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"I'm not knocking IHRA here, either," Kloeber
continued. "They run a good, tight little program
and in some ways it shows in certain aspects
of our running NHRA races. It's a great place
to learn how to run a Top Fueler, not so much
in my case because I've been tuning for a fairly
long time, but you always pick up something
as you go along. With both organizations running
the same rules, your knowledge isn't interfered
with. You've just got one target to contend
with."
His adjustment to one tune-up status went over
well based on his first two efforts this year.
On Friday of the NHRA Winternationals, Millican
took over the number one spot with a blistering
personal best of 4.52/326.79, a number that
held as the pole until a dramatic final-qualifying
battle with Doug Kalitta. Millican got the jump
on the Mac Tools car and was cruising at half
track when Kalitta stormed by with a 4.48/332.18
at three-quarter track. Millican's run was nothing
to sneeze at as he carded a 4.55/325.53. The
team didn't win Pomona, but they did make it
to the semi's and improved on their best speed
with a 328.62-mph speed in round two.
At the NHRA stop in Phoenix, Millican qualified
fourth with a 4.54/327.43 and made it to round
two where he lost a reasonably close 4.53 to
4.59 duel to NHRA champ Dixon.
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Again,
Kloeber said that the task is made easier when
you are playing by one set of rules, but he
also added another proviso. "We had a handle
on the IHRA tune-up last year, no mistake about
that. One of the big reasons was the supercharger.
I am a big fan of the Bill Miller/Tim Gibson
blower and think they are the best on the market.
Miller quit making them, so I went out and bought
up every one of them I could find. I was originally
introduced to them by Clayton Harris, who tuned
Paul Romine to the 2000 IHRA championship, and
was sold right away. If you're going to be dealing
with different blower percentages, the blower
is one of the most crucial areas of the car.
"Miller said that this year he is going to
produce a limited amount of new blowers for
his established customers from the past and
I'm fortunate enough to be in that group. That
and our new car should make for a hopefully
successful year in 2003."
During the winter, Kloeber got together with
friend Brad Hadman, one of the country's premier
chassis builders, on a new car and went to work
on a dragster that represents solid changes
from the previous season.
"Brad's ideas are extensions of ideas from
his old boss (the late) Al Swindahl," Kloeber
explained. "He's an aggressive builder and I'm
an aggressive tuner and we just gelled in the
building of this car. The cockpit is different,
we are going with a tall body, but without a
tall nose, the weight been distributed differently,
and there are a number of tricks that I can't
go into, but these first two races this season
have confirmed that our ideas this winter were
on the right track."
Even officialdom thought so as NHRA threw the
Werner Enterprises team $1,000 in pocket change
and the Best Engineered Car award at the Arizona
race.
The only downside to any of this is that Kloeber
says that they will again concentrate on IHRA.
Plans call for attendance at only from six to
10 NHRA races, and again this is due to budgetary
constraints. Car owner Peter Lehman is beating
the bushes for an associate sponsor or two so
that they can someday make a real charge at
the NHRA championship.
Today Top Fuel competition has become appallingly
one-sided. Who were the four Top Fuel semifinalists
at Firebird Int'l Raceway? Just 2002 finishers
1 through 4. It would be nice to see a new set
of faces show up in the winner's circle, and
this is a subject I'm openly prejudiced on.
If there's anyone around who can break up the
Dixon, Bernstein, Schumacher, Kalitta monotony,
it'll be a high energy Tennessee driver, a low-key
owner, and their tuner and master juggler (at
least last year) Mike Kloeber.
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