lunes, 29 de octubre de 2012

2006 Pro Stock Preview

2006 Pro Stock Preview Determined Champions versus prepared challengers on tap for this season... 
By Robert Bravender; Photos by Roger Richards
PUBLISHER'S NOTE - Throughout this week, we've summoned our beat reporters to provide our readers with a look into the 2006 season and some of the known news tidbits and some unknown. Join us throughout the week as we conclude with our seventh annual championship predictions.
In today's installment, noted Pro Stock enthusiast and Inside Drag Racing producer Robert Bravender takes a look into factory hot rod land with this feature.
TOMORROW'S PROFILE - Pro Stock Motorcycle

NHRA


Let's get This Party Started - While the 2006 NHRA season officially kicks off with the Carquest Auto Parts Winternationals Feb. 9 in Pomona, select Pro Stock racers will get to flog their rides one week earlier during the Pontiac Pro Stock Showdown held at The Strip in Las Vegas. With numerous new engine programs in play, many drivers welcome the extra seat time - and the extra cash they could win.
Greg Anderson, 3 time Pro Stock Champion, hopes to help get a lock on #4 with the debut of a his DRCE 3 engine at Pomona.


Four Times a Charm? - Among the select: defending champ Greg Anderson, whose switch to a new Summit Racing Equipment Pontiac GTO at mid season coincided with a comeback that earned him his third consecutive POWERade championship.
To keep things fresh, he and teammate Jason Line, who finished 3rd in points, parked their Goats during the winter, and with three more cars being tested in the wings, “we are in better shape for this coming season than we have ever been,” said Anderson.
But that doesn‘t mean he‘s been idle, for Anderson’s been feverishly working with the DRCE 3, the new version of the GM drag race engine, which he hopes to debut by Pomona. “Warren and Kurt (Johnson) switched over to the new engine last year, so they’ve got a year’s jump on us,” he reported. “That’s why we’re working extra hard this off season to be as ready as we can, so that we can withstand the challenge that we know is coming in 2006.” Perhaps even from his own back yard - right Jason?

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Recording the best runs of any Pro Stock racer in pre-season tests, both Warren and Kurt Johnson have a chance to break Greg Anderson’s iron grip on the Pro Stock championship.


License Renewed -Despite Warren Johnson’s earlier announcement that he was retiring at the end of the 2005 season, GM’s renewed sponsorship and the power of the DRCE 3 engine program enticed the six-time NHRA champion back behind the wheel, where he and son Kurt, respectively #4 and #2 in the 2005 NHRA Pro Stock points, recently clocked astounding numbers during testing in Cecil, GA - 210.08 mph from Warren’s GM Performance Parts Pontiac GTO, 6.604-seconds from Kurt’s ACDelco Chevy Cobalt - serious threats to Anderson‘s current NHRA record, 6.633 at 208.23.
“Both my son Kurt’s and my programs have shown tremendous potential,” enthused Johnson, “and I look forward to returning behind the wheel of the GM Performance Parts GTO in 2006. I guess I’m just having too much fun to give it up.”

A Gift from Grumpy - Also confirmed to attend the Las Vegas bash is two-time NHRA Pro Stock champ Jim Yates. "Running at Las Vegas will work out great for us," he said. "The conditions we'll be testing in will be more realistic to what we'll be racing in at Pomona. The other places you run are good for your ego, but they're not an accurate indicator of what to expect at the Winternationals."
Recently testing a new bullet from Pro Stock legend Bill “Grumpy” Jenkins, Yates put his Sea Ray Boats GTO through its paces in Bradenton, FL, running the best numbers of his career, 6.662 seconds and 207.30 mph. Finishing 10th in points at the end of the 2005 NHRA season, Yates hopes negotiations with a potential sponsor will bear fruit so he can bring Jenkins on board full time as his engine builder.

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Mark Pawuk feels his chances are greatly improved this season with Ron Krisher bringing his experience to the Cowboy’s engine program.


Signed on the Dotted Line -With the ink still drying on his own contract, Mark “Cowboy” Pawuk successfully extended his associate sponsorship agreement for a fourteenth season with Summit Racing Equipment, confident that last year’s mid-season arrangement with fellow Pro Stock racer Ron Krisher will produce even better results for his Pontiac GTO.
“We ran pretty well in the last few races of 2005,” Pawuk said. “We’ve made a few changes for the coming year, with our engine program with Krisher already having been firmed up. I think we’re going to be considerably more competitive than we were last year, and I can hardly wait for the new season to begin.”
With Coughlin back in Sportsman, crew chief Bob Glidden auditions a new driver for the Dodge Stratus, either Mike Corvo, Jr. or Shawn Carlson.


Back to Basics -For the first time in over eight years, a Coughlin won’t be racing Pro Stock. Jeg Coughlin, Jr. announced at the end of the 2005 season that he was dropping out of Don Schumacher Racing to return to Sportsman racing.
“I finished sixth in the points standings and won the last race of the year in Pomona, so I was able to achieve some of the goals I set for myself last year,” said Coughlin. "My true love for the sport was born in the Sportsman ranks, and I plan on racing as much as possible with our stable of cars. I want to rekindle that special feeling of competitiveness that has driven me and my brothers for so long. I have a lot of friends in the Sportsman classes, and it'll be fun to go head to head with them again. It will also be real nice to get away from the pressures of racing at the top level for a little while."
Richie Stevens finally gets to see his cars’ new livery after devoting most of his energies to salvage efforts in his hurricane-ravaged hometown of New Orleans.


Weathering the Storm -Meanwhile Coughlin’s teammate Richie Stevens is picking up the pieces of his life after Hurricane Katrina blew his New Orleans home and business into the next parish. After joining Don Schumacher Racing last year, Stevens drove his Team Mopar/Valspar Dodge Stratus to an 8th place finish in points, but now is behind the eight ball playing catch-up.
With it’s new camouflage paint scheme, Stevens hasn’t even had a chance yet to see the car apart from photos. To help him get up to speed, crew chief Bob Glidden began testing the car last December with results in the 6.64 range at around 208 mph. “He was pretty impressed,” Stevens said of Glidden’s reaction. “He seems really pumped up about 2006.”
Stevens will finally get some seat time when he goes to Vegas before the Pontiac Pro Stock Showdown. “I can't wait to go testing,” he reported. “I'm ready. I can't wait to see the car and the guys, and I can't wait to get behind the wheel. It's been a while. Just to hear the motor again, and hear the other cars and be out there again is what I'm really looking forward to.”

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This crash not only effectively ended Bruce Allen's 2005 season but more than likely helped him to make a tough decision for 2006.


Back to the Drawing Board -Also dropping out of Pro Stock is veteran racer Bruce Allen. Recently honored by the Michigan Motorsports Hall of Fame, this world class engine builder has decided to return to work behind the scenes at Reher-Morrison for awhile.
“Basically the price of doing this has just gone up tremendously in the last few years,” Allen explained. “We’re not that competitive at the moment, so it’s not something we can afford to do…To be competitive it has to be your full time job. In our case [Reher-Morrison], we’d rather work on the business and the shop. We’re going to continue doing engines, and we’re going to keep working on Pro Stock stuff. If we get engines running good enough then we’ll probably make an appearance, but at the moment we’re definitely not going to run a full schedule.” 
Just Call Me Daddy - Jason Line would love nothing more than to have every Pro Stock driver including his boss Anderson to adopt that mode of thinking. At least one new crewmember will be calling Line by that title.
Line and his wife Cindy became proud parents of a boy when she gave birth to Jack Vincent Line at 12:46 p.m. in a local Charlotte-area hospital on Tuesday, January 24.
Jack Vincent Line crossed the scales at 7 pounds and 2 ounces and was 21 inches long. Both Cindy and the new baby are doing fine, as is Jason, who took a few days off to admire and spoil his new offspring.
Only the 5th woman to ever compete in NHRA Pro Stock, Erica Enders now enters the 2006 season as the most successful female driver in the history of the class.


Got Milk? - Primed to step into the void created by these departures are hard-charging youngsters Erica Enders and Dave Connolly. Enders, the Disney Channel darling, and - in her rookie year as a pro - the most successful female driver in the history of Pro Stock, succeeded in locking in Bravo! Foods International Corp. as Cognazzi Racing’s primary sponsor for 2006.
Showing tremendous improvement toward the end of the 2005 season, Enders also snagged a Weld Racing Wheels sponsorship after finishing 15th in points at the wheel of the Slammers Ultimate Milk Cobalt.
Sometimes the Bear Gets You - On the other hand, Dave Connolly is starting off the 2006 season with a deficit. Finishing off 2005 in the number 5 position, this 23 year old looks to be a serious contender, but suffered a setback at a recent test session in Valdosta, GA when his Skull Gear Racing Cobalt crashed into a concrete barrier. While doing a burnout, the right tire grabbed pavement, making the car do a hard left into the concrete wall. Connolly was unhurt, but the front end was critically mangled without a
A major test into the wall: with the front end of Dave Connolly’s Skull Gear Racing Cobalt destined for the dumpster, hopes are high that the car will be repaired in time for Vegas and Pomona.


complete pass made on the car. Scheduled to appear at the Pontiac Pro Stock Showdown in Vegas, crew chief Terry Adams has high hopes of getting the car repaired in time.
"The car was working pretty well," Adams said. "It came around and we'd made some big (tuning) gains. It wasn't nearly as finicky as it was before. We just have to fix it and keep on going."
Stop the Presses - Adams has heard the phrase "Any Given Sunday" all too often. Pre-season planning morphed into a full-on thrash Sunday as the crew of the SKULL GEAR Pro Stock Chevrolet Cobalt finished rebuilding the car and sent it on a 1887-mile journey to Las Vegas for the final test session (Feb. 3-5) prior to NHRA’s season opener, Feb. 9-12.

This wasn’t the way Adams envisioned preparations would go. Plenty of test runs were planned and there would be ample time to hone the tune-up that’s certain to change because the car’s horsepower now comes from Victor Cagnazzi Racing.

The accident caused more damaged to the car’s front end than was first thought and necessitated a longer stay at car builder Jerry Bickel’s shop in the St. Louis area.

“It turned out we practically had to rebuild the car,” said Adams, the team manager/crew chief. “It’s a long drive to Las Vegas and I don’t think we’ll have an opportunity to make a run until Friday.”

Connolly is scheduled to join other top Pro Stock drivers in Saturday’s special Pontiac Pre-Season Shootout.

“We won’t have much time to test,” continued Adams, “but we’re confident that it will take only a few passes to get the car dialed in. It does put us at a disadvantage, but there shouldn’t be a problem with the car. Jerry Bickel has assured us he will do whatever necessary should we need something fixed. 

“I want to thank Evan Knoll, our team owner, and Latrell Preston for having the confidence in me and for their dedication to the team, making sure whatever needed to be done was. We wouldn’t be on our way to Las Vegas without the dedication and hard work of Jerry Bickel and his staff; Victor Cagnazzi and his staff who provided a great deal of much-needed
assistance; and Fred Simmonds and Dan Ingle of General Motors, who also provided a great deal of help.”

SKULL GEAR crewmen John Utt and Richard Hicks joined Adams in working around the clock to meet the departure deadline.

After three days of testing, the team faces a much shorter drive – 208 miles – to Pomona, Calif., to prepare for the CARQUEST Auto Parts Winternationals, Feb. 9-12.
Greg Stanfield wins the unofficial award for doing the most with the least in 2005 .


The Wild Card -While Greg Stanfield’s not one of these young guns, in 2005 he was the Pro Stock gunner who flew in the face of accepted dogma by demonstrating you didn’t necessarily need money to win. This former Pro Stock Truck racer built his own engines, qualified for all but one of the Pro Stock fields, and with only his brother to crew on Bart and Donna Price's PiranaZ Cavalier, came in seventh in the POWERade championship, doing it all without a huge budget.
Such talent doesn’t go unrewarded. PiranaZ will return and Royal Purple has announced its associate sponsorship of Stanfield for the 2006 season. The Price’s have ponied up the money for a new Jerry Haas-built GTO as well. And while Stanfield still faces a major uphill battle, he hopes to do well enough to attract additional sponsorship, and has budgeted for some pre-season testing in Las Vegas before embarking on another full tour.
Finding Nemo - There will be no high speed fishing for Kenny Koretsky this year as a driver, but that doesn't mean he won't loan out his prized bass boat. Koretsky recently announced that he plans to sit out most of the 2006 NHRA POWERade Series season. In his absence, he’s chosen veteran Pro Stock competitor Mike Thomas to replace him in the seat of the Nitro Fish Wear Dodge Stratus.  Additionally, Dave Northrop will run a partial schedule in another Nitro Fish Dodge.

“I don’t believe my body has recovered from the injuries from my accident (with Bruce Allen) in Texas last October,” said Koretsky, who suffered numerous injuries in the horrific crash.  “I will be at most of the races, but watching from the sidelines.

“Mike did an excellent job last year when he drove for me in three races in July and the two after my accident.  He’ll be running all 23 races this year.  Dave ran several races in my second Nitro Fish Dodge in 2005 and he plans to do 10 to 15 events this year.  I’m really looking forward to working with both of them.”

Eddie Guarnaccia, Koretsky’s longtime friend, crew chief and race team general manager, will work with both cars.

“I’m really excited,” said Thomas, of Knoxville, Tenn.  “We know this car will qualify well and run in the top half of the field.  I’m looking forward to working with Eddie again.  I rank him in the top five Pro Stock crew chiefs out there.  Larry Morgan is still building the engines and we know he can make Hemi horsepower.”

Thomas was the No. 1 qualifier at last season’s Seattle race and was No. 2 the following weekend at Sonoma, Calif.

“We’re looking forward to testing at Las Vegas (Feb. 3-5) and going to Pomona the next weekend (for the season-opening Winternationals, Feb. 9-12),” added Thomas.

Northrop, of Perkasie, Pa., shares Thomas’ enthusiasm.  

“I’m real excited and think it is a good opportunity for our race team,” Northrop said.  “We know we’ll have a competitive Nitro Fish/ISC Racer’s Tape Dodge.”
Making Gains - While he hasn't been publicizing it much, Barry Grant's shop in Charlotte, NC., has been burning the midnight oil and flogging the dyno unmercifully in preparation for his return to driving. Grant was sidelined last season with a back injury and successfully underwent surgery. He is expected to gain medical clearance in time to test during the Eastern Spring Test Nationals in Valdosta, Ga. Grant's national event return will most likely come during the NHRA Gatornationals the following weekend.

U.S. Army NHRA 2012

  • Designs for the Don Schumacher Race Team with driver Tony Schumacher, sponsored by the U.S. Army. 

    The car design was inspired by classic racing stripes, updated with dramatic upsweeps and incorporating 
    the Army's digital camo pattern into the stripe configuration.

    The uniform design uses angles to create a body armor effect.

lunes, 22 de octubre de 2012

DRAGSTERS TOP FUEL.....

DRAGSTERS TOP FUEL


carreras de Top Fuel son una clase de carreras de , en la que los coches se ejecutan en una mezcla de aproximadamente de 90% de nitrometano y un 10% de metanol (también conocido como alcohol de carreras) en lugar de gasolina o metanol, simplemente. Los coches son especialmente diseñados para carreras de resistencia, con un diseño exagerado, que en algunos aspectos se asemeja al de vehículos de carreras. Sin embargo, los dragsters de Top Fuel son mucho más largos, mucho más estrechos, y están equipados con neumáticos de tamaño en la parte trasera y llantas pequeñas en el frente, todo con el fin de maximizar su línea recta de aceleración y velocidad. Son la categoría más rápida de los corredores de carreras, con la mayor competencia alcanzando velocidades de 536 km/h y terminando el cuarto de milla (402 m) en menos de 4,5 segundos. Debido a la velocidad y aceleración de estos coches, la pista posee 1300 pies, para poder lograr una “frenada” adecuada.



Un top fuel acelera desde parado hasta 160 km / h en tan sólo 0,7 segundos (menos de una quinta parte del tiempo requerido por una producción de Porsche 911 Turbo para alcanzar las 60 mph) y puede superar los 450 km / h en sólo 200 metros. Esta aceleración sujeta al conductor a una fuerza media de alrededor de 4,0 G durante la duración de la carrera.



Motorizacion

Mientras que el nitrometano tiene una densidad de energía mucho menor (11,2 MJ / kg) que los de gasolina (44 MJ / kg) o metanol (22,7 MJ / kg), un motor de combustión de nitrometano puede producir hasta 2,3 veces más que el motor de gasolina. Esto es posible por el hecho de que, además de combustible, es un motor que quema el aire con el fin de generar la fuerza: 14,7 kg de aire son necesarios para quemar un kilogramo de gasolina, en comparación con sólo 1,7 kg de aire por kilogramo de nitrometano . Esto significa que un motor puede quemar nitrometano 8,7 veces más que la gasolina.

El nitrometano también tiene una alta temperatura de vaporización, lo que significa que absorbe el calor del motor, ya que se evapora, proporcionando un mecanismo de enfriamiento invaluable. La temperatura de combustión es mayor que la gasolina, de 0,5 m / s y 2400 ° C, la salida de energía se puede aumentar mediante el uso de mezclas de aire muy ricas en combustible. Esto también es algo que ayuda a prevenir la pre-ignición, algo que suele ser un problema cuando se utiliza nitrometano.

Motor

El motor utilizado para alimentar un top fuel tiene sus raíces en la segunda generación del Chrysler Hemi 426 "Motor Elefante" hecho en 1964-71. Aunque el motor Top Fuel se construye exclusivamente de piezas especiales, mantiene la configuración básica con dos válvulas por cilindro activado por varillas de empuje de un árbol de levas central-puesto. El motor tiene cámaras de combustión hemisféricas, una de 90 grados el ángulo V, 4,8 pulgadas y un campo de diámetro 0.54 pulgadas de elevación de la leva. La configuración es idéntica, de válvula a la cabeza, y con un solo árbol de levas en el bloque "Hemi" V-8, que se hizo disponible para la venta al público en una selección de Chrysler en los productos de automotores en 1950 (año del modelo 1951).

El bloque está mecanizado de una pieza de forja de aluminio. Se ha montado a presión, con camisas de hierro dúctil. No hay pasos de agua en el bloque, lo que suma considerable fuerza y rigidez. El motor es enfriado por el aire / mezcla de combustible. Al igual que el original Hemi, el bloque de cilindros de carreras tiene una falda larga (para reducir el pistón "rocking" en el límite inferior del recorrido del pistón). Hay cinco tapas de los cojinetes principales, que están sujetos con para espárragos, espárragos con refuerzo adicional principal y pernos laterales. Hay tres proveedores aprobados de estos bloques personalizados.



La culata es de aluminio mecanizado a partir de palanquillas. Por lo tanto, ellos también carecen de las camisas de agua y confían plenamente en la entrada de aire / combustible para su enfriamiento. El diseño original de Chrysler de dos grandes válvulas por cilindro se sigue utilizando, la válvula de admisión se realiza a partir de titanio y el escape de sólidos 80A Nimonico o similar. Los asientos son de hierro dúctil, se ha intentado hacerlos de berilio-cobre, pero su uso está limitado debido a los costos. Los tamaños de las válvulas están alrededor de 2,45 pulgadas (62,2 mm) para la toma y 1,925 pulgadas (48,9 mm) para el escape. En los puertos hay tubos integrales de las varillas de empuje, las cabezas están sellados para el bloque de juntas de cobre y acero inoxidable, el asegurado de la cabeza del bloque se realiza con pernos de aviones.

El árbol de levas es todo de acero, acero al carbono 8620 o similar. Se ejecuta en la presión de aceite cinco cojinetes lubricados y está impulsado por engranajes en la parte delantera del motor. Elevadores mecánicos de rodillos pasan encima de los lóbulos de la leva y conducen las varillas de empuje de acero de hasta a los pernos de acero que accionan las válvulas. Los pernos son del tipo de rodillo en el lado de admisión, pero la presión de escape limita su uso al lado de admisión solamente. El rodillo de acero gira sobre un rodamiento de rodillos de acero y los balancines de acero giran sobre un par de ejes de titanio en los bujes de bronce. El doble muelles de las válvulas son de tipo coaxial y están hechos de titanio, los retenes de válvulas también están hechos de titanio.

Se utilizan cigüeñales de acero, todos ellos tienen 90 grados de configuración y se ejecutan en cinco cojinetes convencionales y cigüeñales a 180 grados que pueden ofrecer una mayor potencia, a pesar de que el escape es de tipo abierto. Un cigüeñal a 180 grados es también 10 kg más ligero que el cigüeñal a 90 grados, pero crea una gran cantidad de vibraciones. Tal es la fuerza de un cigüeñal de combustible superior que en una ocasión, el bloque del motor entero se abrió y fue arrancado del coche durante un fallo de motor, y el cigüeñal, con las ocho bielas y los pistones, aún quedaban atornillados al embrague.



Los pistones son de aluminio forjado, estos tienen tres anillos y botones de aluminio mantienen a 1,156 x 3,300 pulgadas, con perno de acero. El pistón es anodizado y teflón recubierto para evitar el gripado durante el funcionamiento a altas temperaturas. El anillo superior es un anillo en forma de L que proporciona un buen sellado durante la combustión, pero un segundo anillo se debe utilizar para evitar que el aceite en la cámara de combustión durante la ingesta de movimientos como el anillo que ofrece menos que un sellado óptimo de gases de combustión. El tercer anillo es un anillo rascador de aceite, cuya función es ayudada por el segundo anillo. La bielas son de aluminio forjado y proporcionan amortiguación de choque, por lo que el aluminio se utiliza en lugar de titanio, por eso bielas de titanio, porque transmiten mucho del impulso de la combustión de los cojinetes de biela, y ponen en peligro los cojinetes y por lo tanto el cigüeñal y bloque. Cada biela cuenta con dos tornillos, rodamientos, mientras que el pasador se ejecuta directamente en la barra.

Compresores

El compresor es un 14-71 del tipo de raíces de ventilador. Se han torcido los lóbulos y es impulsado por una correa dentada . El compresor está ligeramente desplazado hacia la parte trasera para proporcionar una distribución uniforme del aire, la presión absoluta del colector es por lo general 3.8-4.5 bar (56-66 PSI), pero hasta 5,0 bar (74 PSI) le es posible aguantar. El colector está equipado con una placa de 200 psi estallar, el aire se introduce en el compresor de gas y se brindan aproximadamente 900 caballos de fuerza a la unidad de la sobrealimentación.

Rendimiento

La medición de la potencia de un motor de combustible superior directamente no siempre es factible. Algunos modelos utilizan un sensor de incorporado como parte del sistema de datos RacePak. Existen dinamometros que puede medir el rendimiento de un motor Top Fuel, sin embargo, la principal limitación es que un motor Top Fuel no se puede ejecutar en su máxima potencia de salida durante más de 10 segundos sin sobrecalentamiento o posiblemente destruyendo a sí misma de forma explosiva. La potencia del motor también puede ser calculado con base en el peso del coche y su rendimiento. El calculado aproximado de energía de salida de estos motores es probable que esté entre 8.500 y 10.000 caballos de fuerza, con un torque de salida de 8.135 N/m y un freno efectivo promediando la presión de 80-100 bar.
Para efectos de comparación, un 2010 Bugatti Veyron Super Sport , el vehiculo de producción más potente, produce 1.184 CV caballos de fuerza y 1.500 N/m de torque.

ARELLANO RACING


SUEÑO

lo que algun dia quesiera correr y a la ves estar orgulloso de mi mismo...

ARELLANO RACING *-*

 

JEGS

More than 380 of the best racers from the Western United States converged on The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway this weekend for the NHRA JEGS Pacific SPORTSnationals.
Gary Reust of Pahrump defeated Al Alguire of Las Vegas for the Super Street title (11.065 sec./131.72 mph to 11.087 sec./149.41 mph).
Alan Ellis of Mapleton, Utah, earned the Comp Eliminator win and trophy combining a perfect reaction time with a pass of 6.670 seconds at 202.76 mph to defeat former NHRA Lucas Oil National Champion Dean Cater of Glendale, Ariz.
Dakota Sun captured the win the trophy in the Sportsman Motorcycle Presented By Harley- Davidson class for this first national event win. Sun, of La Mirada, Calif. went 9.270 sec./146.83 mph on his 2009 Kawasaki to Las Vegas resident Dave Phillips’ 8.991 sec./143.67 mph.
Special awards: Stefan Kondolay (Best Engineered Car); Doug Watts (Best Appearing Crew); Al Aguirre (Best Appearing Car).
COMP ELIMINATOR
Winner: Alan Ellis (Mapleton, Utah) 1923 Ford 6.670 sec./202.76mph.
Runner-up: Dean Carter (Glendale, Ariz.) 2006 dragster 7.231 sec./173.29 mph.
SUPER STOCK
Winner: Gregg Luneack (Vista, Calif.) 1965 Nova wagon 10.828 sec./110.50 mph.
Runner-up: Tibor Kadar (Peoria, Ariz.) 2002 Camaro 8.964 sec./150.53 mph.
STOCK
Winner: Leo Glasbrenner (Chino, Calif.) 1968 Firebird 10.850 sec./117.36 mph.
Runner-up: Casey Plaizier (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada) 1996 Firebird 10.871 sec./117.63 mph.
SUPER COMP
Winner: Aaron Kinard (San Marcos, Calif.) 2008 dragster 9.275 sec./139.65 mph.
Runner-up: Thomas Papas (Roseburg, Ore.) 2005 dragster 9.046 sec./165.54 mph. (foul)
SUPER GAS
Winner: Eddy Plaizier (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada) 1963 Corvette 14.126 sec./69.47 mph.
Runner-up: Ashley Warn (Danville, Calif.) 2003 Chevrolet S-10 10.092 sec./157.43 mph. (foul)
SUPER STREET
Winner: Gary Reust (Pahrump) 1955 Chevrolet 11.065 sec./131.72 mph.
Runner-up: Al Alguire (Las Vegas) 1968 Barracuda 11.087 sec./149.41 mph.
TOP SPORTSMAN
Winner: Daryl Hemley (Burley, Wash.) 2002 Cavalier 7.579 sec./182.16 mph.
Runner-up: Chris Newman (Lancaster, Calif.) 2008 Cobalt 7.056 sec./197.16 mph.
TOP DRAGSTER
Winner: Art Hoover (Concord, Calif.) 2112 dragster 6.845 sec./192.00 mph.
Runner-up: Tom Pappas (Roseburg, Ore.) 2007 dragster 7.185 sec./186.33 mph.
SPORTSMAN MOTORCYCLE
Winner: Dakota Sun (La Mirada, Calif.) 2009 Kawasaki 9.270 sec./146.83 mph.
Runner-up: Dave Phillips (Las Vegas) 1977 Kawasaki 8.991 sec./143.67 mph.

Dragster canopy will not start NHRA season

Top Fuel dragster canopy will not start NHRA season, but DSR owner confident it will be used early this year


BROWNSBURG, Ind. (Feb. 1, 2012) - Don Schumacher Racing will not be able to start the 2012 NHRA Full Throttle Drag Racing Series season with its innovative fully enclosed canopy on Tony Schumacher’s U.S. Army Top Fuel Dragster until NHRA completes further inspection of the revolutionary component.
Team owner Don Schumacher said the canopy that fits within an existing dragster chassis also cannot be used at the second event to be held near Phoenix a week after the Feb. 9-12 NHRA Winternationals in Pomona, Calif.
“We have to go through the proper channels with NHRA to get approval for the canopy, and NHRA wants to take a close look at it so we’ll take it to Pomona where officials, Safety Safari and other drivers and owners can get a close look at it,” Don Schumacher said.
Tony Schumacher is an adamant supporter of the canopy although it adds about 25 pounds to the dragster’s weight. His best run with the canopy was 3.761 seconds at 324.28 mph during Jan. 15-21 testing at Palm Beach International Raceway in Jupiter, Fla., where he made 13 runs with it. Teammate Antron Brown also made a run to test the unit.
“This isn’t about performance. This about safety,” said Tony, the seven-time NHRA Top Fuel world champion. “I want every driver to have one. We aren’t hiding anything. Again, this is just all about making it safer for all the guys in Top Fuel.”
Don added, “We let all the teams at West Palm examine it. We let drivers get in it if they wanted. I want to make these cars as safe as they can be and not just for Tony. The canopy takes safety in Top Fuel to a much higher level.”
“The canopy doesn’t make us go faster,” Tony said. “It looks really cool, but I wouldn’t care if it were ugly. That fact is I feel safer under it. That’s all that matters to me.”
Schumacher is a longtime safety innovator in drag racing. In the early 1970s when he was a top Funny Car owner and driver he developed the first roof escape hatch after seeing too many drivers burned in cockpit fires. He was the first to activate on-board fire extinguishers by attaching the handle to a Funny Car’s brake handle so at the end of a fiery run the driver could keep one hand on the steering wheel and another on the brake while suppressing a fire.

Winters Racing’s first NHRA Pro Mod Series this weekend at Bristol

(6-13-2012) Kernersville, NC – For the first time ever, Doug Winters and the Winters Racing team will field an entry at an NHRA event. They will be taking their Lucas Oil / MAVTV ’57 Chevy Pro Mod to compete at the Ford NHRA Thunder Valley Nationals in the Pro Mod Series by ProCare Rx this coming weekend. Over many years of racing, dating back to the early 1990s, Winters Racing has competed in series like IHRA, ADRL, and Super Chevy Shows to mention a few. But this is the first time they will take the tree at an NHRA national event. “We are so excited to be going to Bristol to compete at an NHRA national event,” stated Doug. “This has been a long time in the making. With the help of Lucas Oil and MAVTV we were able to invest in our car to upgrade it to meet the rules for NHRA Pro Mod. We still have some work to do on the performance side. We have not ran quarter mile events very often since back in the day with IHRA and Super Chevy Shows. So we have a steep learning curve ahead of us, but we are up to the challenge.”

viernes, 19 de octubre de 2012

ANTRON BROWN




Phoenix-based sports photographer Mark J. Rebilas shares photos from the second race on the 2012 NHRA in the Arizona desert.

The second race on the 2012 NHRA was my favorite stop on the circuit. Not because its a cool track or its a big race but because I get to sleep on my own bed every night. Lets get right to the action of a gorgeous weekend in the Arizona desert.
On the Thursday before the race began I was invited out to the track to participate in the NHRA media race. I had never done it before so I figured I’d give it a shot..