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Around The World In Eight Days
If you read the NSCA bulletin board you were probably
aware of my recent tuning trip to Puerto
Rico. The event was staged as
a war between the big inch American
Muscle versus the Japanese turbocharged, nitrous
injected and even alcohol burning imports. I was
hired to tune a car driven by Axel Colon' (Engine built
by R and S Competition out of New York) and owned
by Sportys Motorsports of Puerto Rico. We made several
half track passes working on the interval times
with a soft leave (un-prepped track) and on raceday
we qualified number one and made it all the way
to the final. A consistent string of 7.6 second runs
pleased the fans, the car owner and the sponsor. Even
the three minute (yes three minute) burn down in the
final round was exciting and quite a crowd pleaser.
Good job Axel you were a rock behind the wheel.
Now we're off to Michigan: In the NMRA Bill Glidden
(Gliddenracingengines.com) ran a string of
7.5 second runs only to
succomb to a faulty line-lock in the final.
He still cooks a heck of a steak and I want to thank
all of those that attended (what was supposed to be
a quaint gathering) but turned into my birthday party.
Thanks for reminding me how old I am everyone.
Dan Testani was my point of focus at the NMRA
event. He had the potential to make
a move in the field (those
blower cars are giving us fits) so I along with Steve
Johnson of NOS camped out there. We all worked together
and Dans times steadily improved every round despite
the changing weather conditions. He qualified number
4 at 8.383 and finished up the event running a string
of high 8.2 second runs and finally a 8.207 @ 170.51
which is the quickest/fastest pass by a nitrous car
in the class. Hats off to Cary Chounard for that solid
running powerplant.
Now its off to Cordova, Illinois and the old
Mississippi: In IHRA Terry Frever with his
Lukovich powerplant(Lukovichracing.com)
took Top Sportsman honors
(leftover race from the last event) and our IHRA
Pro Stock test pilot Jerry Yeoman (Sonnys powerplant)
landed in the #2 spot.
It was pretty warm in Cordova, so I was
lounging in the motor home when Ed Steffey (owner of Pat Moores car)
stopped by. He asked me to take a look at their program.
I zipped over to their camp and saw a few things,
made the changes and Moore (with Buck Racing Power)
moved to the front of the Nitrous field. Qualifying
number 3 behind the Hahn, Critchfield supercharged
entries. A quick additional touch up and review
after the run and they were set for raceday.
On raceday consistency was the key as both
Yeoman and Moore could have been
bracket racing, their cars were right
there every pass.
Yeoman bowed out in round three in Pro Stock
and Pat Moore lost to Ronnie Hood
despite running a quicker E.T.
The string of 6.37 second runs by Moore, all at220 mph proves the Moore driven
Buck racing powerplant is a
solid contender in Pro Modified.
Hats off to current IHRA P/Stock World Champion Chris
Holbrook who made some moves in the right
direction with his program.
Unfortunately the Kaase powerplant kept
improving in performance every round and Chris was
left chasing a clutch setup. The 6.75 E.T. that was
in that old top Sportsman car (carrying an 813 c.i.
engine) never got a chance to shine. If you get Chris
Holbrook on raceday you've got your hands full. Good
Luck in New York Chris.
Oh and Tom Payn...good job buddy.
Thanks for reading...I'm going to get some much needed
sleep (next week I think I'll be in North Dakota...do they
have a track there?) and thanks from all of us at Pro
Systems.
We appreciate your comments and support. If you have
any questions feel free to call.
Sincerely,
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