Mother Nature is often at odds with motorsports. The events surrounding the June 7 and 8 NHRA Sport Compact race at Atco, N.J., proved just how vindictive she can be. Saturday's qualifications were a total washout and, to add insult to injury, I was dragged kicking and screaming to "2Fast 2Furious," a disappointing attempt at entertainment that grossed $52 million in its opening weekend.
It's cool; I took one for the team, figuring on Sunday there'd be wall-to-wall racing. The weather forecast predicted clouds in the morning and clearing to partly sunny with 79- to 82-degree temperatures. However, we were greeted by overcast skies, misty air that registered 100-percent humidity and no wind. No conditions conducive to drying off a racing surface were present.
The plan was either a single round of qualifying or running with a ladder based on points. I wanted to see a qualification round because some wicked Puerto Rican cars in the pits deserved a shot at the action. The latest time the NHRA would run a qualification round was 12 p.m. because the track closed at 7:30 p.m.
Qualifications got rolling at 12:30. It took forever; at 3:45, the ladders were finally set, but it was obvious the 7:30 deadline was toast. The track constantly needed to be oiled down, and the Pro FWD and Pro RWD classes elected to qualify from the left-hand lane only, which doubled the amount of time it took to determine the field.
Despite rumors of completing the event and paying the fine (reportedly $7,000), one round of eliminations was run, cutting the field in half and getting half the teams on the road as scheduled, then completing the event on Monday.
Single Round Qualifications-SundayThe day got off to a troubled start as a Puerto Rican Honda went sideways and tagged the wall on the big end, causing a long delay in the action. The rest of the All-Motor mad dogs were at full song, with Ken Scheepers atop the ladder with a 10.39.
In Turbo Magazine Hot Rod, Marty Ladwig showed the track could handle the power as he pumped out an 8.70. He was the only Hot Rod runner in the 8s in a top-five field, including Gary Gardella (9.10), Lance Ho Lung (9.13), Jojo Callos (9.15) and Andrew Bermea (9.61).
The back-halfed bruisers were the first set of racers to challenge the track surface as the top qualifier, Jimmy O'Connor, laid down an 8.16 to take top honors. Vinny Ten was second in his Supra with an 8.23 at 165 mph, the fastest speed in the qualifying round. Cesar Febus was third on the grid at 8.23, well off his 7-second norm.
It's been a long time coming and it was great to see Christian Rado get his act in gear. His transmission gremlins have been traced to linkage binding under load. The box would shift on the dyno, but load in the real world was just enough to push the linkage over the threshold. Rado's e-World Electronics Celica reacted with an 8.65, making the Pennsylvania native the top qualifier in Pro FWD. Nelson Hoyos was second at 8.82 and Ed Bergenholtz and his Mazda6 were third at 9.33.
The Pro RWD cars were able to overpower the track so the drivers and tuners had their hands full. The Scranton Brothers showed them all how it was done. They detuned the motor, made some other suspension tweaks and nailed a 7.24 at 187 mph. This was well off their 6-second capability, but the Turbonetics Celica was .42 seconds ahead of second-place qualifier George Ioannou at 7.66. Unfortunately, an oil fire under the car put the Celica on the trailer for eliminations.
Eliminations: Round One-Sunday
In Honda Tuning All Motor, Ken Scheepers, Angel Valentin and Scott Mohler (quickest 10.43) posted solid 10-second laps. Turbo Magazine Hot Rod also delivered the goods as Mike Crawford and Lance Ho Lung (quickest 8.73) laid down 8s.
All that changed with the high-power rear-drive races. Venom Racing's Grant Downing got a bye when Steph didn't show. Downing launched the Supra-powered Tundra, the engine made a popping sound and putted to the lights. In the next pairing, Matt Hartford was the favorite after dropping a 7.35 on Jorge Lazcano.