new releases SEAT León WTCC “Jordi Gené” NEW
Transcription
new releases SEAT León WTCC “Jordi Gené” NEW
new releases Ref. 62090 June SEAT León WTCC “Jordi Gené” NEW The Competition The World Touring Car Championship (WTCC), formerly known as the European Touring Car Championship (ETCC), is the international GT championship organised by the Fédération International de l’Automobile (FIA). Its denomination was changed at the request of the manufacturers in 2005. The WTCC today is firmly positioned as the FIA’s third most important championship, after the Formula 1 and the World Rally Championship. The WTCC currently enjoys the support of major manufacturers such as BMW, Alfa Romeo and SEAT, among others, and is held on the leading circuits in a total of ten events, which take place in different countries including Italy, France, Britain, Germany, Brazil, Mexico, the Czech Republic, Turkey, Spain and China. It is strictly limited to real FIA Super 2000 cars, not prototypes, and awards two world titles, Driver’s Championship and Manufacturer’s Championship. In line with the trend set by the most recent FIA regulations, technology is subordinated to cost. Engines are limited to 2000cc and some production car technologies are not allowed, including traction control and ABS braking, among others. new releases Ref. 62090 June SEAT León WTCC “Jordi Gené” SCX Model SCX is reproducing one of the major WTCC contenders, the SEAT León WTCC, with official decoration in eye-catching colours, lemon yellow and electric blue, which will never go unnoticed on the track. The driver’s name appears on the windscreen, rear side windows and rear window. On the outside, there is one aerial and rather small wing mirrors which appear to be fitted further back than usual on the front door. The front of the car has two air intakes, one along the bumper and another smaller one just above it. The two wide, oval headlights make this part of the car look longer. The windscreen has two wipers, both located vertically at the corners, a fitting which is certainly unusual on this type of vehicle. Moving to the rear of the car, SCX has also reproduced the ventilation openings on the small windows and the profile of the petrol cap. The back door has chromed–effect fittings on the bottom part at each side. Finally, the rear bumper is cut away to make room for twin exhaust pipes, decorated stainless-steel effect. The vehicle’s aerodynamics and its low centre of gravity give the rear spoiler, smaller than is usual on competition vehicles and fitted flush with the car roof, a small visual role. The wide tyres, with aluminium-look wheels, stick out from the bodywork and give the car a compact, tough appearance. Looking inside, SCX continues to work on adding even more detail. This time, as well as the full frame of the roll bars and the decoration on the driver’s helmet and suit, the aluminium-look gearstick and a small electronics box are featured. The Real Car Vehicle driven by the Spaniard Jordi Gené in the FIA World Touring Car Championship (WTCC) for the SEAT Sport team. Gené gained pole position in the first qualifying heat at Valencia’s Cheste circuit, ahead of Müller’s BMW and his team-mate Peter Terting. He won the first victory for the SEAT León WTCC, and in fact the first for a Spanish driver in a Spanish-made car in a FIA world championship. With a 4-cylinder in-line 2000cc engine, it delivers 270hp at 8500rpm. With the driver, it weighs in at 1,140kg and has a six-speed sequential gearbox, front wheel drive and Michelin tyres with 12-inch wheels. new releases Ref. 62090 June SEAT León WTCC “Jordi Gené” High-Intensity Headlamps Xenon Effect Removable and Adjustable Magnet Guide with Suspension a.r.s. Guide Tilting Chassis Detailed Chassis Testing Bench The 1/32 León is a circuit car It has to accelerate at the with geometry of a Rallyslot right time, skids are short and impulsive and it tends to model. Shorter, wider, higher follow the rail fairly well. and heavier than other sharks of the circuit. Once one is familiar with its It is a model which reacts like behaviour, and following the a thoroughbred, thanks to its usual running in and tuning up, it will provide hours of smaller size, and has greater enjoyment, helped of course acceleration thanks to its by the colourful decoration lighter weight. which makes driving it more fun. The pivoting of the rear axleengine assembly also works actively, avoiding going off the track where other chassis do go off. NOTE the test was conducted without the magnet SPORT MEASURES TABLE MEASURES TABLE Wheel base 82 mm Transmission type Direct rear Motor RX-42 Distance 96 mm Transmission ratio 9/27 =3 Traction rear Wheel track 58 mm Type of Guide Pivotant ARS Front Ø 19,5 x 9,8 mm Wheel diameter 19,5 mm Screws 5 (2+2+1) Rear Ø 19,5 x 9,8 mm Car weight 83,3 gr Other Tilting Chassis Bodywork weight 29,5 gr new releases Ref. 62070 Mitsubishi Lancer EVO VIII June NEW The Competition The World Rally Championship (WRC) dates back to 1973. By 1976 a total of 10 rallies were held in different countries, most of them in Europe but also some in Africa. In their order on the calendar: Monaco, Sweden, Portugal, Kenya, Greece, Morocco, Finland, Italy, Corsica and Britain. The starting point of the WRC, the Monte-Carlo Rally, was reached following a preliminary “concentration stage”, in which the more than 300 teams taking part converged on Monte-Carlo from different official European starting points in Almería, Frankfurt, Copenhagen, Paris, Rome and Warsaw. In its early days the WRC admitted a massive number of teams, including a handful of professionals and large numbers of amateur entrants. It is now entirely professional and only ten teams with about twenty cars take part. The popularity this competition has gained is shown by the number of countries where meetings or rallies are held, a total of 16, including Monaco, Sweden, Mexico, Spain, France, Argentina, Italy, Greece, Germany, Finland, Japan, Cyprus, Turkey, Australia, New Zealand and Britain. In 1988, interest in including a Catalan event in the world calendar led to the merging of the country’s two leading rallies, the Catalunya and the Costa Brava, into a new event named the Rally Catalunya-Costa Brava, based in Lloret de Mar. In 1991, the Rally Catalunya-Costa Brava became part of the World Championship. In 2005 the event left Lloret de Mar and moved to Salou. This, together with the arrival of the RACC motoring club as the event organiser, led, yet again, to a change of denomination: Rally RACC Catalunya–Costa Daurada. It still counts towards the World Manufacturers’, Drivers’ and Junior Championships. The Rally RACC Catalunya-Costa Daurada is today held over a total of three stages over a weekend, on roads with lots of difficult bends. This year, in its 42nd edition, it was the fourth event on the 2006 World Rally Championship calendar. Salou, its new base, was the starting and finishing point, and its stages took place around the province of Tarragona. new releases Ref. 62070 Mitsubishi Lancer EVO VIII June SCX Model SCX reproduces another WRC classic, the Mitsubishi EVO VIII, a car which makes up for its subdued decoration with the spectacular red of its bodywork. The car has two air intakes On the front section, one along the bumper and another located between the large headlights, plus two small air outlets on the bonnet. In the middle of the roof there is an air intake to cool the cockpit and, next to it, the vehicle’s small camera. The roof is finished off at the back with a set of three aerials. Moving towards the back, we come to the most spectacular feature of the vehicle, its double spoiler, with the RALLIART logo – the largest on the car – featured on the lower of its two levels. The size of this spoiler sacrifices much of the visibility through the rear window, but gives improved aerodynamics. The boot features the shape of two closures and the bumper, with a modest opening at the right, the a tiny-looking aluminium-effect exhaust pipe. The windscreen is fitted with a single wiper located in the middle. At the sides, dispensing with any brackets, there are two small side-view mirrors directly affixed to the doors. The front wheel arches are unusually wide, exposing part of the chassis and the front tyres –with aluminium-look wheels– to properly cool them. Inside the car we find roll cage and a pretend spare wheel. SCX has also decorated the driver and co-driver –including faces, microphones and route map– and, in front of the driver, has also included a replica of the dashboard. The Real Car The Finnish driver Harri Rovanperä and his co-driver Risto Pietiläinen drove this Mitsubishi EVO VIII in the 2005 Rally de Catalunya for the Mitsubishi Motor Sports team, finishing in tenth place. The Mitsubishi Lancer EVO VIII was made in Japan and redesigned in 2005 to take advantage of the FIA’s new rules. The changes made little visual difference, but internally they gave the car greater stability: wider bodywork, new front and rear spoilers, rear wings and bumpers. The suspension was also reviewed to adapt it to both asphalt and earth, and changes were made to some internal components, including the engine, gearbox and clutch. Moreover, Mitsubishi fitted Pirelli tyres for the first time. It weighs in at 1,410kg and delivers 450 horsepower at 6200rpm, thanks to the front-mounted 1997cc turbo DOHC inline 4-cylinder 16-valve engine. The car has a six-speed manual gearbox and rear-wheel drive. It features ventilated disc brakes on all four wheels. It can reach a maximum speed of 282km/h and accelerates from 0 to 100km/h in 3.6 seconds. new releases Ref. 62070 Mitsubishi Lancer EVO VIII High-Intensity Headlamps Xenon Effect June Removable and Adjustable Magnet Testing Bench One more for the pits – the whole Guide with Suspension a.r.s. Guide 4-wheel drive Detailed Chassis The plastic protecting the motor at the bottom provides the world championship is available in SCX. warning that worn tyres need replacing to avoid the bottom grounding on the track. The EVO VIII has the classic rally car behaviour, featuring the chassis Otherwise, maintenance is parts common to all of them, so it standard, looking after the car’s drives in a familiar way. This is fast, fairly safe car for which, like any basic points, including the pincers rally car, the right choice of tyre is which hold the motor fitting and bearings (these parts may be vital. secured with glue), and the pickup guide, which must be in good The four-wheel drive using a condition to ensure the motor gets double-pinion motor provides the electrical power it needs. instant, guaranteed power, even though this gives such impetus to Proper lubrication will prolong the the car that care is needed to control it. The small front and long life of parts subject boot combine to make the car skid to wear and tear. easily but predictably. NOTE the test was conducted without the magnet SPORT MEASURES TABLE MEASURES TABLE Wheel base 79 mm Transmission type 4-wheel double pinion Motor RX-81 Distance 94 mm Transmission ratio 9/27 =3 Traction 4-wheel drive Wheel track 56 mm Type of Guide Pivotant ARS Front Ø 19,5 x 9,8 mm Wheel diameter 19,5 mm Screws 3 (0+2+1) Rear Ø 19,5 x 9,8 mm Car weight 82 gr Other Covered engine Bodywork weight 30 gr new releases Ref. 62050 Vintage McLaren F-1 June SCX’s latest addition to the its Vintage Series. The choice this time has been an unusual model indeed: it has the shortest career in motoring history –just 7 minutes– and also a distinctive and highly unconventional design. As usual for its Vintage Series, SCX is re-releasing the model in a numbered, limited edition, of 4,500 units, supplied in specially-designed packaging featuring an elegant, top-quality box. Inside, sitting on a black base, the McLaren M9A stands out for its colour and beauty. Carefully tucked under this base, the information leaflet containing details of the actual vehicle, the driver and SCX’s model. new releases Ref. 62050 June Vintage McLaren F-1 SCX Model SCX first released this McLaren M9A in 1970 – the only completely new model to be produced that year – in four colours: dark blue, red, green and yellow, though it was launched in other colours for the Mexican market. The SCX model had rear-wheel drive, an open RX motor and a white movable guide fixed to the body shell with a centre screw. It was one of the models featured by SCX in its GP-50 circuit. This brings us to the most spectacular part of the vehicle, the rear, with an imposing spoiler -almost as long as half the overall length of the vehicle- situated over and along the whole length of the engine block. The whole engine block has been “chromed”, highlighting the set of six carburettor pipes arranged in two rows, sheltering shyly under the space inside the rear spoiler, which looks as if it were protecting them. SCX has re-used the original moulds and brought it back to The width of the tyres, completely smooth, is significantly different at front and rear, the back ones being considerably larger in order to cope with the vehicle’s enormous power. Both tyres are fitted with chrome-look wheels. The axles and suspension bars, particularly at the back, are largely exposed. life, if only for a short time, with a single concession to modernity: the use of tampo-printing instead of the usual transfers. The decoration is minimal, with just 2 sponsors plus the number and the names of the team and the driver. These were undoubtedly Formula 1’s modest beginnings. This is a vehicle which appears long, due to the scarce width of the rear section, which looks like a flattened cylinder. At the front, the oval-shaped air intake which cooled the radiator stands out. On either side of the nose are the two side fins, whose function was to improve stability and road-holding, stopping the nose from lifting up. Finally, two sets of exhaust pipes, welded to the engine block, run along the block underneath the rear spoiler and above the axles. In the cockpit, open and surrounded by a clear plastic screen, the driver’s figure is simple, painted white with just the safety belt profiled; the driver’s helmet features lines and bottom in the red, white and blue of the British flag, which also appears on the top of the helmet. Just behind is the chrome-finish roll bar fixed to the engine block. The Real Car The 1969 British Grand Prix was the year of the fourwheel drives. Five cars of this type took part, one of them a McLaren, the M9A. At the wheel of the McLaren was Derek Bell, the third driver specially signed by the New Zealand team for the car’s trials and its competition debut. Although Bell subsequently earned himself a very good reputation as a driver – winning two world Sportscar titles, five victories in the Le Mans 24 Hours and three in the Daytona 24 Hours – this was his first and last appearance in the British Grand Prix, and of the McLaren M9A in Formula 1, within the Championship or outside it. Bell, without a background in Formula 1 and of humble origins, came from Formula 3, where he had enjoyed a successful season with seven wins. Bell came fifteenth in training, but in the race a puncture on the fifth lap caused him to crash and abandon the race after only seven minutes! Designed by the Swiss engineer Jo Marquart, this curious car had some highly unusual features: four-wheel drive, a Cosworth DFV engine fitted “back to front”, adjustable power distribution, drive shaft passing to the left of the cockpit, a proprietary McLaren transmission design, aluminium chassis and unconventional ancillary mechanical solutions. new releases Ref. 62050 June Vintage McLaren F-1 Testing Bench There are no strange movements or slipping at the front, A classic of the 60’s to bring the old excitement of those first SCX cars bang up to date. or even the long skids so typical of 60’s SCX models, which shows that even then, despite their limitations in Deliberate, undemanding driving comparison with modern designs, really well-balanced reveals the car’s dynamic cars could be made. possibilities, at the same time as showing us what the first SCX As for the open RX motor, re-released for the Vintage series, users felt, so similar to their it responds perfectly to reactions to the first McLarens. modern controllers and transformers. Difficult to control once it gets away from you, the McLaren Smooth reactions, long can hold the track if we stick braking and an adequate to the rail. peak, just like the old RX’s. Going along without trying to go too fast, accelerating When placing it on the track, the braids should be lifted on the straights and anticipating the bends is the way to as far as possible, or else the bottom of the guide pin cut short, to avoid get the best lap times, getting some wear on the touching the standard tyres, which grip better bottom of the slot, as they get older. as the classic screw guide goes much lower than today’s ones. Unless we want it to be, this is not a car to keep in the display case. NOTE Test conducted with factory specifications SPORT MEASURES TABLE MEASURES TABLE Wheel base 76 mm Transmission type Direct rear Motor RX-1 Distance 86 mm Transmission ratio 9/27 =3 Traction rear Wheel track 63 mm Type of Guide Traditional, with screw Front Ø 20,5 x 7,8 mm Wheel diameter 22,5 mm Screws 4 (1+1+1+1) Rear Ø 22,5 x 9,0 mm Car weight 77,4 gr Other RX open engine new releases Ref. 88620 June Supersliding Inner Curve Set “Ice Effect” SCX presents the Supersliding Inner Curve, specially designed to make races even more spectacular. This new curve allows: Setting up parallel curve sections in both directions to create a spectacular effect as cars pass each other in opposite directions; Completing curve sections on four-lane racing tracks by using this Supersliding Inner Curve together with the “Ice Effect” Supersliding Curve (ref. 88100). The Supersliding Inner Curve Set “Ice Effect” includes: >> 4 Supersliding Inner Curves >> 2 Supersliding Curve Entrance/Exit sections >> 3 Barriers >> 2 Inside borders >> 4 Borders All the sections are decorated with “Ice Effect” and cause the sliding effect by having aluminium rails fitted rather than the usual steel ones: as aluminium is not magnetic, the car’s magnet is not attracted to it and the car “skids” more.