They're still 'takin' it to the streets' at 0rlando
By Jeff Burk
Photos by Ron Lewis, Steve Gruenwald and Adam Cranmer
There are a lot of pretenders to the throne when it comes
to what is the biggest and best streetcar race. But ask any street legal
racer that question and the answer almost always are, "The StreetNationals
down in Orlando!"
The formal name for the race that Orlando promoter Carl
Weisinger puts on annually is "The Real World StreetNationals" and this
year marked the tenth anniversary of this mother of all street-legal
racing events.
The program starts with a car show at the local Race Rock
Cafe on Thursday night, but like the race itself this is not your ordinary
car show. Between fifty and 100 of the competitors bring their cars
to the parking lot of the cafe and park them. Then for a couple of hours
everybody eats, drinks and ogles everyone else's cars and girlfriends.
At about 6:00 PM the locals start to line up on the curbs on both sides
of International Drive that runs in front of the Race Rock. By the time
they give the signal to fire the cars and start driving them off the
parking lot, the crowds are primed, ready and standing ten deep to see
the "street cars" pull out.
The local police control the crowd with style, patience
and grace not often seen at this kind of scene. The cars idle off the
lot and many of the hitters are among them. They purge the nitrous,
or whack the throttle on the blower cars and do a chirp in front of
the crowds. The crowd goes up for grabs each time a car does a chirp
or a burnout and this goes on for about and hour. When this scene is
ended the teams either stow the cars in the trailers and haul them to
the track or just drive the cars to the track. The Thursday night scene
before the real racing begins on Friday is worth the trip to Orlando
just by itself.
The real racing action started on Friday. This year, despite
rain and overcast skies, more than 280 cars pulled through the gates
at Orlando SpeedWorld Dragway to compete in the four unique street legal
classes devised by track operator, race organizer and the man with the
final say, Carl Weisinger.
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