Hot Rods
by Andy Bell
On
July 16th, OVR was invited to participate in a road and track test for some
hot rods built by Woody’s Hot Rods and tested for Buckaroo Communications
and the Goodguys Hot Rod Club. Our contacts at Jeg’s and National Trail
Raceway put Chis Sondles from Woody’s Hot Rods in touch with Tim, Craig and
me to see if we could come out and set up a "Road Course" to compare three
high performance hot rods against each other so they could be reviewed and
documented by three hot rod magazines. Part of the test would be the road
course followed by a drag racing segment. We found out about the event on
the 11th just before the board meeting. We all saw this as a good
opportunity to help out our track owner, a club sponsor, and get a new
audience for SCCA. The press release looked like this:
|
Woody's Hot Rodz has teamed up
with Buckaroo Communications to build 3 equal but different cars.
The "Buckaroo Build-Off" features three Woody's
projects. Sponsored by JEGS, Dupont Hot Hues, BFGoodrich, Flaming
River, Lokar, Dynamat, Art Morrison, Strange Eng., Painless, SoffSeal,
US Radiators, Year One, Spal, Hot Rod Air, Specialty Power Windows,
Ecklers/Classic Chevy, Technostalgia, Phoenix Transmission, Wilwood,
Trim Parts, Standard Trans., Rocky Hinge, Crow, Rocket Brand Racing
Fuel and more...
Check for frequent updates in the Buckaroo
Communications titles, Street Rod Builder, Chevy Rumble, and Super Rod
for more details. We'll see you on the road in 2007! |
The
day of the test was beautiful. When we pulled into National Trail, all three
of the test cars were already there and polished up. There was a 40 Willy’s
owned by Gary Anderson, a ‘55 Chevy Del Ray owned by Fred Sondles, and a ’69
Mustang owned by Bob Steinbacher. The unique thing about all of these cars
is that they were mounted on a modern purpose built hot rod chassis. All of
the cars were beautifully done. The paint on the Chevy and Mustang looked so
glossy, you would think you could dip your finger into it.
We
talked to Chris Sondles from Woody’s and determined that they would like to
have each car driven three times on the course and then they would change
over to the drag race portion of the event. John Fergus volunteered his time
to do the driving on the road course and Jeg Couglin would come out in the
afternoon to do the drag racing.
From
OVR, Mike and Tonya Smith, Craig and Cody Wollenslegel, Coby Hartman and
voluntered to come out and help with the event. We set up a very basic
course with elements that we thought cars guys would like. We had a
decreasing radius turn, slalom, hairpin turn, lane change, kink, and a
constant radius curve. As we set up the cones, Mike asked me how far apart
we should make the lanes. I answered " Think $15K paint job." Immediately we
went back and widened everything by an additional 2 feet! Having not driven
these cars and having just done the GTO event a few weeks ago, we assumed
that these cars would need a lot of turning room and tried to keep the
course pretty open. It turns out our fears were unfounded, but more on that
later. The test was to show off the cars, not to see who could go fastest,
and we didn’t want to leave cone marks on the cars.
John
quickly got to know the owners of the cars, who were there to see how they
did, as well as the staff from the magazines. It was cool to see a
professional driver in action. He drove the course several times with the
assorted press members in his Audi. Then he showed them where he thought the
cars would get the best pictures. Once he was comfortable with the course,
he took a quick shakedown cruise in each car to see how they would react.
Finally he got ready to make the timed runs.
While
John was feeling out the cars, Mike and Cody were teching the cars. The
Willy’s had to have the hub caps removed, and that’s about when we realized
the hubs were originals which are almost impossible to find. The owner was
very grateful for us for suggesting the removal. Our other major concern was
tire pressure which was quickly remedied by the crews who brought them up to
their max inflation levels. Other than removing some remote controls and
cameras from the interiors, the cars seemed to be in tip top shape.
The Buckaroo Communications guys had a Viper with them and
John took a base line run with it. Then it was time to see what the rods
would do.
First
up was the Willy’s. For a car that just looks like it should be top heavy,
this thing really was a great road car. There was hardly any body roll at
all! I’m pretty sure there is more roll in the Go Kart than this car had.
The turn in was very quick and it had great potential as an autocross car.
However, the car was set up for drag racing and the fuel pick up was
positioned so that if the fuel started to slosh, the engine would start
getting fuel starvation. This dampened the first two runs while the crew
tried to figure out how to work around the problem. John had two great
starts, but ¾ of the way around the track, the constant turns would cause
the car to cough and sputter, ruining otherwise great timed runs. John then
took two more runs in the car with the tank topped up and a bit smoother
around the back of the course and just edged out his base run in the Viper.
Next
was the Chevy. John took his first run and again we were impressed. The
thing handled like an F Stock car. Halfway through run two John suddenly
slowed down. We all watched apprehensively as he idled back to the start
line. Turns out he had accidentally released the seatbelt and had to make a
re run with it fastened. Of the three car owners, Fred Sondles, the Chevy
owner seemed the most nervous about the sea of cones surrounding his
beautiful car and the sudden slow down had him pacing back and forth. That
said, he still wanted to see what his car would do. John quickly did two
more runs and was just short of the Willy’s time by less than .1. The owner
and his wife were very impressed with their "shoe box" and relieved that it
came home in one piece.
The
Mustang held the most promise as well as the most challenge. It was the only
car of the three with non power steering and with a HIGH horsepower engine.
In his test drive John remarked that he had only depressed the pedal by
about 1 inch and was flying. The extra ponies came at a cost however and
after the first run, the engine was getting hot so we took a short break to
let it cool down. Once cooled down, the Mustang strutted its stuff coming
across the line in first place of the three hot rods.
All
of the OVR members were impressed with the potential of these hot rods. The
chassis they use could work in our type of racing and it would be fun to try
out a chassis when you don’t have to worry about who owns the car, multi
thousand dollar paint jobs, and could dial it in for autocross rather than
drag race.
As
the Mustang made its last run, Jeg pulled up and came over to watch.
Introductions went all around and when we mentioned that both Cody and Drew
are kart racers Jeg perked up. He has been playing around quite a bit with
go karts recently from TAGS to a set of karts he runs with his son in their
back yard track. John took Jeg for a ride in the Willy’s and Mike and Tonya
started giving rides to the owners and crews in the Subaru. We did some
exhibition runs in the cars and John edged out the Willy’s time with the
Chevy. The Willy’s owner was quick to joke that this was an exhibition run
and "no longer counted! " but the Chevy "shoebox" owners now had improved
their bragging rights!
Once
everyone had their rides (Including Tonya who had talked her way into
driving the Viper, can you tell I’m jealous!? ) We packed up while the
photographers did their thing and everyone moved over to the drag strip for
the next phase of the test. Craig and Cody stuck around to watch and from
what I could see the Willy’s was running about 100MPH in the quarter mile. I
would have liked to seen the Mustang at full power, but we needed to get
going. We are supposed to be notified when the magazines will come out with
the article and I’ll try to make sure I post it to everyone when it does.
2007
August 6
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