMW taking the absolute World Speed Record was a matter of personal, and for the first time, national pride for the English competitors.  BMW had only existed as a motorcycle company for 7 years, and was already at the forefront of supercharging technology, having bolted blowers onto their flat twins since 1927.  While their supercharged road racers were fast, they didnt handle that well at the limits, and were no match on any race track with curves against the all-around riding excellence of a Sunbeam TT90 or Norton CS1 or Saroléa Monotube.
The Gilera Rondine engine, which had its roots in a 1923 experimental across-the-frame 4-cylinder OHC motor by the OPRA research lab, which was then sold to CNA, who redesigned it as seen here with a DOHC cylinder head.  It gained watercooling and a supercharger, as seen here, by the time Gilera purchased the design...a fine example of a research-based motorcycle engine design, and the precursor to all modern 4-cylinder motorcycle engine
The WR750 Henne rode at Ingolstadt to 221.54kph was based on the R63 750cc OHV roadster, using the same tube-frame chassis, with some very special magnesium racing parts.  It was partially streamlined, but o nly to the extent of covering the steering head and some of the bodywork in form-fitting sheet metal.  While the overall effect was a bit lumpy, the WR750 was visually a more integrated motorcycle than its cobbled-up competition, because the entire machine was designed inside a single factory, with a set of engineers working to improve their product.
The 1931 iteration of the Brough Superior record-breaker, with supercharger plumbing marring the bikes usual clean lines...but making an oh-so-compelling machine
By contrast, their English comp etition formed an old-fashioned mens club of jolly sporting gents, who assembled the best components they could buy from industry friends, then worked with racing pals to combine these parts into the fastest possible package, in rented workshops beside the Brooklands track. The cross-Channel competition for Worlds Fastest became a battle pitting the Engineers against the Enthusiasts, the professionals against the privateers, the mind versus the heart. Of course, this metaphorical division is illusive; every effort required some mix of inspiration and experiment, but the flavor (or national character?) of our competing teams was distinct.  Teams of engineers in Germany working from plans, versus teams of English speed addicts working from intuition and hard-won racing experience.  The contrast between these factions became even more stark as the 1930s progressed, as the World Speed Record became a battleground between BMW and Brough Superior-JAP, and the political/propogand a implications of this proxy battle between rival nations grew far more serious.
Last of the old-school World Speed Record contenders: Super Kim, the 1925 Zenith-JAP modified in Argentina with a supercharger and 1700cc motor, seen here at the Vintage-Revival Montlhéry in 2011.  A machine I found in Argentina many years ago, and which now lives in Germany.



Easy online repair ARCTIC CAT DOWNLOAD 2004 Snowmobile Service Manual ALL MODELS

Download for Free

If you searching for ARCTIC CAT DOWNLOAD 2004 Snowmobile Service Manual ALL MODELS Free Download, you come to the right place. Here you can read or download ARCTIC CAT DOWNLOAD 2004 Snowmobile Service Manual ALL MODELS Free Download directly from the official website. Find and download the free auto repair manual you need online. This user manual, user guide, instruction manual, how to instruction, service manual or repair manual is provided by the manufacturer, and you will read or download from their server.

The ARCTIC CAT DOWNLOAD 2004 Snowmobile Service Manual ALL MODELS Free Download is available for free. We got the link from internet. We are neither affiliated with authors and brands nor responsible for its content and change of content. Check any other articles by browse all content of this site.

You may vis it this ARCTIC CAT DOWNLOAD 2004 Snowmobile Service Manual ALL MODELS

Toyota Yaris Generation 2 2 2009 2012

TOYOTA YARIS (2009-2012)

For 2009, the Yaris receives a slew of upgrades that includes a new front, headlamps, steering wheel audio controls, side mirror signal repeaters, auxiliary jack among others.

See the overview of this Yaris
See the Generation 2.1 or 2.3 model
See the latest model of the Yaris






OWNERSHIP DETAILS1.5
Years AvailableJune 2009-March 2012
ENGINE SPECS
Engine1NZ-FE 1.5 DOHC 16V I 4
Horsepower107hp @ 6,000rpm
Torque142Nm @ 4,200rpm
Fuel TypeGasoline/93 Octane
Fuel SystemElectronic Fuel Injection
Transmission5-Speed Manual, 4-Speed Automatic
Fuel Tank Capacity42 Liters
DIMENSIONS
Length3,750mm
Width1,695mm
Height1,520mm
Wheelbase2,460mm
Curb Weight1,060kg (MT), 1,080kg (AT)
Body Style5 Door Hatchback
Engine/Drive TypeFront Engine/Front Wheel Drive
Seating5
SUSPENSION & TIRES
Front SuspensionMcPherson Strut with Stabilizer
Rear SuspensionTorsion Beam
Front Brakes Ventilated Disc
Rear BrakesDrum
Tires185/60 R15
Wheels15 Inch Alloy
SAFETY
Airbags2
Anti-Lock BrakesYes, with Electronic Brakeforce Distribution and Brake Assist
Traction/Stability ControlNone
Other Safety FeaturesNone
EXTERIOR
Fog LampsFront and Rear
Other Exterior FeaturesLED Type Tail Lights, Rear Wiper, Side Mirror Signal Repeater
INTERIOR
Steering Wheel AdjustmentTilt
Steering Wheel MaterialLeather
Seating AdjustmentManual
Seating MaterialFabric
Other Interior FeaturesCenter Cluster Mounted Gauges with LED Backlit, Silv er Accents, Folding Rear Seat, Front Underseat Tray
CONVENIENCE FEATURES
Power AmenitiesSteering, Windows, Door Locks, Mirrors
Climate ControlManual
Audio SystemAM/FM/CD/MP3/WMA/AUX
Speakers4
Steering Wheel ControlsYes, Audio
AlarmYes
Keyless EntryYes
NOTES
RIVALSChevrolet Aveo, Ford Fiesta, Honda Jazz, Mazda 2, Suzuki Swift

Vitto!

1186


acrylic on canvas 12x24"

Bellissima Brambilla!

Vittorio Brambilla
March 175
Austria GP 1975

this painting is available at
ijbemaa@gmail.com< /div>


Selasa, 30 Mei 2017

Suzuki Packs It In

American Suzuki is filing for bankruptcy protection, and the mother ship (Suzuki Motor Corp) is leaving the U.S. market.  This is not a surprise, as Suzuki's cars never really took off, and the brand remained nearly invisible.

If I had to pick a next brand to go, I think I would pick Smart (998 sales in Oct 2012) or Mitsubishi (3,981 sales in Oct 2012).

National Corvette Museum Sinkhole Collapses

One of the things about living in Kentucky is every once in a while you get new sinkholes. If you happen to be the National Corvette Museum you can lose stuff like 8 Corvettes!

National Corvette Museum: Sinkhole Collapses at National Corvette Museum: We received a call at 5:44am from our security company alerting us of our motion detectors going off in our Skydome area of the Museum. Up...

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 License.

Ford E150 Generation 4 1998 2009

FORD E150 (1998-2009)

One of the first Fords to be brought here, the E150 van became a popular choice among the rich and famous. Powering this 11 seat vehicle is a 4.6 V8 that is also utilized by the Expedition and Mustang.

See the overview of this E150







OWNERSHIP DETAILSChateau Wagon
Years AvailableAugust 1998-February 2009
ENGINE SPECS
Engine Triton 4.6 SOHC 16V V8
Horsepower235hp @ 4,250rpm
Torque462Nm @ 3,000rpm
Fuel TypeGasoline/93 Octane
Fuel SystemElectronic Fuel Injection
Transmission4-Speed Automatic
Fuel Tank Capacity132 Liters
DIMENSIONS
Length5,382mm
Width2,014mm
Height2,118mm
Wheelbase3,505mm
Curb Weight2,623kg
Body Style4 Door Van
Engine/Drive TypeFront Engine/Rear Wheel Drive
Seating11
SUSPENSION & TIRES
Front SuspensionTwist Beam Axle
Rear SuspensionRigid Link, Semi-Elliptic Leaf Springs
Front BrakesVente d Disc
Rear BrakesDrum
Tires245/75 R16
Wheels16 Inch Alloy
SAFETY
Airbags2
Anti-Lock BrakesYes
Traction/Stability ControlNone
Other Safety FeaturesNone
EXTERIOR
Fog LampsNone
Other Exterior FeaturesRear Wiper, Two Tone Paint
INTERIOR
Steering Wheel AdjustmentTilt
Steering Wheel MaterialUrethane
Seating AdjustmentManual
Seating MaterialFabric
Other Interior FeaturesNone
CONVENIENCE FEATURES
Power AmenitiesSteering, Windows, Door Locks, Mirrors
Climate Con trolManual, Dual
Audio SystemAM/FM/Cassette (1998-2002) or AM/FM/6 CD (2002-2009)
Speakers4
Steering Wheel ControlsNone
AlarmYes
Keyless EntryYes
NOTESSix disc changer downgraded to single disc in 2006.
RIVALSChevrolet Savana

WHEELS WAVES CAYUCOS

Brian Bent and his magnificent Hot Rod Church of Sinners mascot car...
The Southsiders MC have been organizing rides in Biarritz/the Pyrenees/Spain since 2009, when we made up a bakers dozen for a few days riding on vintage machines.  Id met Vincent Prat at the Legend of the Motorcycle Concours in Half Moon Bay in 2008, a nd hed invited me to come ride with his friends in France. With exceptional riding roads, little traffic, and terrific Basque food, our merry band of vintagents had found a perfect combination of company and environment. 
Most of the crew who came out for a ride in the Central Coast of California.  The usual August fires were 30 miles away, and lent a golden haze to the light
The event was repeated the next year, and the next, growing with each iteration; by 2011,  the Southsiders added a party in Toulouse to the ride, with an art exhibit and music, which was the prototype for Wheels&Waves, which began in June 2012 in Biarritz.  That little ride with a dozen of us is now an event with 15,000 attendees, still with the ride in the mountains, and other fun in the region, like the Punks Peak hillclimb/sprint, and now a flattrack race in Spain, along with the ArtRide exhibit, and music at the central village at the Cité de lOcean in Biarritz.  Its a terrific mix of moto-centric fun, and a unique mix of the vintage, custom, chopper, surf, race, and skate scenes.
Go Takamines Indian Chout - a Chief motor in a Scout chassis.  He said it took him 4 months of no sleep to built it...
What does this have to do with The Vintagent?  Its a strategy: one-make vintage motorcycle clubs, and groups like the VMCC and AMCA, have an aging membership, and their members/boards lament and fret on how to interest younger riders in old machines.  Younger riders are in fact already interested in old machines - alt.custom sites like Pipeburn and BikeExif feature plenty - but arent interested in hanging around a boring bike club.    A mix of old an new machines is happening organically at events like the BikeShed and Wheels&Waves; what better place to fan the interest of younger riders than to bring old bikes, and ride them in the mix at cool events?
Scotty Topniks Shovelhead chopper at the Cayucos Skate Park; a natural combination, give how many recent chopper converts are/were serious skaters...
To support this concept, TheVintagent partnered with the Southsiders MC last month to host Wheels&Waves Cayucos, a low-key flag-planting on American soil of a great event.  A few friends were invited to the Swallow Creek Ranch for 2 days of riding through the Central Coast hills, and an opportunity to hang out without distraction.  Our mascot f or the event was Richard Vincent, who raced Velocettes and Triumphs in Santa Barbara in the early 1960s, and surfed in the area too.  Richard brought his vintage surfboards, Velocette dirt racers, and a bunch of photographs from his racing/surfing days.  Susan and I shot MotoTintypes with our Wet Plate Van, and portraits of a few friends, which Im sharing here, along with a few of my iPhone shots.  Stay tuned for next years event!
The Hardley from Revival Cycles beside an astounding grain elevator in Templeton, built entirely of stacked 2x6" boards!
Jalika and Alp Sungurtekin relax with their pup.  Alp brought his 172mph pre-unit Triumph land speed record bike
Jeanette Mekdara and her Triumph Bonneville
A few of the ladies chill out by Swallow Creek barn
Yours truly with my 1960 Velocette Clubman, and the very brave Suzie Heartbreak
Revival Cycles fantastic Velocette-Rickman custom
Polo Garat, a Southsider over from France, on a borrowed Velo...
Conrad Leach and Matt Davis hanging around Brian Bents hot rod... (MotoTintype)
Birds of prey circled the skies...even a rare Falcon was sighted.  It was great to see Ian Barry on the road again.  (MotoTintype)
Dean Micetich making it all look easy on his Panhead chopper  (MotoTintype)
Ana Llorente rode her Honda CB450 Black Bomber  (MotoTintype)
The ladies of the Southsiders MC are not to be messed with  (MotoTintype)
Those wild men from Revival Cycles - Alan Stulberg and Stefan Hertl  (MotoTintype)
Roland Sands brought his cool Servi-Car based flat track racer  (MotoTintype)
The Southsiders MC.  (MotoTintype)
Photographer Travis Shinn with Rolands H-D.  (MotoTintype)
There were waves, ther e were wheels.  These vintage surfboards belong to Richard Vincent, who displayed them along with his racing Velocettes, and photos from his racing/surfing days in the early 1960s.   The Southsiders MC - Julien Azé, Jérome Allé, and Vincent Prat - were happy to pose with them...  (MotoTintype)