Category: Maxxd News

  • MODIFIED AUDI 90 QUATTRO: EVERYTHING EVERYWEHRE

    Some people build their project cars for out-and-out thrust, or to be nimble on the track; others are focused on quarter-mile times, while yet more like to have a quick and practical runabout for nipping to the shops via the fun route. Wolfgang Koller wanted all of these things at once, and the modified Audi 90 you see here is the polymathic result…

    Feature first appeared in Fast Car magazine. Words: Dan Bevis. Photos: Lukasz Elszkowski

    “I like to use this car for special occasions,” says its proud owner and builder, Wolfgang Koller. “Like quarter-miles, half-miles, and weddings…” Only a few moments in his effervescent company and already we’re awestruck by the quality, malleability, entertainment value and sheer audacity of this build. After all, while blushing brides are famously quite keen to get to the church on time, the idea of lining up alongside the Christmas tree lights in full wedding regalia and catapulting up the strip is presumably not something that gets mooted all that favourably. Finding a car that can excel in both of these entirely diverse scenarios is a rare treat indeed, and Wolfgang’s wonderful creation is frankly something of a marvel.

    Perhaps the best part of all is that people really have trouble trying to figure out what the car is. If you look at the front dead-on, then it’s clearly an RS2 – except that when you move around to the side you find that it’s a saloon. And what’s this 90 saloon doing running a big-power 20v turbo five-pot and a full quattro drivetrain swap? It’s like a greatest hits of 1980s/’90s Audi engineering, smooshed together into some kind of quantum vortex and atom-split into one catch-all solution. A practical four-door that’s also a total headcase.

    Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised. After all, as the driving force (pun certainly intended, ta) behind Germany’s revered Audiland Racing, Wolfgang is a man who knows his Ingolstadt onions. The fella had a fairly early start, with his quattro career kicking off back when he was nineteen with an ’87 Coupe GT quattro. “I started out modifying the wheels and the suspension, before moving on to the question of power,” he recalls. “The engine was a 115bhp 2.2-litre, and I modified the cylinder head and fitted a crank from ABT, as well as upgrading the exhaust system.”

    It’s true that modifying can be a manner of addiction, and the path that’s been followed here is a textbook case. The initial alterations in both altitude and attitude acted as a gateway drug, and it’s never long before the lust for thrust begins to push with its insistent urgency and pointy claws. In Wolfgang’s case, it all proved too irresistible for words, and his home-brewed modifying adventures naturally led him to be buying and selling Audi parts, something that developed into a proper parts business and vocation; the enthusiasm for tuning stirred its own elements of malevolent energy into the mix, and as all of these stars symbiotically aligned it was only a matter of time before he was cutting the ribbon on the doors to the new business, Audiland Racing. And the rest, as they say, is history.

    Modified Audi 90

    So why an Audi 90 this time, of all things? Well, quite simply, Wolfgang crashed his old Coupe GT and he needed a new car. After a quick search, he unearthed a front-wheel-drive Audi 90 for sale not too far from home, packing a 136hp 2.3-litre motor. (For the uninitiated, the 90 nameplate was the one applied to the versions of the Audi 80 that were running five-cylinder engines – it was a more luxurious version with plush velour seats, and identifiable by its different lights at either end.) Suffice it to say that the 136bhp number didn’t stay the headline power figure for long, as Wolfgang immediately got elbows-deep in the oily stuff to reimagine the saloon as the ultimate version of itself. “I built it up to 550bhp, with a Garrett GT35 turbo and the 2.2-litre 20-valve engine out of an S2,” he grins. But impressively – and perhaps slightly improbably – that wasn’t enough for this inveterate tuner. Perhaps it was the tortured screams from those overloaded front tyres that gave him pause for thought, but somewhere along the line he realised that he was putting quite a lot of surprising grunt through the front wheels.

    “In 2002 I bought an Audi 90 quattro chassis, and built a completely new 90 quattro 20v turbo,” he explains. “In the beginning I used the engine out of the FWD Audi 90, along with an intake manifold from an Audi S1 to add a little more power. Since then, I’ve changed almost every single element of the car – only the fuel tank and the rear diff remain.” That’s a fairly astonishing boast; not so much Trigger’s Broom as a cornucopia of relentless excellence, this project has been an ongoing quest to refine every individual element of the car in the pursuit of perfection. Topped off by the white carbon Audiland cam cover, this insanely purposeful five-pot kicks out Group B levels of power, and the bangs and flames which explode out of the custom shotgun exhausts really are a treat for the ears and the eyes – check out Wolfgang’s Instagram (@koller.74) to see for yourself.

    Modified Audi 90

    What makes it all the more fun is that, if you weren’t really paying attention, the car almost looks subtle. Sure, the low-slung stance thanks to its KW V3 coilovers and the old-school BBS E28s tell those in the know that something’s amiss here, but the sober grey hue acts as a sort of cloaking device. There’s a reason why military planes are often painted grey; well, three reasons, really – first of all, if you paint the underside of a plane grey, it can blend in with the sky more easily when seen from below. Secondly, and similarly, if you paint the top of it grey then it can camouflage itself on the runway tarmac when viewed from above. And thirdly, and most significantly, if you slather your fighter jet in radiation-absorbent iron-ball paint, it’ll be pretty much invisible to radar. That, and it’ll fox heat-seeking missiles somewhat. All in all, the stealthy properties of grey sell themselves when it comes to hiding in plain sight. This is very much the reason that the 90 is a stealthy (if sparkly) grey – it flies under the radar. Well, until it starts popping and banging like a rally car, obviously. The interior is splendidly fit for purpose too, as Wolfgang’s swapped in the forthright innards from an S2, also augmenting it with huggy Recaro buckets, plus the essential accoutrements for a build like this: oodles of gauges, and a big shift light. It’s all form and function here, working in splendid harmony. A true polymath, built largely by Wolfgang’s own two hands, with the ability to carry out any task thrown at it with aplomb. Dragstrip runs, track days, nipping out for a pint of milk, bridal chauffeuring, this unique creation can do it all. Naturally the colossal thrust will pin the bride back in that Recaro like a force 11 gale, and the cartoonishly large brakes will then pinball her toward the dash, but of course that’s all part of the fun. Wolfgang’s got big plans too, involving a bigger turbo and around 800hp. When you have a car that can do everything, that gives you carte blanche to do anything.

    Modified Audi 90

    Tech Spec: Modified Audi 90 Quattro

    Engine:

    2.5-litre 20-valve 5-cylinder, PK Motorsport valvetrain, TTH GTX35 turbo conversion, Audi S1 intake manifold, PK Evo pipes, TiRon hardware, custom Audiland cam cover in white carbon, custom exhaust system inc. thermo-isolated manifold, full quattro conversion

    Chassis:

    9×18-inch BBS E28 wheels, 215/35 tyres, KW V3 coilovers, front strut brace – covered in white carbon, RS6 8-pot front calipers with R8 LMS discs, B5 RS4 rear brakes

    Exterior:

    Full repaint in metallic grey, RS2 front-end conversion, RS2 mirrors, Kamei badgeless grille, additional air vents in bonnet and front bumper, USDM taillights, smoked headlights and indicators, de-badged rear

    Interior:

    RS2 interior conversion, stock carbon trims, Recaro bucket seats, Alcantara-trimmed steering wheel, shift-light, additional gauges in air-vents

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  • THREE MEN FOUR WHEELS: NEW TV SERIES

    What is the greatest racing car ever made? That’s the question that new TV series Three Men Four Wheels will try and answer as it launches on Quest at 9pm on June 24.

    Antique and classic car dealer Drew Pritchard (Salvage Hunters), motoring broadcaster Andy Jaye & British racing driver Marino Franchitti are your three men and each episode will see them debating some of the greatest race and sports cars ever built.

    Three Men Four Wheels

    Jaguar. Trac Môn Anglesey Circuit.

    Getting their mitts on some serious motoring gems, Three Men Four Wheels takes an exclusive look behind the scenes of some of the most thrilling vehicles ever built, such as the eye wateringly expensive Porsche 911 S-T, Colin McRae’s 555 world famous machine and possibly the greatest F1 car ever, the Lotus 72.

    Three Men Four Wheels

    With access to extremely rare cars, they go where cameras have never filmed before at the Porsche Motorsport Garage, housing more than £100million worth of cars as well as gaining rare access to Ten Tenths, the private car collection of Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason.

    Drew Pritchard, Marino Franchitti and Andy Jaye at Ferrari showroom.

    Poring over every inch of some of the most incredible vehicles ever made, Three Men Four Wheels gives you breath-taking driving, pure passion and genuine best mates desperately debating their car choice for top trumps!

    The first of 10 episodes airs on Quest TV on June 24th at 9pm. Freesat channel 167, Sky channel 144, Freeview channel 37 and Virgin channel 172.

    Three Men Four Wheels

    Three Men Four Wheels: Episode Breakdown

    1. The Ferrari F40…with Drew, who hates it, struggling to get into the car due to an ill-fitting race suit.

    2. The Stovebolt Special. A one of a kind car that holds a very special place in Drew’s heart.

    3. The Lotus 72. The greatest F1 car ever built? Marino is given ultra exclusive access to a very special machine.

    4. The Mini. Not only do we meet the Monte Carlo winning car (and drive it), we also get to hang out with the legend Paddy Hopkirk – at his house!

    5. The Aston Martin Ulster. A divisive episode, which also features Pink Floyd drummer Nick Mason.

    6. Porsche 911 ST. Not just any 911, this one is hyper-rare and eye wateringly expensive.

    7. Subrau Impreza – Colin McRae’s 555 world famous machine. A very special episode where Marino gets to drive his old friends iconic car, and remember the legend of Colin.

    8. Bugatti T35. Another special car for Drew…who instantly attempts to buy it, only to be given a children’s replica.

    9. Jaguar XJ220. The car which probably divided the gang most of all, but which brought the Welsh hills alive when we tested it on track.

    10. The Nasty Habit Hot Rod. So dangerous Marino refused to get in it, and it set the track on fire! Literally!

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  • COLIN MCRAE: A FORD MOTORSPORT ICON

    One of the most iconic characters in motorsport, Colin McRae will forever be remembered as a true Ford hero. Here’s why…

    Feature first appeared in Fast Ford magazine. Words: Graham Robson. Photos: Ford Photographic

    It’s been 22 years since Colin McRae won his first rally event in a Focus WRC, the Safari of 1999. It may have been of shattering importance to Ford, and to M-Sport, which had built the car, but for Colin it was just another step along the way – he had, after all, won his first world championship round six years earlier, and had been world rally champion in 1995.

    As a personality, an icon, and, above all as a fiercely competitive driver, we’ll never forget him. Colin, who tragically died in a helicopter crash near his home in Scotland in 2007 (along with his son Johnny and two family friends) had no time to do anything slowly. Everything in his life seemed to be enjoyed at top speed, and his career certainly reflected that. Maybe his top-line rally career was already over by the year in which he was taken from us, but as far as he was concerned there was still much more motorsport to be enjoyed.

    Colin McRae

    Famous son of a famous father – Colin McRae’s dad, Jimmy McRae, was British Rally Champion several times in the 1980s, twice in Sierra RS Cosworths like this

    Before he took up rallying, Colin had indulged in motorcycle trials and scrambles, but it was after watching his famous father, Jimmy McRae, win so well, so often and so stylishly in a rally car that he took up the sport. He never let his rallying life be dull, and his sport was never tackled cautiously.

    Along the way, he notched up an impressive total of bills to repair crashed cars and seemed not to care how much this was sometimes costing his employers. It was a perhaps slightly arrogant attitude, which eventually weighed against him.

    The first time I saw Colin McRae on a British rally in the 1980s, he was picking tree branches out of the bodywork of his battered Vauxhall Nova. The second time, he was doing the same to a Sierra RS Cosworth, and the third… Well, why do you think that his long-standing nickname was McCrash? His one-time team boss David Sutton described Ari Vatanen’s progress as ‘crash, win, break the car, crash, win…’ and Colin was like that in every way. And just like the flying Finn, Colin matured and became a hero to millions of rally fans all over the world.

    Colin McRae

    Colin McRae and Nicky Grist celebrate their 1999 Safari victory

    “With McRae’s ‘if in doubt, flat out’ attitude, there’s no wonder he’s regarded as one of the most-loved Ford motorsport icons of all time”

    Colin was the eldest son of five-times British Rally Championship winner Jimmy McRae, who along with Russell Brookes, had dominated British rallying events during the 1980s. It was when Jimmy was at his peak, driving works-blessed Ford Sierra RS Cosworths, that in 1986 Colin (then only aged 18) started out in the Scottish Rally Championship in a Talbot Sunbeam, soon turning to a Vauxhall Nova (with financial help from Dealer Team Vauxhall).

    Ford, which had Jimmy McRae on a long-term contract, then decided to encourage Colin too. The Blue Oval provided him with a Group N Sierra RS Cosworth for the British Rally Championship (where he often crashed) but at this early stage his most astonishing performance was to take fifth overall in New Zealand in D933 UOO, an elderly ex-works Group A Sierra RS Cosworth RWD (on an event where four-wheel-drive cars were already considered essential).

    Ford, still indulging him in spite of his frequent costly crashes, then gave Colin full backing in 1990, where he started the year in a rear-drive Group A Sapphire Cosworth, and ended it in one of the first Cosworth 4x4s. Although he took second place overall in the British Rally Championship of that year (a seven-event series in which he had one victory, two seconds and two third places), his first Ford works contract came to an end immediately after he had badly damaged yet another works Sapphire Cosworth 4×4 in the RAC rally.

    Colin McRae

    Despite taking sixth place at the end of that event, his car was really a rolling write-off following a typical McCrash excursion and Boreham seemed relaxed when hearing that he had decided to join to Subaru (and Prodrive), where he would stay until 1998.

    To be honest, it was at Subaru that Colin firmly cemented his relationship with the British rallying public. Not only did he win the British Championship twice in the four-wheel-drive Legacy, he began winning at world level, using steadily-improving Imprezas.

    Not that his demeanour, nor his treatment of his cars, improved in that period, for although he became world rally champion in 1995 and finished second in the championship in 1996 and 1997, he was often at odds with his team management, with his teammates, and even in the car itself; he also dumped co-driver Derek Ringer in favour of Nicky Grist in 1997.

    Colin McRae

    Richard Burns and Colin McRae – rivals but still friends

    By that time he had become something of a media hero, as his Colin McRae computer game sold in its millions, making him richer than any previous British driver. His demands on the team and, coincidentally, his financial demands on Prodrive, eventually led to them releasing him at the end of 1998.

    By then, though, he had already concluded a mega-contract with M-Sport and Ford for 1999; he was made team leader at a then-colossal fee of reputedly £3 million-a-year. You may be sure that Martini, which was the headline sponsor of the newly-developed Focus WRC cars, had to spend much of the budget on McRae.

    No matter, the financial outlay was soon seen to be worth it; grappling with the all-new Focus WRC, he startled everyone by winning the 1999 Safari and Portugal events in his first few months. They were only the third and fourth rallies ever tackled by that complex four-wheel-drive car.

    Colin McRae was famous the world over, and the fans loved him – as this shot confirms

    Nevertheless, Colin McRae always seemed to be very hard on his cars: he expected them to put up with his methods, and expected the team to put up with his sometimes sullen temperament. When things were going well, he could reputedly be the best of hosts and the soul of any party. But when the gloom descended (which it sometimes did) he was said to be better avoided.

    Malcolm Wilson’s M-Sport organisation, which loved him because of his unstoppable ambition to win and ability to keep a battered car going, rose above McRae’s attitude, as the car kept on improving. Colin was always on the pace unless the Focus WRC let him down. Sadly it did that more often then he or M-Sport would have liked in 1999, with 11 retirements in that first year; three were due to crashes, but whenever and wherever he appeared in the Focus, Colin McRae set standards and, usually, fastest times.

    His second season with the M-Sport Focus (in 2000) was so typical of his flamboyant career at Ford. Having started all 14 world championship rounds, Colin won twice (Spain and Greece), and took second on three occasions. But his cars suffered four engine failures and had two big accidents. He was apparently so unhappy about this that he threatened to leave at the end of the year.

    “He had become a media hero, as his computer game sold in its millions, making him richer than any previous British driver”

    Colin McRae

    Colin McRae was supremely fast – and brave – on any rallying surfaces

    Things got much better in 2001 when McRae won three world events, all three on the run: Argentina, Cyprus and Greece. And amazingly, there was only one accident – in front of his adoring fans in the Network Q Rally at the end of the season.

    Even so, Colin always seemed to give everything to his sport and his employers. In fact, he came close to death after a high-speed crash in Corsica in 2002, which left the car upside down in the trees and below the level of the road, with him trapped inside and fuel dripping onto his overalls. It was a miracle that co-driver Nicky Grist was able to get out of the wreck and summon help.

    McRae was always the darling of the national and motorsport press (like Nigel Mansell, they didn’t necessarily like him as a man, but he certainly provided them with many good headlines). It was especially a great thing for his personal publicity, especially as the media encouraged the myth of his rivalry with Richard Burns (in fact, the two were friends and thought the idea of a feud was laughable). With a total of 25 world victories and many other podium placings, it’s easy to see why.

    Bargaining on his worth to the sport, Colin soon became rallying’s richest driver, and because more than ten million copies of the PlayStation Colin McRae Rally video games were sold, he wisely became a tax exile in Monaco for some years.

    Nevertheless, it was his financial demands (he reputedly demanded £5 million for the following year) that eventually forced McRae out of Ford at the end of 2002, and he was never happy, nor successful, with Citroen the following year.

    When he lost his Citroen contract after only one season, there were no other substantial rally offers, and because of his known character he found it impossible to gain any further works drives.

    Apart from dabbling with the design of a new clubman’s rally car – the McRae R4 – which he personally demonstrated at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in 2006, a one-off drive in the Le Mans 24-hour race, and the commissioning of an ultimate Mk2 Escort  ‘just for fun’, his motorsport career was effectively over.

    But his legacy will live on forever. Rally fans aren’t as pragmatic as team bosses; they don’t care about coming second in a pristine car ready to do battle again next week. No, they want to see a do-or-die attitude, going all-out for glory and to heck with the consequences. And with Colin McRae’s ‘if in doubt, flat out’ attitude, that’s exactly what they got. No wonder he’s regarded as one of the most-loved Ford motorsport icons of all time.

    Colin McRae: Driver Profile

    Born:

    Lanark, on 5 August 1968. Killed in a helicopter crash on 15 August 2007.

    Rallying achievements:

    World Rally Champion in 1995, second in World Rally Championship in 1996, 1997 and 2001. British Rally Champion in 1991 and 1992.

    Raced works Ford Focus WRCs from 1999 to 2002, winning nine world events (including twice in the East African Safari, and three straight victories in the Greek Acropolis) during that time.

    Outright World Rally victories:

    1993 – New Zealand (Subaru Legacy), 1994 – New Zealand, Australia and Great Britain (Subaru Impreza); 1995 – New Zealand and Great Britain (Subaru Impreza); 1996 – Greece, Italy and Spain (Subaru Impreza); 1997 – East African Safari, Tour de Corse,          Italy, Australia and Great Britain (Subaru Impreza); 1998, Portugal, Tour de Corse and Greece (Subaru Impreza); 1999 – East African Safari and Portugal (Ford Focus WRC); 2000 – Spain and Greece (Ford Focus WRC); 2001 – Argentina, Cyprus and Greece (Ford Focus WRC); 2002 – Greece and East African Safari (Focus WRC)

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