PILCHER PREVAILS
OVER PARKER
Words and photos
by Ian Tocher
4/1/04
Johnny Pilcher said
his car had some problems with the nitrous turning
on and off early in the day, but fortunately,
its performance never suffered on the way to
the ORSCA Outlaw Pro Mod win at Atlanta Dragway.
ittingly,
the two quickest and fastest cars on the grounds
faced off Mar. 28, in the ORSCA Outlaw Pro Mod
final at Atlanta Dragway, as Johnny Pilcher
and Dan Parker traded blows throughout eliminations
in a pair of '63 Corvettes before staging their
ultimate clash.
It was only the
third time out for the car Dan Parker was
driving in Atlanta after testing it for
four days early in the year at Darlington
and finishing runner-up at Orangeburg, SC,
two weeks before the ORSCA event. Car owner
Mike Hill, who races a turbocharged Mustang
in Outlaw 10.5 action, said he plans to
enter a few Outlaw Pro Mod events and match
races with it himself this year, and may
even try to qualify for a couple of IHRA
national events. |
With 13 cars in the class, both Pilcher and
Parker enjoyed bye runs in the opening round.
Pilcher ran next-to-last and set low e.t. for
the round with a 4.18 at 175.64 mph over the
1/8-mile distance. That left only Parker to
make a pass in Mike Hill's '63 Corvette and
he promptly went one better with a 4.14 at 179.25
mph. The stage was set. In round two, Pilcher
ran another 4.18 against a red-lighting Thomas
Lee, while Parker went 4.16 to a 4.58 by Rex
Kelley.
Pilcher, from Chancellor, AL, said he showed
up at Georgia's House of Speed just expecting
to shake down his new Sonny Leonard-built 737
engine and support the fledgling Outlaw Street
Car Racing Association (OSCRA). "We've changed
some components in the motor, trying to get
it faster and get a little more durability.
You know, you've gotta' finish to win," he stated.
The semi-finals featured match-ups against
James Hancock Jr. for Parker and Jeff Ensslin
for Pilcher. In the first pairing, Hancock left
early while Parker set low e.t and top speed
for the day at 4.12 secs and 179.40 mph. Unfortunately,
in the other semi, Ensslin's 1954 Studebaker
broke on the line, sending Pilcher on a 4.13-secs
solo pass.
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