As many of you are aware, Moroso Performance Products head man Rick
Moroso not only runs the business that bears his family name but he
is also a serious, died-in-the-wool, drag racer.
For the past several years Rick has been campaigning the 'Vette that
his dad started the family business with at NMCA events in the Hot Street
Class. [See Dec.1999 issue of DRO for feature on the old 'Vette] The
only problem has been that while the old 'Vette was fast it wasn't fast
or quick enough. So Rick decided to retire his Dad's 'Vette and not
only build a new car but a new Vette that would keep the Moroso family
tradition of fast Corvettes alive.
What Rick and his guys at the company shop in Connecticut did was to
take a new generation C-5 Corvette and make it into a new generation
race car for NMCA/NSCA Hot Street competition.
As we go to press the new car is going for testing and then Rick hopes
to take the car to the NMCA finals at Atlanta.
Before Moroso took the new 'Vette to the track he was kind enough allow
DRO to give our readers this exclusive look at his new ride and give
us a little information about it. We think it is one of the trickest
and slickest street-legal race cars ever built. We think you will agree.
The ultra sano C-5 'Vette is painted with Corvette Pewter color paint.
The Moroso technicians installed Strange Engineering brakes on all four
corners which required special offset wheels. They had no problem with
the rear wheels but couldn't find front ones so they used these GM "space
saver wheels." Rick has some custom wheels coming but DRO thinks the
"space savers" are way cool! You can't see it in the photo but Rick
has retained the stock interior, even going to the trouble of replacing
the stock gauges with aftermarket ones while retaining the stock dash.
They even took the stock seats apart and reinforced them with steel
to meet safety regs. As the car sits with Rick in the seat it weighs
3113 lbs, which is just about exactly what it has to weigh with the
current 375 cubic inch engine.
After some of the NMCA street car racers petitioned the sanctioning
body to allow them to use wheelie bars, the NMCA agreed but restricted
the length of the bar so that the wheels wouldn't extend past the rear
bumper. DRO thinks that is a good rule. It will eliminate the bumper-scraping
passes that have occurred in some classes with the resultant damage
while the short bars will allow these cars to get the wheels up. We
really like the way the exhaust exits behind the rear wheels. By the
way the wheelbase on this C-5 is 104.5 inches.
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