NZ Hot Rod – August 2019

(Axel Boer) #1
56 > NZ HOT ROD AUGUST 2019

From Paul Astridge

PERFORMANCE can be measured in many ways. For
drag racers, the 52nd Australian Winternationals at
Willowbank Raceway was the epitome of just that.
Perseverance is also a form of performance, and for
this Gulf Western Oil-backed event, Willowbank
management and staff, IHRA and the 400 Thunder
series organisers all pulled together to make a success
of an event which had its fair share of challenges.
The biggest curveball arrived on day two of the
four-day classic. Rain was tipped to wipe out two
professional qualifying sessions the following day.
Therefore, the general consensus was a likely one-shot
qualifying showdown on the evening of day two. With
the staging lanes full for that outcome, rain wiped
it out. From that point on, teams were frantic with
concerns with when, or even if they could qualify
before eliminations. The weather gods mercifully
shone long enough to allow the one-shot session, on
day three, and it was worth the wait. Damien Harris
dropped a 3.778/321.96 in one of the Santo Rapisarda
fleet of Top Fuel dragsters, to set the bar. Gary Phillips
in Pro-Alcohol was the next jaw-dropper when he ran
5.408/261.72 off the trailer. These two players essentially
outclassed their respective competitors in qualifying.
Pro Slammer saw Steve Ham nail down number one at
5.701, and the bump spot fell away to Ben Bray’s 6.3, such

It is hard to believe Australian drag racing had not seen late generation A/FDs before. It took
NZ’s Tony Marsh’s exhibition passes to suggest a new way of thinking for Pro-Alcohol racing
in the future. His (restricted nitro percentage) passes were easily in the ballpark with 5.43,
5.71 and a 5.47 and an impressive 271mph best. Parity will be the issue with the alky burners.


Barry Plumpton (NZ) found the anticipated fives during
qualifying, hitting out a 5.813 and 5.886, but lost that
momentum in Pro Extreme eliminations, and bowed out early.

One-shot Pro-Alcohol qualifying and a tricky track,
allowed Brett White to make the show with a
5.982/250.37, while some of the heavy hitters struggled.

Winternationals


Climate Changed

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