
First look – Hedges new Pro Stock GXP livery
Jason Hedges Racing have unveiled the teams new 2014 livery for their GXP in preperation for a ANDRA Pro Stock return.
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Jason Hedges Racing have unveiled the teams new 2014 livery for their GXP in preperation for a ANDRA Pro Stock return.
GEICO/Lucas Oil Top Fuel dragster driver Richie Crampton experienced the highs and lows of NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing during the Circle K NHRA Winternationals in Pomona this morning.
Mark Mariani made his first runs in his Top Fuel dragster at Sydney Dragway today, further bolstering the ranks of Top Fuel teams in Australia. With the supervision of some of Darren Morgan’s team including crew chief Ben Patterson, Mariani made a couple of hits at the track with both getting off the line cleanly. The car is an ex-Darren Morgan ride that has been set up by the reigning champ, with the Mariani finally getting the chance to return to racing as a family. Mark’s father Mario Mariani formerly raced Top Fuel while Mark drove for Santo Rapisarda for a number of years and won the 2010 Nitro Champs. The Mariani team is the second to begin licensing this year, following Peter Xiberras making his first runs in Queensland recently as well. {fcomment}
Queensland Pro Stock racer Shane Tucker has officially made his first NHRA field, qualifying 16th for the Circle K Winternationals this weekend in Pomona, California.
The NHRA season has officially opened in Pomona, California where Australian Pro Stock driver Shane Tucker made his first competitive runs in the Auzmet Architectural Chev Cobalt.
The Australian National Drag Racing Association has moved to a new headquarters in the Adelaide suburb of Ridleyton.
A last ditch qualifying pass saw reigning Top Doorslammer champion John Zappia qualify at the Pro Showdown but a part failure eliminated the champ early.
On Sunday 23 February, the Hot Rod bracket of Willowbank Raceway’s Nostalgia Drag Racing event will play host to no less than three ‘Carpenters.’
The central Canadian province of Saskatchewan does not have a long list of participants when it comes to Pro Mod racing. But our friends at Drag Race Canada found one.
When a bunch of Australian roustabouts were invited to race at the V Four & Rotary Nationals in New Zealand, we kept our fingers crossed that they would represent Australia well and stay out of trouble.
The $10,500 on offer for the winner of Outlaw 10.5 Shootout presented by Bendigo Bank at Adelaide International Raceway in March has been enough to make former Super Sedan champion Steve Fowler change the tyres and give heads up racing a shot.
The competitive racing season at Willowbank Raceway is now officially open following the successful running of the first round of the 2014 Street Series at the weekend.
Beaudesert’s Ian Ham – winner of the 2013 JP Racing Eighth Mile Drag Racing Series in the RD Williams Excavator Parts Modified Bracket – will kick off a final year of racing ahead of an extended overseas jaunt at this weekend’s 2014 Series opener at Warwick Dragway.
All the action from Sydney Dragway’s first dedicated test and tune session for the New Year, check out who brought out what for a skid. You just never know what is going to be there.
The Aeroflow Outlaw Nitro Funny Car Series, where the cars are the stars, rumbled into Fuchs South Coast Raceway, Portland and delivered a feast of nitro flopper action over the short track.
Shane Tucker has made his first hit at a drag strip in the USA, but little problems hampered the Auzmet Architectural team in testing at Wild Horse Pass Motorsports Park.
Steve Reed was a shock non-qualifier at the opening round of the ANDRA Top Alcohol season but expects they can make a fightback in the championship.
Only one event into the season, Victor Bray will be making the major change to an auto transmission ahead of the second round of the Top Doorslammer championship.
The Pro Showdown at Perth Motorplex delivered plenty of awesome racing action across the board, read our full wrap including all the pro gossip and sportsman shenanigans.
Sydney Top Doorslammer racer Jeff Wilson has survived a violent accident relatively unscathed when he lost control of his Corvette Top Doorslammer during testing at Sydney Dragway.
Stuart Bishop earned his first Top Doorslammer win and John Cannuli won his second event in Perth as the Top Doorslammer and Top Alcohol seasons got underway in Western Australia last night.
The Aeroflow Outlaw Nitro roadshow has hit Portland where 11 Outlaw Nitro Funny Cars will dual it out over three rounds. Watch the racing live via the video feed courtesy of Jesse Kelly and DragPix.net.au.
Young gun Shane Weston and privateer driver Murray O’Connor lead the Top Alcohol and Top Doorslammer fields respectively following an exciting night one of the Pro Showdown, the opening round of the ANDRA Drag Racing Series for the supercharged methanol classes.
Top Doorslammer and Top Alcohol are about to get it on for the first time this season in their opening round of the ANDRA Drag Racing Series at Perth Motorplex’s Pro Showdown this weekend.
As an additional supercharged sweetener for the ANDRA Top Doorslammer and Top Alcohol action at the Pro Showdown this Friday and Saturday at Perth Motorplex – Walkinshaw Performance Formula Tech Dyno Centre has offered a $500 Top Qualifier FAST Time incentive to both categories.
The Nieuwhof Family Racing team and their 60foot Kawasaki will be looking for two wins in a row come this weekend’s Pro Showdown at Perth Motorplex after victory last time out at the Aeroflow Sportsman Drag Racing Championship round.
A last minute change in the ANDRA Top Alcohol calendar has inspired last season’s runner-up Steve Ham to load the transporter and head west to Perth for this weekend’s opening round of the championship.
In part two of his epic editorial, Ken Lowe looks for answers on why racers fall in, or out, of love with the sport. The answers are perhaps more with in themselves than from others. Let’s start with what I asked earlier, where do new racers come from? I know how I got started, or should I say when the ‘infection’ began, because for me it is truly is a disease – not that I have sought a cure. I am quite happy with my disease and the association of all my diseased friends. Many years ago I saw a sign on the back of a dragster trailer with a skull and crossbones on it with the instructions that this vehicle contains a disease for which there is no cure. As normal, the humour was the truth in the story. I grew up at a time in history when for us the car was several things. It was freedom, an escape, a way to get out and interact with others of my age, be with my friends, it was social. For many of us it was a status symbol, a test bench, a tool that rewarded our egos with a sense of accomplishment. Is it relevant to me? Is motor racing, car racing and drag racing in particular still relevant today? That is part of my concern. Does it do the same things it did forty years ago? I think maybe not. It is common knowledge that life today is radically different than it was forty years ago. The internet has changed everything. The fact that I can write this and post it for all to see is testament to the reach of the internet. Between Facebook, all the social network stuff and video games are we not all becoming a little isolated in our togetherness? Is today the car just a form of transportation where for many of us in the past it was an extension of our personalities? Can I afford it? I grew at a time when in the 1960s some race tracks would have qualified fields of 64 Top Fuel cars. That was possible back then because it was affordable. All racers ran what they could buy at the wrecking yards because that is where all the parts came from. There were very few aftermarket parts available other than the basics. Clutch management was your left leg, the ignition systems of the day were marginal at best and if you can’t light it you can’t burn it. This means anyone could win. The first thing that happened was better tires, better tires made the front engine dragster obsolete, the rear engine dragster was perfected and then in 1977 Keith Black made the first aluminium block. At first it would appear having a block that was repairable was a good thing but it let racers lean on the parts harder, made the cars quicker finding more weak components for which the aftermarket was happy to produce more robust replacements and so the spiral goes. Each step gradually increased the cost of going racing to the point where there could be less than 64 competing Top Fuel cars in the world. I guess more to the point I have to ask is motor racing, and again drag racing in particular, still relevant to society today. What is the spark that ignites the idea for someone to start racing? The second part of the unasked question is what keeps the racer coming back to the race track. If he is winning all the races, sure he will keep coming back but that just does not happen and even if someone is on a “streak of wins” it never lasts. What keeps a racer coming back year after year, decade after decade? Or what make them quit? In my fifty years of drag racing I cannot count the number of people that have taken up the challenge of drag racing and raced for one race, one season or with just one car for a few years. Why? Once, while I was tuner and crew chief on Danny Townsend’s Funny Car, a new crewman commented to me that he wanted to save up his money to build a race car and go racing. I had to point out to him that it was NOT a pile of money that he needed but a stream of money. The pool of money needed to be replenished at a rate at least as quick as it drained. Most quit because of money or more precisely the lack of money. One must fully understand their budget limits, overreach and you will fail. One answer is that most new racers all enter the race ‘business’ thinking that the biggest expenditure of time and money is the initial construction and assembly of the race car and getting the truck and trailer (or transport) organised. Sadly I must inform that this is not the case in general. Some racers don’t quit as much as they just park their cars. Officially they are still racers, with a race car, but they stopped taking it to the race track. There are often a few reasons for this, but the one that needs to be addressed here is if the racer does not take their car to the track because of something the local race track is or is not doing. Do I want money, or respect? As mentioned earlier, no one actually races for money, if they did no one would race, because you always spend more money than you earn. Today, If you race you do so for – here it is again – respect. Respect comes in different forms. Respect is taking home a bit more money than it cost to finish the day. If the amount you get for winning the day’s racing is substantially less than what it cost to get there on the day, that is no respect. If you lose first round you kind of
Mark Belleri and Marty Dack sat down with Perth Motorplex’s video team to preview the Pro Showdown round this weekend at Perth Motorplex, the opening of the ANDRA Drag Racing Series for Top Doorslammer and Top Alcohol. Do you think either of these guys is a chance at the first ANDRA silver Christmas tree trophy for Top Doorslammer? Leave your comment below! {fcomment}
Grant O’Rourke was one of three Top Doorslammer teams preparing for the ANDRA championship season opener in a pre-event test and tune on Wednesday at Perth Motorplex.
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