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#1 | |
VIP Member
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Pontiac,il.
Posts: 1,192
Likes: 272
Liked 950 Times in 189 Posts
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My Tech moment happened at a RT 66 bracket race also. The tech there was just as strict as any big races I go to. As I was leaving tech with my Stocker I was told by an older tech official that I had to put my "dial in" on before I left the tech area? After a few quizzing moments asking how I was going to do that since I had not run the car yet another tech official came over and waved me on. Later I figured out that it was the class designation he wanted on the car(Super Pro, Pro, or Sportsmen). Not the dial in. LOL. |
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#2 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Miles From Nowhere
Posts: 7,786
Likes: 2,878
Liked 5,076 Times in 1,935 Posts
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Okay, here's one:
If you ever got teched by Marty Barrett it was worth the price of admission, alone. We're out at Amarillo for the 73 finals, with the 66 Chevy II SS/J car. Tech was in some God-forsaken vacant lot they picked out. Marty comes walking up , pulling up on his pant legs,,,"gotta watch for the snakes" he says. He goes around to the back of the car, still on an open trailer. He's looking underneath but not saying anything. This was before weight boxes, ballast bars, etc. You had to run your natural class, only. No dropping down a class...Spare tire, jack ,full tank of gas...whatever it took. We had moved the springs in ,which was legal. We took a 3x3 piece of angle iron and ran it from one side to the other, and hung the shackles off that...Finally Marty says " nice way to add some ballast back there". He then puts his hand on the big SS plate on the deck lid.Glad you've got that in place We told him..of course...Nice and heavy too. Marty says.."well, you boys have a nice day" We told him to watch out for the snakes,...and off he went. The good ol' days...
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"We are lucky we don't get as much Government as we pay for." Will Rogers |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Prunedale Ca
Posts: 188
Likes: 522
Liked 390 Times in 81 Posts
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Almost got tossed in St Louis for bumper brackets and dash cluster my first year in super stock 2006, was not a fun experience, had to get Danny to let me back in. Lots of drama not gonna mention names but all worked out in the end. I got to race, main thing after a 2,000 mile drive. John
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Maryland USA
Posts: 532
Likes: 126
Liked 247 Times in 88 Posts
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A new bracket racing sanctioning body with its own bespoke rule book held a "national event" at Atco Raceway. You had to pre-enter and pay by mail if you wanted to race. On the morning of the event I drove the 100 miles from my home in North Jersey in my 1969 Mercury Cougar.
I had never had tech problems at any of the other tracks where I had raced the car previously. However this group's tech inspector bounced me because a portion of the car's slapper bars extended below the rear wheels' rims. I had never heard of such a thing, but it was in their rule book. I never thought to look, because NHRA had no such rule that I was aware of and no one ever questioned the setup before. Mind you, the car was running stiff-wall DOT tires. The bars wouldn't touch the ground even if all the air was let out. Nevertheless, I didn't want to waste the trip and entry, so I unbolted both traction bars and left them in my pit space. The amount of squat in the rear on subsequent runs was unnerving. After the race I put the bars back on and drove home. I never had problems with tech again, and I never raced with that organization again. Last edited by Mike Schwartz; 02-11-2024 at 12:33 AM. Reason: Traded droop for squat. :) |
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