Drag Illustrated Issue 109, May 2016 | Page 12

Counterweight class has progressed right in line with the quality of the cars in the class and E TH the technolHOTTEST o g y ava i l 2016’S DRAG RACING able. BackLEADING WOMEN halved cars, Alex Rogeo P r o Mo d Melanie Salemi Hemi-headThe Sisters Force ed engines, Courtney Enders 1000ci niteley Annie Whi trous enJudy Franklin gines – what Megan Meyer can you exAND MORE pect? We started this whole deal with small blocks STREET LEGAL and twin IE OK RO ’S RACING SENSATION 8 8 m m turbos, or 632s with 88s. Then it was Pro Mod 88s, then 91s, then 94s, 98s and 102s. Went from 4.840-inch bore space engines to everyone having a 5.3-inch monster. Small blocks were 440ci Windsors – now they’re all billet and 500+ cubic inch. In my opinion, the Pro Mods on radials…they aren’t good. Neither are the back half, 10.5 style cars. We should have kept it all stock suspension, but that didn’t happen and here we are. Regardless, these cars are as fast in the eighth-mile now as they were in the quartermile in 2010, and we all thought it was crazy back then. Chris Maters, via the Internet dragillustrated.com Haley James Ridiculous Radials Drag Illustrated Editor-inChief Wes Buck asked over 10,000 subscribers via em ail whether drag radial racing, at least at its highest levels where sub-four-second, 200+ mph runs have become commonplace, is out of control or right on track. Below is a collection of responses. Join the DI Email Newsletter and hear from Wes directly by joining at www. dragillustrated.com and get in on the conversation. We’ve got cars going mid 3.70s now on radials (well, at least one), a half dozen or better consistently in the 3.80s and a whole bunch running 200 mph or way faster every time out. I have to ask – how much is too much? Dave Bell, via the Internet It’s crazy to think that guys that were being put on the cover of Drag Illustrated a little over a year ago for running low four-teens in the eighth-mile would hardly qualifying at a top-tier radial race at this point in time. I think the 12 | D r a g I think the world of radial tire racing is turning into another Pro Mod – same thing happening all over again. It’s tough to see all these classes so quickly turn into situations where teams with high-dollar sponsorships or steep self-funding abilities dominate and the average Joe can’t even come close to competing. Trey Sasser, via the Internet I say let ‘em ride if the tire company says the tire can handle it. Let ‘em go! I get so tired of these big body sanctions saying, “slow down” and “change this”. The ame of the I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com Feedback, Friendly Notes, & Hate Mail sport is racing. If it were “slow down” there wouldn’t be any sponsors or any fans. Keep up the good work, Drag Illustrated! Lifetime subscriber here! John Williams, via the Internet Racing Pro Mod type cars with Pro Mod type power on a tire just wider than the ones on my daily driver? You have got to be kidding me! These cars are one of the coolest things to come into the sport in a very long period of time. It’s great to think that so many classes – like drag radial, Pro Mod and even fuel cars – are reaching new heights performance-wise still yet in 2016. The sport is becoming so much more exciting now compared to five-to-ten years ago. This is how we make drag racing great again. I would, however, like to see some radial guys try running those numbers – threes at over 200 – on an average race track instead of one with the same tackiness as flypaper. Jimmy Sackuvich, via the Internet The best part about drag radial racing, in my opinion, is that almost all of these cars resemble daily drivers – a far cry from even Pro Stock today. Being able to relate to the cars, again, in my opinion, is critically important. Drag radial has got it going on! WG Miller, via the Internet I think it’s insanely impressive, but, ultimately, a recipe for disaster. When everything goes right…it’s awesome. But the weight of the cars and the radial tires make it almost impossible to come back/recover when these cars get out of control. My opinion is that they need to limit cubic inch or do something to slow these guys down. Doc Z, via the Internet I think the progression in radial racing is the most exciting thing in drag racing today. The NHRA is really missing out by not bringing them in on some level. On that note, they could also benefit from some match races by the grudge and noprep names that we all know. John D. Hartman, via the Internet Honestly, I think it’s like every other category in heads-up drag racing – the evolution never stops and there are few boundaries outside of the literal physics involved. Is it “out of control”? That’s a great question, but I think the answer is going to depend largely on whom you ask. At the current time, it appears as if drag radial racing is operating just like any other within the boundaries (rules) set. At some point in the curve, the folks with the most liability (insurance companies) will drive the rules that are implemented to insure the safety of the competitors. A great tire engineer once showed me a timelapse study of the performance improvements in Top Fuel drag racing over the years – the curve has always gone up. It may have flat-lined during some periods, but at the end of the day – records continue to be broken. Man and machine have continued to improve performance levels regardless of the limitations imposed – done deal! Carl Robinson, via the Internet Radial is the new class for serious players, and no doubt it was time for it. The sport is always looking for new ideas and challenges, and drag radial racing will continue to be “the show” as long as the promoters are willing to put up big money. It would appear that racers have a safe venue to push current technologies to the maximum and develop new ones. As long as it can continue to be marketed as something new, special and never-beforeseen – I believe it will continue to grow. The most exciting part is the amount of younger fans this type of racing has brought into the fold. It makes the sport feel so much more alive, and thank God for that. We needed something new. Wes Ramsey, via the Internet Contact Us LETTERS to Drag Illustrated, 902 Kings Rd., Kirksville, MO, 63501. Letters become the property of Drag Illustrated and may be edited for publication. E-MAIL [email protected] SUBSCRIBER SERVICES Go to dragillustrated.com • Subscribe • Renew • Cancel • Missing Issues • Give a Gift • Pay Bill • Change of Address Issue 109