Into
each great career, a little rain must fall. It's no secret that Dale
Armstrong, one of the sport's greatest innovator/driver/mechanics, is
in a bit of a slump with Jerry Toliver's WWF Funny Car team. However,
anyone remotely familiar with Armstrong's career knows that this down
period is only a temporary respite.
Armstrong has been racing high-powered nitro machinery dating back
to 1966 and his "Canuck" Chevy II roadster Funny Car at Lions Dragstrip.
The Canadian native became Pro Comp's (AA/DA, BB/FC, A/FC, A/FD) first
superstar when he won the 1975 NHRA Winston World Champion and the W.R.
Grace Sportsman Cup (the best NHRA Sportsman racer overall) with Jim
Foust's "Alcoholic" Plymouth Satellite BB/Funny Car. In 1976, he followed
by becoming IHRA's first dominator in the class when he won seven of
nine IHRA Pro Comp National events for that league's world championship.
He won 12 NHRA Pro Comp national event titles in his seven-year Sportsman
career, including three U.S. Nationals championships (1974, 1975, 1977).
In IHRA action, Armstrong netted 14 IHRA event wins and two of their
world championships.
In 1978, he switched to nitro, highlighting his driving career with
membership in the eight-car Cragar Five-second Club in 1981 and the
first NHRA Funny Car national record in the 5.8s with a 5.89 at the
Winston World Finals the same year. He joined Kenny Bernstein's Budweiser
operation as the crew chief and tuned his boss to four NHRA Funny Car
world championships. He later tuned Bernstein to the first 300-mph run
in a Top Fueler at Gainesville, Florida in 1992. After the 1995 season,
Armstrong left Bernstein and crewed for racers like Don Prudhomme and
his current driver Toliver.
Darr Hawthorne sat down recently with the father of the drag racing
lock-up clutch and today's low profiled injector scoops for the following.
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