Drag Illustrated Issue 109, May 2016 | Page 75

TWO RINGS, ONE HAT, ONE SWORD PHOTOS: JT HUDSON, CHRIS SEARS With two NMCA Radial Wars championships and a Lights Out title to his credit, Berry has little to prove in the world of drag racing, particularly the D.O.T.-approved radial-tire racing arena, but the Georgia-based wheelman has no intentions of slowing down. “I couldn’t be more proud of what this group has accomplished,” admits the generally brash and brazen Berry, “but I can’t help but feel like we’re just getting started – there’s a lot more that we’d like to do.” town of unknown name in the Canadian province of British Columbia – Berry picked up the turnkey dragster and headed home with intentions of unloading the digger and massaging the big-inch small block to fit his needs. “We had a lot of stuff that we wanted to change,” admits Berry. “Different stroke, different rods and pistons – a lot of stuff. By this time, though, we were already a few weeks away from Donald’s race. The plan was to put something together that would, hopefully, survive the one race and then we’d reevaluate.” Amidst a whirlwind of overnight shipping and praying for a miracle, Pro Line Racing Engines, who has long since been Berry’s engine builder of choice, delivered May 2016 the goods. With about 10 days until Lights Out 7, Berry picked up his 4.5-inch bore space, slightly de-stroked 487ci small block utilizing a billet CN block and CFE’s chargers from Precision Turbo. “The week of the race we took the car over to RK Racecraft – my crew chief Ryan Rakestraw’s place in Clarksville,” explains “We had to stop. I was seeing shit on the road; I was dying. I couldn’t play music loud enough; couldn’t have enough windows open. We were all smoked. We pulled over and tried to rest for about an hour, but we had to roll.” latest SBX heads. From there the car went to Joey Bell at Bell Chassisworks in Woodstock, Georgia, where he installed the engine and mounted the new 98mm turbo- Berry. “He’d already been working around the clock, finishing up a new Outlaw Drag Radial Corvette for Alepa Racing and a bunch of other Pro Mod stuff, and then we showed up with my car. I think it was about three o’clock in the afternoon on Monday that we got started on my car. And the race was going to start on Wednesday.” Around 4:00 the following morning, better than 12 hours later and with the car still in a thousand pieces, Berry realized that the situation didn’t look promising. While they’d come to terms with missing the qualifying rounds on both Wednesday and Thursday, settling for a couple shots on Friday and a final chance on Saturday morning, Berry and his high-energy, fun-loving squad had their doubts. “I text a few people, a few friends, and let them know, ‘man, I don’t think we’re going to make it’”, he allows, clearly still amazed that didn’t end up being the case. “It felt like one of those deals where everyone is thinking the same thing – not like a good thing – but no one wants to be the one who comes out and says it. We’re in the shop working on the car, literally listening to the live feed of the race we’re supposed to be at.” Throughout the next two days and into the wee hours of the morning on Thursday they thrashed. Parts came and went – off to get powder coated or modified – and finally, around 2:30 AM on Thursday, still up on Pro Jacks with body panels strewn about, Berry climbed into the driver’s seat, reached up to the switch panel and whirled the engine over. By 4:00 that morning they were southbound toward Cecil. Though seemingly infinitely shorter than their trip to “basically Alaska” a few months prior, Berry and company had to dig deep to make it the final 265 miles of their multi-month journey. “We had to stop,” says Berry. “I was seeing shit on the road; I was dying. I couldn’t play music loud enough; couldn’t have enough windows open. We were all smoked. We pulled over and tried to rest for about an hour, but we had to roll. I think we rolled through the gates about 10:00 in the morning.” Having rewired the car from front-to-back, along with the engine swap and new bigger turbocharger, Berry was confident the car would fire up for Thursday’s DragIllustrated.com | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | 75