Print This Issue! - Mopar Max Magazine
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Print This Issue! - Mopar Max Magazine
Vol umeV I ssue5 -M ay 201 0 DI CK LANDY photosfound i na trunk! TECH Ni tr ous i ns tal l fr om ZEX FEATURE CAR JoeHeuther’ s ‘ 72 Chal l enger PLUS LeftHand LugNuts TheM axtonM i l e Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 RUNNER-UP FINISH MOVES BECKMAN UP IN NHRA FUNNY CAR POINTS Mopar HEMI-powered Don Schumacher Racing (DSR) driver Jack Beckman raced the Valvoline/Mail Terminal Services Dodge Charger Funny Car straight into his second final round of the season, the 19th of his career and the first at the NHRA Midwest Nationals at Gateway International Raceway. He ended up runner-up to Robert Hight and moved into third in the NHRA Full Throttle Drag Racing Series point standings. Beckman and his team remained consistent throughout. On his direct path to the finals he left some heavies in the dust, including Tony Pedregon, whom he defeated with a 4.254-second pass at 290.63, Tim Wilkerson with a 4.243/294.56, and Bob Tasca using a 4.215/297.29. It wasn't until the final round, when he met up with Robert Hight, after a track-cooling short rain delay, that he met his match. Beckman launched two hundredths of a second ahead of Hight, but it was Hight first at the finish, recording the quickest pass of the day, a 4.149/304.25, to snatch the victory from Beckman by 15 feet. Although Beckman posted his quickest pass of the day, a 4.204/296.44, it wasn't enough to beat Hight. Beckman’s DSR teammate Ron Capps advanced to the semis in his own Mopar-driven Dodge Charger, trailering Jeff Arend and Del Worsham before he also fell to Hight. The third member of the DSR triumvirate, Matt Hagan, exited in the opening round. The DSR teammates now own the Nos. 2–4 spots in the NHRA Funny Car standings. Hagan is second behind leader John Force, Beckman is third following his runner-up finish, and Capps rounds out the Mopar-powered trio in the fourth spot. (Jeff Burk photo) [05/03/10] DECEGLIE TESTED BEFORE ST. LOUIS RACE We got a couple of spy photos of Vinnie Deceglie’s brand New Mountain View backed Pro Stock Stratus. The car just got finished at RJ Racecars in Galesburg, Ill., and the team stopped by Cordova Dragway Park on their way to St. Louis for the April 30-May 2 NHRA event. [05/03/10] Mopar Memos - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 JOHNSON GARNERS 200TH ROUND WIN, BUT LEAVES IN QUARTERFINALS ADVERTISEMENT Team Mopar NHRA Pro Stock driver Allen Johnson enjoyed an event-filled visit to Gateway International Raceway near St. Louis for the NHRA Midwest Nationals on Sunday, May 2. Johnson earned his 200th career round win and endured a re-run of his first round match with Ronnie Humphrey before losing to Warren Johnson in the quarterfinals. Johnson qualified No. 4 in his Mopar Dodge Avenger and drew Humphrey in the opening round. After a staging duel, Humphrey entered first, the red light on Johnson’s side of the starting tree was immediately triggered, and Humphrey motored down the track for an apparent victory. Fortunately, it was determined the red light was triggered in error and a re-run was called. Johnson’s 6.659-second pass at 207.82 mph easily bested his opponent’s 6.711/207.05 mark, giving the Team Mopar veteran his 200th round win. Johnson encountered problems shortly out of the starting gate in his quarterfinals match with Warren Johnson and watched "The Professor" drive away with the win. Despite his early exit, Johnson remains second in the NHRA Full Throttle Drag Racing Series Pro Stock standings. "We’ve got a team that has a lot of hours of experience at the track in the bank," said Johnson of his J&J Racing team. "We came back out for the re-run and got the job done. In the second round, we were the first pair out, and we didn’t adjust well to the track conditions. We’ll put it in our data banks and hopefully learn from it before the Countdown. We’re still in great shape, second in points." V. Gaines qualified 16th in his Dodge Avenger and came out on the losing end of a first-round race with current points leader Mike Edwards. (Jeff Burk photo) [05/03/10] TURNER HEADS EAST THIS SUMMER? We hear that the California-based “Pedaler” AA/FC of owner Gary Turner, tuner Cory Lee, and driver Kris Krabill, are considering making a return trip to the Midwest this summer for a couple of DragRacingOnline.com AA/FC Challenge presented by Lucas Oil events in June and July at Cordova Dragway in Illinois and Cedar Falls Dragway in Iowa. If the team does make the trip, they are sure to run into the series defending Champion, Paul Romine and his “Man O’ War” crew with tuner Mike Cavalieri. The Mopar and Ford bodied cars are two of the fastest AA/FC both having gone over 253 mph. The 1977 Arrow “Pedaler” currently has the second fastest AA/FC speed ever at 254+. (Jeff Burk photo) [05/03/10] Mopar Memos - Page 1 of 1 - MoparMax.com ADVERTISEMENT Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 ’59 DODGE PICKUP ON MECUM AUCTION BLOCK This 1959 Dodge pickup (lot S242) will be auction on May 22 at the Mecum Auction in Indianapolis. The Dodge D100 Sweptside Express pickup was billed in advertising as coming "Straight out of Tomorrow". Created by mating the quarter panels from the 1957 DeSoto 2-door wagon to a Uniline pickup box, the Dodge Sweptside was possibly the most radical example of stylist Virgil Exner's "Forward Look" concept. This is one of fewer than 100 Sweptsides hand built by Dodge's Special Equipment Division, a rust free lifetime Tucson vehicle that has completed a frame-off restoration. Its Flame Red and Angus Black exterior finish is highlighted by polished stainless and chrome, and the Buckskin Tan and Spanish Gold interior features NOS seat covering. Powered by a completely rebuilt 318/205 HP V-8 and push-button automatic, it rolls on period correct wide Whitewalls trimmed with deluxe 1959 Custom Royal Lancer hubcaps. (photo courtesy Mecum Auction) [05/03/10] FOOSE NAMED GRAND MARSHAL OF SEMA SHOW ‘N SHINE ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Chip Foose, awardwinning automotive designer and fabricator, and host of TLC's "Overhaulin'," will return as Grand Marshal of the second annual SEMA Show 'N Shine public car show, Saturday, July 24, at the Pasadena Convention Center. Held in connection with the SEMA Installation Banquet & Gala Fundraiser (taking place the evening before, on July 23) and the SEMA Pinewood Drag Races, also on July 24, the Show 'N Shine car show will draw some of the best local enthusiast cars, trucks and classics, with all proceeds benefiting children's charities Childhelp and Victory Junction. More than 200 vehicles packed the Pasadena Convention Center last year. Foose, a California native and an integral part of its car culture for the past decade, began working for his father's automotive company as a boy and became the youngest member, at age 31, inducted into the Hot Rod Hall of Fame in 1997. He established his company, Foose Design, a year later. "It's fantastic to have Chip Foose back again this year," says Joel Ayres, chairman of the SEMA Cares Committee. "Last year, I watched as Chip paused from an interview to draw a car on the T-shirt for one of the children from Childhelp. The young boy later exclaimed it was the best day of his life. Chip's celebrity status was a major reason for the success of our inaugural show, and we were pleased to hear his generous offer to once again help the children of Childhelp and Victory Junction Gang Camp ." (James Drew photo) [05/03/10] ANOTHER HEMI CHALLENGE SET FOR JUNE ProCharger is sponsoring the World's Fastest HEMI Challenge, June 4-6, at Maple Grove Raceway near Reading, PA. This event is part of the 2nd annual shopHEMI.com Late-Model Shootout and the NMCA's Muscle Car Nationals. To see just who does have the fastest ProCharger-equipped late-model HEMI vehicle, ProCharger will award the "ProCharger Bonus" to winners in the Challenger, Charger, Magnum, 300, and Truck/SUV late-model HEMI classes if they are running a ProCharger supercharger. There will also be an awesome match race between the two overall fastest HEMIs at the end of the event. Bottom line: If any winner (or runner-up in the overall) has a ProCharger supercharger on their vehicle, ProCharger will pay the bonus. There will be a match race at the end of the event between the two fastest late-model HEMIs on the property. [05/03/10] Mopar Memos - Page 1 of 1 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 The Mystery of Left-Hand Lug Nuts The next time you’re hanging out with your buddies and discussion turns to the many unique engineering details found on our Mopars – things like torsion bars, Super Stock leaf springs and ram tuned induction, ask the question: “What’s up with the left-hand lug nuts used on the driver-side of the car”? I’ve been involved in countless discussions on this topic and have heard a wide variety of theories over the years ranging from the absurd to the probable. On the absurd side, some say one of Chrysler’s fastener sub-contractors screwed up (pun intended) with an unrelated industry customer and cranked out several million left-hand studs and nuts when the order called for standard right-hand threads. Chrysler supposedly got a screaming deal on a zillion parts and adopted the fasteners for production until the supply finally ran out in 1970. Another theory that’s bandied about like a beach ball is the idea that Chrysler sought to punish customers for taking their Chrysler Corp. vehicles to nonauthorized service stations. Unless these independent mechanics were hip to the Chrysler left-hand way, they’d never get the wheels off and become discouraged. They’d assume that working on the rest of the car would be just as problematic. In disgust, they’d call the customer and say something like: “Get it outta here and take it to the dealer”. The notion that Chrysler would take this passive-aggressive deterrent strategy sounds crazy…it is. More thoughtful theories have a lot to do with the physics of a rotating wheel and printed in 1965 with subsequent printings in 1966, 1967 and 1968. Don’t look for the effect of inertia and centripidal force it on the New York Times Best Seller List. This one is from the fourth print run of on the threaded retaining fasteners at August, 1968. high speed. Let’s take the example of sports cars fitted with knock-off wheels. If you aren’t familiar, knock-off wheels do not use typical wheel studs and nuts to retain the wheel on the brake hub. Instead they have a central splined-hub onto which the wheel fits. Then a large spinner is threaded onto the hub to lock the wheel in position. Tightening (and removal) is accomplished by striking the blades of the spinner - with a soft brass or lead hammer so the chrome finish isn’t deformed by the blows. A somber looking affair, the 481 page Passenger Car Safety Dynamics was first You’ve probably seen knock-off wheels on Jaguar E-Types from the Sixties as well as certain 1963-1966 Corvettes. The functional benefit is that you can remove and replace wheels and tires very quickly in pit-stop situations during a road race or other timed competition event. By contrast, fiddling with a handful of lug nuts would add precious seconds to the pit stop – don’t tell that to NASCAR. Steve Mags Speaks - The Mystery of Left-Hand Lug Nuts - Page 1 of 4 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 But you will also see that the spinners on these cars use strategically positioned left-hand and right-hand threads. Generally, the driver-side hubs and spinners are threaded so clockwise rotation of the spinner tightens the wheel to the hub. The passenger-side fasteners employ left-hand threads that are turned counter-clockwise to achieve tightening. With the threaded wheel fasteners oriented this way, there is a natural tightening effect imparted to the spinners as the car travels forward over the road. But keep in mind that the wheels and spinners are rotating at precisely the same speed at all times – unless a careless mechanic hasn’t tightened the spinner all the way down. Okay, let’s now turn our attention to the use of left-hand lug nuts on cars equipped with conventional star-pattern wheel studs and wheels. Since the nuts are now orbiting (i.e. rotating on a different axis) than the front spindle nut / rear axle shaft centerline as the car rolls down the road, they are not subjected to the same kind of contra-rotational inertia as a center-mount spinner. As such, there shouldn’t be any need to be concerned with right-hand or left-hand threaded wheel fasteners. Just make ‘em all right-hand threads and be done with it, right? That’s what the vast majority of domestic and foreign automakers choose to do and it seems to work just fine. All of which brings us back to the original mystery of why Chrysler went with left-handed fasteners on the driver-side for so many years. Some new insight into the left-hand lug nut mystery was discovered recently when I was at a local used book store. I bought a heavy hardbound book called “Passenger Car Safety Dynamics”. Published in 1965 by the Motor Vehicle Research Center of New Hampshire, and authored by one Andrew J. White. This 481 page tome is filled with vintage photos of real world car accidents as well as many intentionally staged vehicle impacts with immovable barriers. An apparently self-funded entity, the Motor Vehicle Research Center of New Hampshire seemed to function as a precursor to the vehicle safety labs of today. Testing shows that finger-tight RH lug nuts quickly unthread and will leave the car with the messy result shown. Left-hand threaded fasteners are far less susceptible to this problem. Chrysler had it right! This vintage Passenger Car Safety Dynamics book has sections with titles like “Theoretical Factors in Energy Absorption”, “Vehicles Impacting Bicycles”, “Theoretical Study of Head-On Crash”, “Low Extremity and Knee Injuries” and more. It’s fun reading for the whole family…if you don’t mind graphically brutal photos of actual crash scenes and victims. Anyhoo, the fourth section is entitled “Investigative Procedures for Accident Cause, Brakes and Wheels”. This, dear reader is where we learn, once and for all, why Chrysler embraced left-hand lug nuts on the driver-side of its passenger cars for so many years. In a nut shell, the Motor Vehicle Research team conducted a series of carefully staged wheel loss tests. Working with a variety of American cars from the major manufacturers, the tests revealed that the use of right-hand-threaded wheel fasteners is perfectly acceptable – “when all the securing nuts on each wheel are properly tightened using a minimum of 20 foot pounds of torque”. Can’t get enough of mangled Chevy shoe boxes? Here’s a staged roll over test captured with a high speed camera. Steve Mags Speaks - The Mystery of Left-Hand Lug Nuts - Page 2 of 4 - MoparMax.com ADVERTISEMENT Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 So far, so good. But the book continues; “When these nuts are not wrench tightened and the vehicle is driven on the roadway the left side wheels (driverside) will become disengaged from the vehicle resulting in the brake drum rim contacting the pavement.” What happens to the right side (passenger-side) wheels when the car is driven with loose fasteners? The book continues; “The right side wheels under the same conditions were found to remain on the vehicle and in some tests the nuts on the right side wheels became tightened with use”. Another distressed Chevy, Corvairs were notorious for knocking your block off in a frontal impact. That’s because the steering box was located right behind the front bumper and transferred crash forces into the non-collapsible steering column. This scene played out hundreds of times all over the ADVERTISEMENT Interesting stuff, and it’s backed up by thorough testing using a ’57 Chevy as the mule. All four wheels were installed with their lug nuts seated all the way to the wheel but only finger tight – as if done by a careless mechanic. Then the hapless Chevy was driven at 10 mph for 400 feet and stopped. The lug nuts on the passenger side of the car showed ½ thread of disengagement while the lugs on the driver side showed as much as 3 full threads of disengagement as the nuts began rotating off the studs. Now remember, like the vast majority of U.S. autos (then as now) all four corners of the car feature conventional right-hand-thread wheel studs and lug nuts. country. Next up, the Chevy was driven another 200 feet then stopped for re-examination of the wheel nuts. Sure enough, the driver-side nuts showed added threads as they worked their way off the car while the passenger-side thread count remained constant with little change. Finally the car was driven an additional 500 feet and the test driver felt a pronounced “wheel rumble” and a “noticeable steering problem”. Upon inspection, the test team concluded; “that the left-side wheels were ready to disconnect from the studs as most of the threads were visible”. Meanwhile, the passenger-side wheels; “showed little change in the original relationship of the nuts to the studs.” This test was performed four times with the same result. It’s proof that when NOT tightened properly right-hand lug nuts tend to “unwind” as the car goes down the road BUT only on the driver-side wheels which rotate in a counter-clockwise direction as the car moves forward. The passenger-side wheels rotate in a clock-wise direction, an aid to the retention of improperly tightened right-hand-thread lug nuts. Working from this, the testers then performed the same test on cars equipped with left-hand lug nuts on the driver side of the car. The book reads; “Some vehicle manufacturers utilize the safe practice of using right-hand threads on studs and nuts to fasten wheels on the right-side of vehicles (passenger-side) Long before the advent of high tech crash chambers like those used by the NHSTA, surplus city busses and left hand threads on studs and nuts to fasten the packed with ballast served as crash barriers. Note the primitive graduated rule (in feet) and sweep hand wheels on the left side of vehicles (driver-side). clock for recording data. That looks like a ’40 Ford 2-door coupe meeting its end. Naturally, the authors are describing Chrysler Corp. products here – but don’t forget that Buick, Oldsmobile and Pontiac also employed left-hand lug nuts on the driver-side of most cars they built in the 1955-1961 period. It’s a fact. Steve Mags Speaks - The Mystery of Left-Hand Lug Nuts - Page 3 of 4 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 To see if left-hand wheel fasteners behaved differently, the testers repeated the looselug-nut test on an unspecified make (presumably a Chrysler product) and found that in one mile of operation at 30 mph all studs remained static with no loosening. After another twomiles at between 30 and 50 mph, the studs became tighter. Finally, after another five miles of operation at 30 to 50 mph the studs’ tightness increased more and were cool to the touch. May 3, 2010 There aren’t many Mopar-specific photos in the book but this shot of a crushed ’59 Plymouth appears in a section titled; “Adaptation of Roll Bars in Enforcement Vehicles”. Thus we can presume it is a police car. Note the police-spec wheel covers and heavy duty wheels. The conclusion of the tests is that the use of left-hand lug nuts on the driver side of any car is a fail safe tactic to help prevent wheel loss IF a lousy mechanic installed the wheels on the car. No, left-hand lug nuts are not a replacement for proper wheel fastener tightening, but they are a nice safety feature that’ll help keep the car on the road until the problem is discovered and proper torque can be restored. Today’s computer controlled crash test acceleration rams were a dream when the Motor Vehicle Research Center of New Hampshire relied on drones to stage impacts. Here a three man crew uses a ‘64 Nova SS ragtop and remote-control to guide a Buick sedan into the nose of a tiny Renault. So there it is. A plausible reason for why Chrysler (and certain other carmakers noted above) embraced left-hand lug nuts and studs on the driver-side of passenger cars built during the 1950s and 1960s. But why did the practice end in the early 1970s? We can speculate that the extra cost and complexity of the right-hand/left-hand strategy finally fell prey to the bean counters. Also, it is quite Not for the squeamish, the book also contains plenty of real world accident photos. Sad possible that by the late Sixties, and fascinating at the same time, the driver of this 1958 Ford Fairlane 500 and its newthe average independent tire for-‘58 352 FE V8 ended up in the middle of the road – together – after a nasty wreck. store auto mechanic was wise enough to ensure that all wheels were properly fastened, negating the need for a fail-safe strategy. All the same, it is nice to know that Chrysler took its motto; “Extra Care In Engineering: It Makes a Difference” to the limit. Still, we’ve all punched the air when some gorilla at the tire shop snaps or strips the nuts during a wheel swap on one of our muscle Mopars. It just goes with the territory. At least we now know why. Steve Mags Speaks - The Mystery of Left-Hand Lug Nuts - Page 4 of 4 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 The Primal Scream Daytona finally got my butt to the East Coast’s citadel of land speed racing. It was just over 65 years ago that history really started getting made at the airstrip located in Maxton, N.C. Back then, we were planning to take on the Axis in Europe with an assault on little Normandy, France, and we needed to figure a way to get multiple groups of soldiers over the target. Some would be by land (parachutes) and some by sea, at places we named for that day (D) like Omaha and Utah. A number of teams would have to go further inland in non-powered gliders, towed in by powered aircraft making their runs over a flak-heavy environment. Those gliders? Yep, they got their testing right here on this airstrip. Today, this particular runway is no longer used for air flight; that ended decades ago when the subsequent owners, the municipalities of Maxton and nearly Lurinburg, realized they did not need to maintain three functional airstrips at their rural facility. From this opportunity, the East Coast Timing Association began using the aging strip and its adjacent taxiway for land speed trials. In April, I made the five-hour ride from my home in east Tennessee to the coastal plains 25 miles southeast of Rockingham to see this type of racing for myself. The reason? During the last six months, we have been covering Gary and Pam Beineke’s creation of the G-Series Primal Scream Dodge Daytona in the magazine I edit, Mopar Enthusiast. Now, if you have read Mopar Max since we began, I covered the Beineke’s street-driven 1971 ‘what if’ vehicles in our first issue back in 2006. These cars use the 1971-74 era ‘fuselage’ body design with the wing car add-ons that NASCAR had already ruled uncompetitive by the time the 1971 models were offered. Since the factory had never built a wing car after 1970, the Beinekes have custom-built these cars, referring at times to the aero-styling and basic wind tunnel notes that were done on these bodies prior to the cancellation of the program; the factory never got beyond 3/8 models. So, having done the street versions and a 1971 convertible GTX for fun, they decided the next step would be to replicate what a 1971 competition car would look like. And rather than just build another cool driver with Grand National-derived paint, they chose instead to take the next step by actually building a car that could race. When I took over the editorship of Mopar Enthusiast last fall, that project was already underway. We have covered it for several issues now, and when Gary told me the car would be ready for opening day at Maxton (after, of course, the ‘requisite’ seriously major project car last minute thrash), I jumped at the chance to go see it shakedown in person. Painted up to look like the #71 K&K Insurance 1969 Dodge Daytona entry of Harry Hyde and Bobby Isaac (which set 27 records at Bonneville in September 1971), the goal was to see if this 21st century edition of the never-built wing could do likewise. Gary had contacted Indy Cylinder Heads for an engine that was pushing 588” on gas, and added in a Jerico five-speed with a big overdrive ratio, and Moser’s new 8.75 rear housing being built for the Drag Pak cars. The idea had been not to get too far from the OEM technology, and Gary painstaking worked on little details on the car to make it look authentic. You’ll have to wait until the story comes out in Mopar Enthusiast to find out how it went; we will tell you the three test runs netted a 181 mph best speed that left a lot sitting in the tank (since Gary never had to try 5th gear!). Mopar Musings - Moving On The Maxton Mile - Page 1 of 6 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 But what about the Maxton experience itself? As someone with a long affiliation with drag racing history, the rookie meeting that I sat in on with Gary on Friday evening reminded me very much of 1950s NHRA pictures. No spit or polish, just a bunch of guys on an old airstrip, being told the dos and don’ts before a wheel ever turned. The ECTA is a volunteer association, and they are pretty laid-back about everything except safety and track rules. Zero tolerance for stupidity is needed when you start talking about pushing speeds like this; in addition to restraints and construction, you have to show you can climb out of the window of your car if you have to. No engine rules; they check you for safety equipment based on your potential performance level and figure out a class for you to run it. Gary had been on the phone a LOT to make sure that only little things would have to adapted on the car to make sure it was legal. F1 eyes Jersey City for possible U.S. return Former NASCAR driver Tommy Ellis pleads guilty to… Paul Tracy to team with Barry Green, KV Racing… Click for more AutoWeek stories ADVERTISEMENT Unlike drag racing, there is not a lot of ‘fast turnover’ on this venue. The track’s acceleration course is a mile, and the shutdown areas is almost a mile (yeah, almost 10,000 feet total). The crew communicates by radio to make sure it is clear before the next single run is attempted, and that can take some time. However, unlike a drag competition, where you race the other guy, here you race the record book only. The airstrip shows its age, and the ETCA has done a lot to patch it up over the years, but it is still a somewhat bumpy group of transitions. As a result, the racing surface itself is demarcated by orange cones that keep the cars in the smoothest groove, with a speed trap at the end of the first mile. There is also a mild bend on the acceleration side and a mirrored bend on the shutdown side. To go really fast, you need to attend the rookie driver’s meeting, and then ease your way up to speed. This was why Gary would go 125, 150, and 175 mph on the three passes he made; he had to so that his licensing sticker could be signed off. Though only a five mph variance is allowed, the ETCA did let him qualify for unlimited speed since the 181 was not in the realm of, say, deliberate 215 mph stupidity. However, the fourth run (and the first to go flat-out) had to be scrubbed when time ran out on Sunday, so we’ll be back in May for that. BlueNile.com Ads by Google JOIN THE AUTOWEEK NETWORK Meanwhile, other Mopars were out enjoying the track as well. There was a new Challenger that flew to 151 best, a 1967 B-body with a big scoop, an ARCA entry that ran in the 180+ mph range, a couple of smaller cars including a flamed Shadow, and even a truck or two. The wing car drew a huge amount of attention; indeed, several people told us that they had seen either our stuff or a small image in Hot Rod magazine an issue or so ago and had come out to Maxton just to see it. In Las Vegas at Mopar at the Strip, I was hanging out at the autocross much of the weekend. Now I’m here, watching fast bikes and roadsters set speed records on a mile-long course. I still like drag racing, don’t get me wrong, but there are a lot of unexplored horizons out there even for long-time Mopar fans. It’s a cool deal to be around it all evolving this time around. Pam Beineke helps her husband Gary get ready for a hot lap in the 1971 Dodge Daytona tribute. The build up was covered in Mopar Enthusiast magazine the last few months. Mopar Musings - Moving On The Maxton Mile - Page 2 of 6 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 The Mopar SixPack Engine Handbook H... Larry Shepard New How To Build BigInch Mopar Small Bl... Jim Szilagyi New $18.21 How to Hot Rod Small -Block Mopar Eng... Larry Shepard New $14.93 The starter give Gary some last minute tips; he also made sure Gary’s belts were really tight! How to Rebuild Small -Block Mopar Eng... Don Taylor How to Modify Your Mopar Magnum V-8H... Larry Shepard New $12.89 Big Block Mopar Performance High P... Chuck Senatore New $14.93 Privacy Information As the motorcycle ahead disappears down the 1.8 mile course, the Daytona rolls to the starting line for its first run; this would be a 125-mph shakedown, which Gary had calculated out at 4300 in fourth gear. 1958-88 Mopar Big Block 383426-440 ... CFR Performance Milodon 16360 Performance Aluminum S... Milodon New $54.94 Milodon 16251 Performance Steel High... Milodon New $85.31 Blue Anodized Billet Dual Nitrous Bo... UPR Products Mopar 7 Quart Oil Pump Pickup CFR Performance Bob Leavitt’s big-block truck is somewhat typical of the style of modifications some people do to race; the big difference here – Leavitt and Friends built it in the pits! The paint was still wet.... Black Anodized Billet Dual Nitrous B... UPR Products Privacy Information Mopar Musings - Moving On The Maxton Mile - Page 3 of 6 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 After Leavitt’s Dodge Ram passed tech (and it was serious, not some joke), it got the rookie sticker applied by ETSA’s Keith Turk. Each new car and each new driver are required to make the 125-150-175 mph sequence before running flat out. ADVERTISEMENT This ARCA type stocker clips through the final speed trap at 180-plus mph; ETSA places many ‘non-specific’ race-built vehicles like SCCA, NASCAR and others into the CT (Circle Track) division. Mopar Musings - Moving On The Maxton Mile - Page 4 of 6 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 If you run something smaller that will never touch the double-buck barrier, flames help! A Dodge Shadow from the ‘old days.’ B-Body bomber – in the days before aero-seriousness, even NASCAR guys wheeled these big wedge musclecars. We missed the time, but other then that big scoop, this one looked pretty close to ‘stock’ on the outside. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Mopar Musings - Moving On The Maxton Mile - Page 5 of 6 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 ADVERTISEMENT May 3, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT New! More results | About this ad | Show on map Miami $6,000 Plymouth : Road Runner 440 1973 PLYMOUTH ROAD RUNNER$12,000 Plymouth : Duster H Code 1973 New Bern Plymouth 340 Duster W Build $2,030 Plymouth : Duster 1973 Plymouth Sausalito Duster - Caged and Mini Tubbed Holden $1,525 Plymouth : Barracuda 1974 CUDA 1974 PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA Marana $1,075 Plymouth : Duster 1973 Duster COMPLETELY RESTORED Columbia City $6,100 Plymouth : Road Runner MOPAR 1973 PLYMOUTH 1973 plymouth This new Challenger was hitting 150 mph times; we thought it was pretty cool since it was unmodified and had less than 1000 miles on the odometer. Gary hitting the shutdown at 156 mph: read the story of the weekend and feature on this in the August issue of Mopar Enthusiast. Mopar Musings - Moving On The Maxton Mile - Page 6 of 6 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 History found Dick Landy photos “Dandy” Dick Landy was one of the high profile drag racers in Mopar history. His long line of Super Stocker and Hemi innovation made his engines one of the most sought after power plants in drag racing. Landy’s altered wheelbase ’65 Dodge Coronet put Dick Landy’s Automotive Research, at the time in Sherman Oaks, California, the destination for Mopar engine horsepower. It could also be argued that along with the factory Dodge Chargers, Landy’s Dodge was a catalyst in the evolution of the funny car and garnered tons of publicity for the Mopar brand when he raced at Los Angeles area drag strips like Lions, Irwindale, Pomona, San Fernando and Fontana Drag City. While helping clean out a storage locker for Drag Racing Online Editor at Large Emeirtus, Chris Martin, among the piles of dusty Drag News, National Dragsters, Drag Sport Illustrated and Super Stock & Drag Illustrated magazines there was an envelope at the bottom of a box. When opened it contained negatives and proof sheets from a May 20, 1965, photo shoot by Chris’s late father, Bob Martin, a shoot apparently for Chrysler publicity on the Mopar Drag Team and Landy’s Dodge. We thought the unearthing of photos of this pivotal Mopar racecar and of Dick Landy himself, the famous wheelstand photo, the venerable Automotive Research Hemi, the vintage Dodge wagon tow vehicle, Goodyear Blue Streak drag slicks and even Landy sipping a Coke with an open bag of Bell’s Potato Chips was the kind of stuff our Mopar Max readers would savor. Enjoy! Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 1 of 10 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 2 of 10 - MoparMax.com May 3, 2010 Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 3 of 10 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 4 of 10 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 5 of 10 - MoparMax.com May 3, 2010 Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 6 of 10 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 7 of 10 - MoparMax.com May 3, 2010 Volume V, Issue 5 Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 8 of 10 - MoparMax.com May 3, 2010 Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 9 of 10 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 ADVERTISEMENT May 3, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT Forgotten photos of Dick Landy - Page 10 of 10 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 Words by Clifford Tunnell Photos by Ron Rairdon and Joe Heuther Here at MoparMax.com, we know how proud you are of your cars, not only restored cruisers, but racers or battered but cared for daily drivers. We know because we're constantly receiving letters and emails asking to feature this or that car in our magazine. When we saw Joe Huether's '72 Challenger, we knew we had to share it with everyone. Like all good love stories, this one starts with a young man. An 18-year-old kid with $250 in his pocket staring at a 1972 Challenger. It was a 318 with a 904 automatic and console, sported a broken back window, a dent in the driver's side door, and was clad in ugly faded brown paint. And it was perfect. The $250 bought the car and the work began. Out came the 318, out came the 904 and in went a 440 and a 727. The rear window and driver's door were replaced, the paint was refreshed, and a new black vinyl top went on. Renewed, the car looked good, sounded good, and it was fast. What more would an 18 year old want? For three years the car served as a daily driver, even taking Joe and his wife, Holly, to the hospital the day Joey, their first son, was born. One day a coworker told Joe that he'd like to buy the car. "It's not for sale," was the response, even after repeated offers over the course of several months. Finally, this eager buyer made an offer not to be refused. For six years, Joe had been looking for a '77 Mustang Cobra for his wife. It was her dream car, but all of Joe's efforts had been for naught. What should happen that day though, but the persistent would-be buyer pulling up with that very car in blue and white? The deal was struck: a straight swap of cars. It was, Joe would later decide, the worst trade of his life. Holly drove the car perhaps five times and then left it to sit in the driveway for over a year. Joe was devastated when he realized he'd traded away his beloved Challenger for a car his wife no longer had any interest in. What else to do now but to try and get it back? Unfortunately, the car had already been resold, and once Joe was able to track down the newest owner, this interloper didn't want to sell the car and wasn't interested in the 'stang. Eventually Joe sold the Mustang for $1200 and embarked on a search for another Challenger. He'd occasionally see his old Challenger around town, and each time he'd stop the driver to try again to persuade the driver to sell, but all to no avail. Joe had actually lost track of the car, until a friend called several years later to let him know that he'd seen the car for sale. Unfortunately, the fellow selling it had a reputation as someone who abused his cars, beating them to Hell and back. Still, hope springs eternal, and a quick telephone call revealed that, yes, the car was for sale. As quickly as Joe could grab a wad of cash, he was on his way, eager to be reunited. Resurrection! - Page 1 of 5 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 Wouldn't it be great if that was the ending? A quick reunion, then a drive into the sunset with the pristine Challenger of his youth? Very Hollywood. But real life is seldom as romantic, and Joe arrived at the house only to find a veritable tragedy. The top had been cut off of the Challenger to make what the owner called a "California convertible." Of course he'd never finished the job, and so the car had been left to sit out through the rain and the leaves and the snow. The interior was half full of decaying moldy leaves, the floorboards were rotten, the trunk and quarter panels were rusty, and the car was, in short, a total loss. Joe left, finally coming to terms with the knowledge that his car was gone forever. Every good reanimation story starts with the raw materials. Here's the car-daver that Joe mad scienced into his beaming beauty. For the next twelve years, Joe kept trying to find a new Challenger, but by now any car he could find was either too trashed, too expensive, or too not for sale. Finally, in October of 2008, he found the car. It lived in Redding, California, about 500 miles from Joe's home. It was a '72, though it housed a '71 front end, contained a Lincoln posi, and had worked as a drag car. But the body was good and the price was better, so Joe took his 16-year-old son Chris to help bring it home. Resurrection! - Page 2 of 5 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 Avert your eyes! The lady's naked! ADVERTISEMENT Joe took the next six weeks to decide what he wanted the car to look like and put together a plan of action. In December, the car was totally disassembled to be media blasted by Master Blasters of Caldwell, Idaho. When the car came back in January of '09, the scouring had revealed only one small patch of rust on the driver's side quarter and a few small dents, all of which were easily handled by Joe and his sons Chris and 7-year-old Zach. Again holding to the mantra that doing it yourself is free, Joe painted what he could of the car: The interior, underside, engine compartment, and trunk. The '71 front end prevented him from doing any external paint work, as his heart was set on the correct '72 front end. The search was on. A thorough scouring of ads turned up a complete '74 Challenger in Valencia, California, and a '72 front end in Orange County, so it was time for a drive. The '74 was a rust bucket, but when you're only interested in the internals, you can overlook a little body rust, and the '74 delivered, giving up the 440 and rear end it housed. On the other hand, the '72 front was battered but salvageable, and came complete with the R/T hood Joe lusted after, so it was a worthy 2,000-mile round trip. Work proceeded apace for the next three weeks, aside from a family trip to San Diego for eldest son Joey's graduation from USMC basic training. Then word came: there was a 512 stroked big block in Phoenix, Arizona, for the right price. Road trip! The engine Joe found was disassembled, already machined, and included all the parts new-in-box: a block, aluminum Stealth heads, 440 Source Roller rockers, a Holley 950 hp carb, an Edelbrock Performance RPM intake, a mini starter, a 440 Source 512 stroker kit, all set to 11.3:1 compression, a 3,500 RPM stall convertor, TTI 2" primary nickel plated headers, a 440 Source seven-quart oil pan and water pump housing and pump, and bolt and head stud kits by ARP. The only thing that was lacking was a cam, something 440 Source was only too happy to help with the selection of. Resurrection! - Page 3 of 5 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 All of that got carted off to Block and Head Shop in Boise, Idaho, where Craig Brown inspected every piece and bit of machining to right, tight, and ready to fight. By now the front end Joe had earlier bought was back from its own course of media blasting, and had received its internal paint, so once its body work was done and it was installed, it was time to paint the car. One paint gun and two days later, the car was 2005 Mustang GT Screaming Yellow. Yes, it's a Ford color, but as Joe says, "A Ford doesn’t need it, as they don’t have car shows in junkyards." The car was looking good on the outside, but as Momma always said, it what's on the inside that counts. The seat covers, headliners and vinyl top were all installed by Fenster Upholstery in Nampa, Idaho. Joe did the carpeting himself, but gives credit to Randy of Fenster Upholstery for making it look good. The engine went in without any trouble, and now there was just one obstacle left between Joe and his car: a transmission. Dave Fleenor of Ultimate Transmission in Boise was the man for the job, and after hearing about the hardware already in the car and what Joe's plans for it were (to have fun), he handily built a tranny more than capable of taking all the power the engine could dish out. Resurrection! - Page 4 of 5 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT So what's the timeline for this project? Joe bought the car in October of 2008. The car came back from media blasting completely dissembled on January 18 of '09, and it was driven for the first time on the Independence Day weekend of that same year. Working six to eight hours an evening on weekdays after work, and fifteen to sixteen a day on the weekends, it took Joe Huether just under seven months to get back the car he once had. And it's a whole lot better than the first one. And, no, it's not for sale. Resurrection! - Page 5 of 5 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 Hemi Huffer from ZEX Not many years ago, fuel systems were virtually standardized from one car manufacturer to another. That’s because most pre-2005 engine fuel systems possessed the same (or similar) fuel pressure, and most had similar air induction systems, meaning that anyone adding a nitrous system to an engine could rely on nitrous systems being more-or-less one-size-fits-all. However, within the last three to five years, engine fuel system rules have changed. New technology, such as return-less style fuel pumps and throttle-by-wire controlled engines, has opened up fuel system design to the extent that engineers are designing more efficient fuel systems tailored to a new generation of engines. That fact has led to the development of new nitrous oxide systems, as well, because early nitrous kits don’t provide optimum performance with these new fuel system designs. These changes did not escape the attention of the engineers at ZEX, who responded by developing nitrous kits tailored specifically to the new generation of Ford, Chevrolet and Chrysler EFI engines. Each new nitrous system is created to provide optimum performance and engine safety. In the case of the 2005 and newer Chrysler Charger and Magnum Hemi engines, there wasn’t an existing nitrous system that would function well. This engine has a unique speed density style computer control and a return-less style fuel system, as well as higher fuel pressure of around 58 psi that requires a radically different nitrous system tune-up for safe and efficient power gains. ADVERTISEMENT ZEX engineers went to work and developed a direct-fit EFI Charger/Magnum kit that safely delivers 75-125 horsepower. The kit provides an accurate tuneup, substantial power, and safe air/fuel ratios. However, developing this compatible nitrous system required solutions to several obstacles. OVERCOMING OBSTACLES One of the first challenges was the need for an efficient and practical fuel connection for the nitrous system. Unfortunately, the fuel lines of the new Hemi engine are manufactured from rigid plastics and are not receptive to modification. The solution was to develop a direct-fit fuel rail adapter that easily snaps in place and has a fuel tap built in. Another issue was the engine’s throttle-by-wire design, which poses nitrous system activation issues. However, the ZEX system includes patented technology that uses the engine’s throttle position sensor to activate the nitrous system at wide open throttle. This provides perfect integration of the nitrous system with the engine’s electronics. From a safety standpoint, the ZEX system uses advanced safety technology called Active Fuel Control. This exclusive technology monitors the nitrous bottle pressure and adjusts the kit’s fuel enrichment so the system is never too rich or too lean. All of this means that the new ZEX Nitrous System for the EFI Hemi-powered Charger/Magnum is an advanced system that safely provides incredible power. Best of all, it’s a plug and play system that can be installed in two hours from start to finish. Installation of the ZEX Nitrous System is a straightforward process; however, as always you must make sure you follow the kit’s instructions. Adding nitrous to a Hemi - Page 1 of 4 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 Deciding where to place the nitrous tank is the first step in installing a nitrous system. The best location for the tank in this 2007 Charger is in the trunk, just behind the rear seats. (Above) Routing the nitrous line comes next. In this photo, the line is routed between the trunk floor, just behind the rear seats, under the car, and then exits into the engine compartment. The nitrous line will be connected to the nitrous management system unit. (Right) Placing the nitrous activation switch is the third step. The switch will be mounted in the passenger compartment in an easy to reach location for the user. The switch (shown here) is an on and off toggle style with a safety cover to prevent inadvertent nitrous system operation and requires a 12-volt power source. Adding nitrous to a Hemi - Page 2 of 4 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 The next step is mounting the nitrous management unit in the engine compartment. In this example an area next to the electronic fuse unit has been chosen because there is sufficient room for the nitrous and fuel lines to be attached and routed to the necessary locations. This location also provides good access for the electric wiring to be accomplished. As shown here, the unit has three colored wires: red is the power (12-volt) wire, white connects to the throttle position sensor, and black is the ground wire. When all the components are mounted, the system will be wired; specific connection instructions are included with the system. Connecting the fuel line requires the removal of the original equipment (OE) fuel line from the fuel rail as indicated here. The OE fuel line is replaced with the custom designed fuel line tap assembly shown here. Adding nitrous to a Hemi - Page 3 of 4 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT The fuel line tap assembly is an exclusive and unique part of the ZEX Nitrous System. The final component mounted is the nitrous nozzle. The nozzle is installed by drilling and tapping an opening in the air inlet tube with the NPT tap included in the kit. ADVERTISEMENT The nitrous nozzle will be placed at this location of the air intake system. SOURCE ZEX 3418 Democrat Road Memphis, Tennessee 38118 888-817-1008 www.zex.com Adding nitrous to a Hemi - Page 4 of 4 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 THERE HAS BEEN A MAGNETO SIGHTING Steve, been waiting for your monthly column.... Where are you? WHERE'S STEVE MAGNETO???!!! Your loyal fan, Ed Burns Ed note: Ed check out the current issue for more from Stevie Mags What do you have to say? CHEVY PARTS INTO A MOPAR… HERESY! I have been collecting parts to install a T56 from a ‘98 Camaro into my ‘70 Challenger with a Hemi. Do you have any info on the conversion from the 727 auto trans? Curtis Shaffer Mississippi Can a reader help this troubled young man? IF YOU ARE GOING TO BE WRONG, MIGHT AS WELL DO IT RIGHT Your lead story about Jeg's new Challenger Drag Pak shows that someone did not bother to find out what these cars are about. The comment that the car is anywhere near race-ready from the factory shows no knowledge of the program or the cars. The Drag Pak is delivered as basically a body on wheels and is not operable in any way. Owners are spending hundreds of hours and many thousands of dollars to prepare the cars, as they are a do-ityourself-kit as delivered. Jim Schild Author - Authenticity Guide-2009 Challenger LC22R Drag Pak Authenticity Guide-1964 Dodge & plymouth Hemi Super Stock Authenticity Guide-1965 Dodge & Plymouth Hemi Super Stock Authenticity Guide 1968 Dart & Barracuda Hemi Super Stock Proving Ground-A History of Dodge, Chrysler & Plymouth Racing Maximum Performance-Mopar Super Stock Drag Racing-1962-1969 Columbia, Illinois How can you even consider these cars "Basically Race Ready?" It has taken over 600 hours to complete these cars. You are badly mistaken in that statement and that's a slap in the face to all the Drag Pak owners who are working to get their cars done. Your name: Your location: Your email: Do you want to subscribe to our FREE email newsletter? Yes No Letters which do not include a full name will not be considered for publication. Send It! * Your letter may (or may not) be published in Mack Reeves Florida our "Mopar Mailbag" section. Ed Note: We definitely “screwed the pooch” on this one. A little less attention to the PR propaganda and a little more real research was called for in this instance. See what the readers are saying - Page 1 of 2 - MoparMax.com ADVERTISEMENT Click NEXT PAGE to skip ad Search Advanced Search The Raddest Ride Wins! RATE All | Car Art | More Categories | New Rides | Raddest Rides | Read Comments Display: Create a RADorBAD account Upload your rides Create a garage With Pictures wi71383bee | Car zephyr9900 | Car Offline Offline zephyr9900 | Car zephyr9900 | Car Offline Offline zephyr9900 | Car zephyr9900 | Car Offline Offline zephyr9900 | Car zephyr9900 | Car Offline Offline Compete for cash Easy to use Sign up in seconds Is your ride RAD or BAD? Read more. Member Login FSTJACK | Truck / SUV zephyr9900 | Car Username Password Remember Me Become a Member Register now Offline Offline FSTJACK | Truck / SUV Offline Offline mrhotrod | Car Click here to create your Garage! boxcar66 | Truck / SUV badfish67 | Car Offline Offline badfish67 | Car badfish67 | Car Offline Offline Ads by Google Used Cars Sale Preowned Trucks Used Diesel Trucks 4X4 Trucks Trucks Available Moparty | Boat snowbird | Car Offline Offline moparcon | Car Dodge's sticky gas pedals and a DUB moparcon | Car Offline Offline MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 SUBMISSION POSITION May 3, 2010 ADVERTISEMENT I am a subscriber to the magazine and it is great. It's always nice to be associated with great things and I was wondering how one can submit their ride as a feature car? I have a ‘63 Dodge Polara with a transplanted 472 MP crate hemi and would love to have it featured here. Thanks again for your efforts with the magazine and keep ‘em coming! Mopar to ya! Steve. Steve Chervinsky Montreal, Quebec Steve, we’re always glad to get reader’s cars submitted to us. (Be sure to check out this month’s feature car; it’s a reader submission.) If you’ve got a car you’re muy proud of, drop us a line at content@moparmax.com with some photos of your car and a little backstory, and we’ll see what we can do. ADVERTISEMENT LOOKING FOR HIS CLAN Just found your web site. Was lookin’ for nostalgia Mopars racing and fell into this. Way cool. As I’m 61 years old, too old to play with toy cars, I drive a ‘65 Plymouth Belvedere two door post 451 with 67-440 heads, or will drive as soon as the crank gets back from the motor man. It has tf with 4500 stall and a 4.56 posi in the rear. We decided to try for a little bit faster times this year. Hopefully in 10s but if it doesn’t make it, there’s always next year. What do I have to do to join this establishment? Mark Forest Keokuk, Iowa Ed note: Mark have we got a deal for you. If your car has two carbs you can run the with the Midwest Nostalgia Super Stock program which has races at Cedar Falls, Kansas City, and Cordova. If you don’t have two carbs you can run the Nostalgia Eliminator. Either way you are assured of a good time with fellow Mopar Maniacs. See what the readers are saying - Page 2 of 2 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 RETURNLESS POWERJECTION III SYSTEM FROM PROFESSIONAL PRODUCTS Professional Products now has an EFI kit for vehicles that do not have an aftermarket or factory fuel return line. This self-learning, bolt-on POWERJECTION III EFI kit is available in satin finish or polished finish and is the only returnless “adaptive learning” fuel-injection unit available today. Simply install the kit, usually in an afternoon with normal hand tools, and drive the vehicle for 20/30-minutes. The system “learns” your engine, and no additional tuning is required. POWERJECTION III has provisions for laptop tuning should you choose. The kit includes a 750 CFM Throttle Body Assembly, which dimensionally replaces a 4150 Holley with identical linkage, four 62-Lb. port-style injectors, built-in engine management system and all harnesses and connectors. The idle air control, 2.5 BAR MAP sensor, air temperature control and throttle position sensor are built into the unit. The O2 sensor bung requires no welding for installation. Dashboard software CD with detailed instruction manual is included. Professional Products’ programmable FuelOnDemand module is included with the kit and mounts separately. This module allows the EFI kit to function as a returnless system, eliminating the need for installing a return line. Run a single inlet fuel line from the tank and let the FuelOn Demand control your fuel pressure. Check out this returnless system at www.professional-products.com . NEW POWER CHILLER COOLS RACECAR ENGINES FAST! The Power Chiller (patent pending), designed by NHRA Pro Stock racer Tom Hammonds, is based on a proven industrial chiller used in medical applications and requires no ice or additional water to cool the engine. That means fewer messes to clean up in the pits and no more ice for the racers to buy. Just plug the unit into a 110-volt, 20-amp socket, set the thermostat and forget it – the Power Chiller maintains a consistent temperature no matter how hot the weather. For more information contact Power Chiller at 5558 West 2nd Ave., Mesa, AZ 85210-1201, call toll-free 1-888-PWR-CHIL (797-2445) or go to www.PowerChiller.com . FIRESTONE INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS OFFERS COIL-RITE KIT FOR 2009 DODGE RAM 1500 The '09 Dodge Ram Coil-Rite kit is a no-drill application designed to increase vehicle stability, improve braking effectiveness, steering and balance, and keep headlights properly aimed. Firestone's Coil-Rite springs, which are installed inside the vehicle's existing coil springs, also help level the vehicle and reduce tire wear. "Our Coil-Rite air helper springs can be easily adjusted for varying loads and road conditions by increasing or decreasing the air pressure in the helper springs, just like drivers would adjust the air pressure in a tire," said Todd Green, regional sales manager, Firestone Industrial Products, Ride-Rite(tm) division. "We also offer our popular AirRite(tm) air accessory systems, which complement the Coil-Rite kit by allowing drivers to adjust the air with a push of a button installed on the dashboard." A pair of Coil-Rite air springs supports up to 1,000 pounds of load leveling capacity. (Note: Air springs do not increase the load-carrying capacity of the vehicle. Do not exceed the vehicle's recommended Gross Vehicle Weight Rating [GVWR]). Coil-Rite kits can be installed in about one hour and include air springs, hardware, air line and separate valves for manual inflation. Trained technicians are available toll-free (800.888.0650) to answer any product application, installation or warranty questions Monday through Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. EST. For more information, visit www.ride-rite.com . Mo Products - Page 1 of 2 - MoparMax.com Volume V, Issue 5 May 3, 2010 REVOLUTIONARY DRONE-FREE MUFFLER FROM DYNOMAX The DynoMax VT muffler features an exclusive, precisely calibrated patented internal valve that ensures maximum performance and provides a drone-free experience in the vehicle. The new DynoMax muffler’s proven performance advantage can be seen in recent flow-bench testing of the DynoMax VT (No. 17956), MagnaFlow, and Flowmaster products. The DynoMax VT muffler delivered 841 cubic-feet-per-minute flow, compared to 588 CFM for the MagnaFlow and 373 CFM for the Flowmaster.1 The new muffler offers the flow characteristics of the legendary DynoMax Ultra Flo Welded muffler, through a straight-through unrestricted design that is dyno-proven to support up to 2,000 CFM and 2,000 horsepower. The 100-percent welded stainless steel muffler is available in a side inlet/center outlet 14-in. body length and a side inlet/side outlet 16-in. body length. Inlet/outlet bushing diameters include 2 ¼-in.; 2 ½-in.; and 3-in. sizes. The new muffler also includes slotted bushing ends; exclusive Continuous Roving Fiberglass (CRF) technology that absorbs additional unwanted interior resonance and provides a rich, deep performance tone; and a show-stopping DynoMax VT logo-embossed body and high-impact finish. The new stainless muffler is covered by a limited lifetime warranty and exclusive 90-day Performance and Sound Guarantee, an offer that lets enthusiasts try the muffler for 90 days. Additional restrictions apply and can be found at www.DynoMax.com . DYNOMAX DELIVERS PERFORMANCE, SOUND & LOOKS TO THE NEW CHALLENGER HEMI DynoMax Performance Exhaust has announced the release of two systems for 2008-09 Dodge Challenger SRT-8 and RT Hemi models, delivering performance, sound and style to the powerful platform, and posts an increase of 24 horsepower and 24-ft. lbs. of torque out of the Hemi Challenger SRT-8 model and 11 horsepower and 24-ft. lbs. of torque out of the RT model. Both new Challenger systems feature high-quality, 409-grade stainless steel 3-in. intermediate pipes and tailpipes, providing protection against corrosion. The new SRT-8 and RT systems feature the brand’s popular DynoMax Ultra Flo Welded muffler – a 100-percent welded construction for improved durability and extended lifetime – that supports flow up to 2,000 SCFM and 2,000 horsepower. The straight-through unrestricted design features exclusive Continuous Roving Fiberglass (CRF) technology that absorbs unwanted interior resonance. The Dodge Challenger SRT-8 and RT systems include a pair of 3-3/4-in. by 7-in. square tips that conform to the bumper valance. Built for “Pure Unadulterated POWER,” the new systems were application engineered to provide maximum performance and highly specific acoustical characteristics. The systems are manufactured entirely in the United States. The new stainless system is covered by a limited lifetime warranty and exclusive 90-day Performance and Sound Guarantee, an offer that lets enthusiasts try the muffler for 90 days. Consumers can return the product within 90 days for a full refund of its purchase price. To find out more information about the 2008-09 Dodge Challenger Hemi applications and other popular vehicles, please visit www.DynoMax.com . CHRYSLER VALVE SPRING COMPRESSOR FROM PROFORM PARTS Proform parts now has this inexpensive and easy to use valve spring compressor for small-block and big-block Chrysler engines. This heavy-duty tool makes compressing and removing valve springs quick and easy, with the head still on the engine. It’s a handy and time saving addition to any Mopar owner’s toolbox. It also saves money since you don’t have to replace the head gaskets! Simply remove the stock rocker shaft from the head, and secure the moveable Proform tool shaft. With the compression arms over the spring retainer, pull back on the handle to compress the spring. The handle slides on the shaft allowing two springs to be compressed with one installation of the tool. Move down the line to remove all the springs. Hassle free spring removal, what could be easier? To preview all of Proform’s innovative line of engine building tools, and other internal and external engine products, visit www.proformparts.com . For additional information, and a retailer near you, contact Proform/Specialty Auto Parts, USA Inc., P.O. Box 306, Roseville, MI 48066, 586-774-2500, Fax: 586-778-7775. Proform, parts and tools that perform! Mo Products - Page 2 of 2 - MoparMax.com
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