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ProFile: Harold Martinby Chris Martin |
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At the July IHRA CARQUEST Empire Nationals in Leicester, New York, one Harold Martin qualified for Pro Modified eliminator on the bubble with a 6.491/217.44. He had to fight hard to get into the show with previous efforts of 6.64/205.91 and 6.53/215.48 getting bumped out. His final effort put him in the 16th slot but unfortunately against the No. 1 qualifier Fred Hahn in Jim Oddys 53 Corvette. Martin tried hard with a first-round 6.55, but Hahn cranked out a record 6.26 to put him on the trailer.
For one thing, Martin is just about the only black racer of renown in IHRA Pro competition. The NHRA has former NBA basketball players Larry Nance and Tom Hammonds belted into Pro Stocks, but thats just about it. Since 1976, Martin of Southfield, Michigan has been knocking around doorslammer pits, running in NHRA, AHRA, and IHRA Pro Stock and IHRA Pro Modified Eliminators, not to mention the Great Lakes area match race circuit. However, while Martin may be the only black racer to crash into the country club in IHRA, he has accomplished something that no other drag racer has ever done. He is the ONLY racer in either association to have ten world mechanical patents to his name. Most of you who are subjected to the constant bombardment of car dealership TV and radio ads are familiar with the term "electronic fuel injection." Would you believe, as comedian Don Adams (Maxwell Smart of "Get Smart" fame) might say, that Martin was a member of the General Motors engineering team that came up with the device? Electronic fuel injection systems are as common as house flies on the car lots of America, and if Martin has his way, they may be that way in both Pro Stock and Pro Modified. From 1980 through 1995, Martin worked at General Motors, mostly in the electronic engineering department, and it was there that he made his corporate mark. Like most in the vanguard of something different, Martins ascendency to mechanical prowess was not a straight line affair. As he tells it, there was little doubt that he would be involved in something mechanical during his tenure on earth, but what it was didnt develop until his teens.
"My father, Houston, bracket raced all around Michigan, especially at Detroit Dragway," Martin recalled. "I was like a lot of kids with a father like that. I was interested in cars, and my travels took me from the street race scenes on Woodward and Stecker Avenues to the drag strip. However, as much as I liked the idea of driving, I was motivated more by the mechanical end of things. "Being a competitive person, I also wanted to make a significant contribution. Not just be a face in the crowd, but make an impact, so I never missed an opportunity to learn. My area of interest was the internal combustion engine." Predictably after Martin graduated form Mumford High in Detroit, he moved on to Oakland University in 1978 just north of the motor city and majored in automotive engineering. At the same time, he started hanging at the factories, and landed himself a job for co-op students on the Detroit Diesel assembly line. Shortly thereafter, he moved on to Cadillacs engine plant. Martin couldnt get enough of the General Motors facilities. His days started at 8 a.m. and were scheduled to end at 4 p.m.. but he always would seek out some department afterwards and volunteer to help out in exchange for learning something. He seldom left the plants before 8 p.m. "I was really into it," he said, "but it wasnt always easy. I struggled on the social front, as well as with whatever technological thing I was grappling with. Being black, I knew that you really had to work at fitting in, that people really checked you out. There were cliques and inner circles, and naturally and I learned this from drag racing no one was volunteering to rush forward with secrets." "I had friends in my old neighborhood, but I wasnt really into hanging out and making the nightclub scene. It wasnt that I didnt enjoy it, but I had other things that really grabbed me. I know some of my girlfriends would complain, Youre more interested in your cars than you are me, and Ill be doggone if they werent right. I guess you could say I was like that guy in the song, Mr. In-Between." While Martin was building his one career, he was also working on another, although it was probably not getting the attention his technical side did. In 1976, he started racing the "Little Kim" Camaro in Pro Stock action at Detroit Dragway. Having limited funds and time, he didnt figure in the national picture. However, he got better as time went on, running his first 8-second time (an 8.92) at the 1978 NHRA Little Guy National Open in Suffolk, VA. In 1980, though, he almost pulled out of drag racing completely. General Motors had noted his desire and talents and asked if he would like to be involved in the production of a GM electronic fuel injection system. Given that this was where his real interests lay, Martin didnt park his racing operation, but only appeared sporadically on race tracks while he pursued his automotive career. In the 15 years that followed, Martin scorched the pavement in that tech department. Being the newest member of a four-man engineering department, Martin went to work to show his mettle. "The first thing I was to develop was a wire harness for the fuel injection system," he said. "Basically, it involved actually wiring the unit. I was intimidated at first by all the high-level tech jargon, but I knew I could come up with something. We developed the unit in a six-month program." From there, Martin played a leading role in several automotive engine and control systems for GM such as traction control devices (traction controlled through the engine) and an electronic spark delivery system. He also produced a unit that provided heavy load engine protection, a device in which the engine could actually run without water and protect itself. In 1995, Martin graduated again; this time from General Motors, and realistically only in a matter of speaking. "I decided to quit to become a pro racer and create Martin Motorsports," he said. "In addition, I wanted to create a market for electronic fuel injection systems for performance cars of all types. Its turned out pretty well because GM has contracted me to develop these systems for more future GM performance aftermarket programs. One of my clients, Danny Scott, has one of the fastest Pro Street cars in the country with our fuel injection systems for performance cars of all types. Its turned out pretty well because GM has contracted me to develop these systems for more future GM performance aftermarket programs. One of my clients, Danny Scott, has one of the fastest Pro Street cars in the country with our fuel injection system, and my AC-Delco Pontiac Firebird uses one and has a best of 6.44/217 to its credit. "Im going to develop this product through drag racing. I have obligations as a husband and father. Ive got my wife Allison and nine-year-old Harold Michael II, along with my dad as part of the team, and theyve really motivated me to try and become the IHRA Pro Modified World Champ. Im goal-oriented and thats what Ill be working at now that I have more time to race." Given the distance hes come, Martin looks like hell warrant a lot of attention in the coming years.
Photos by Jeff Burk and Rollo Tomassi
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