Drag Illustrated Issue 112, August 2016 | Page 78

Scott Palmer evolved into it. The maintenance program is crazy, too, nowadays. Troy Fasching and Jim Oberhofer over at Kalitta Motorsports help us, too. Those guys are running connecting rods one run. You figure $1,600 a run for a set of rods, I mean, that’s a tough deal. That’s why we go back home and people ask, ‘How come you’re not running 3.70s?’ Well, we could, but you have to pick your battles. We’ve been running a fuel car for 15 years. So, you have to ask yourself – do you want to be out here for 15 years or 15 races? That’s the type of shit that will put a small team like ours out of business. Most of the guys run through the lights at 56- or 58-degrees of timing. We ran a 3.92 and we had 46-degrees out the back door. So, we know it’ll run 3.86 to 3.88 if we just put a little timing in it down track because we know that the 60-foot was good. It ran .838 60-foot in Sonoma – generally always leaves good, and we’re just easing it out the back and being safe. We just have to learn more before we start cranking it up and start tearing too much stuff up. You know they all tear stuff up, but we’ve been lucky. We’re just trying to learn this new setup right now more so than anything. I think there will be a few more little guys come out and run, but I think more than anything you’ll probably see big teams add another car or two. Even the big teams are concerned that there’s not 16-car fields. Now, Seattle had 18 cars but that’s kind of a freak deal. Usually, Sonoma and Seattle are at the most 16 cars. So this is kind of a weird situation right now. But I think maybe the big teams will add a car or a few of them will to get the car count up, but, honestly, you don’t hear a lot about new teams coming out because Crew guys are the key – especially when it comes to making more runs. We’re lucky. We have a group of guys here who have been together for a long time, so we all know what each other is doing. If you run more races or you start winning rounds like we did the other day…we can make it. But we can sure tell because if you have one little issue – you’re going to struggle to make it up there. It’s woken us up for sure because we’ve won a couple rounds. We’re working on having more stuff ready for the second round because we realize now that it could happen. We could easily have won those two rounds in one race, and then you’re in the semis – it goes fast after that. The main problem for smaller teams like us and Jeff Diehl, we have trouble with getting people that can go in the first place, and then people that are super cautious and concerned about everything on the car. That’s why we have a small team. We could put a couple of guys on there, but one little mess-up might cost you 50-grand. I tell everyone this is not my car. This is our car. I can’t race it by myself. We all own this car. We’re all a big part of this deal because we live and die by it. In your opinion, what can be done to bring “I tell everyone this is not my car. This is our car. I can’t race it by myself. We all own this car. We’re all a big part of this deal because we live and die by it.” 78 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com it’s just a maintenance monster. The upkeep alone is outrageous. The Alan Johnson Stage 7 cylinder heads are so much maintenance to keep up on that you need more crew guys to take care of them properly. You’re obviously making the most of the small team model, but it has to make it harder – especially when race day rolls around. What does it take to make it work, keep the energy up and stay motivated? Issue 112