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Four
racing tips that can save you time, aggravation
and $$$.
Words
and photos by Dale Wilson
5/7/04
Here are some
more Quik Trix garnered from the
Wilson household on how to race
the right way, the safe way or the
cheap way. Itll take you only
a matter of moments to read each,
hence the name Quik Trix.
They have helped us. Maybe theyll
help you.
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LEFT SIDE, PLEASE
Check out this photo we took at the Grove.
This savvy crewman has taken refuge behind
the Groves full-length guard wall,
well away from anything that might ka-bam
or drop off the Camaro, far left. Thats
the safest place of all. |
I always mount my dragster from the left side,
just like in mounting a horse. Now comes an
idea from my chassis builder Tommy Harris of
Fabrication Concepts in Douglasville, Georgia,
the craftsman who is building my new front-engine
bracket dragster.
Notice that the savvy crewman always stands
on the left (drivers side) of the race
car when said is doing a burnout or being lined
up in the staging beams. Why? There is a good
reason for that --- since a running engine rotates
counterclockwise, anything that might fly off,
say a starter ring gear or a piece of flexplate
weld, will fly off to the right side, resulting
in an injury to the crewman. Stand on the right
side and an exploding engine,
trans or flexplate will inevitably head for that
side, while in most cases, the flying pieces will
miss the one on the left side simply because of
inertia will direct the pieces to the
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right.
Weve seen one spectator standing on the
right side near a dragster doing a burnout get
hurt when a flexplate piece exited the underside
of the car and headed his way, resulting in a
bruised and bloody leg.
And the lesson here is an added bit of learned
logic --- spectators should stay away from any
car doing a burnout, regardless of which side
theyre on.
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