I consulted with Roger and he agreed to watch
and listen to my car as I made another blistering
11 second run. He suggested that my $650, 8
in., anti-balloon plated, double throw-down
G.E.R. torque converter was not doing its job.
It wasn't locking up. How could that be? It
cost a lot, stalled at 5500 rpm's and was ordered
custom for the car. It was toward the end of
the season and I was not having any fun or success,
so I decided to try another converter. All I
had available was a 10 in. B&M Holeshot street/strip
converter out of a car I had bought.
The next weekend I went to trusty ole' CFR
and got in line for a time run. The car I lined
up against had always kicked my butt, usually
running in the mid 10.60's with a small block
Ford in a tube chassis Probe. I knew better
than to use the trans. brake with the street
converter, so I foot braked it to around 2000
rpm. The 4-wheel drum brakes wouldn't hold much
more; the lights came down and we were off!
The Probe ate my lunch for the first 100 feet
and then I hit second and, wam! I had never
felt a shift that hard. Half-track was next;
third gear followed and then came another hard
shift. I couldn't believe that I was catching
him. We crossed the finish line almost even;
he had run a 10.72 @ 123 mph. I crossed the
line at, 10.71 @ 129 mph! I went from a best
ever 118 mph with my trick converter to almost
130 mph on the first pass. Not too long after
that weekend I carded a 10.49 @ 131 mph with
the B&M and the season was over. I decided something
different was needed. I sold the Mustang II
and decided I was going to learn how to build
cars. My buddy Jim had finally talked me into
it. Thanks, Jim. And, thanks Roger Knudsen,
may he RACE in peace.
That
brings us to the future Project Muscrate, the
car I built in 1992 and have raced ever since.
It is a 1989 Mustang LX with the 302 HO fuel-injected
engine and a automatic trans. Originally I raced
it with a stock T-5 manual trans and quickly
realized that trans. was not going to cut it
in the world of Stock Eliminator. Jerrico's
and adjustable clutches are the norm in stock
if you run a stick, and that was beyond my fiscal
capacity at the time. I converted to an automatic
class designation and built my own C-4 trans.
with parts from a regular rebuild kit, turbo
action valve body, and an ATI treemaster
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converter.
I knew better than to scrimp on a converter,
and ATI has served me very well over the years.
After 11 years of running low 12's and a best
of 11.94 @ 110 mph, I need a change. So, let
me introduce you to, Project "Muscrate". I'm
going to convert my national record holder into
an IHRA only, "crate motor-class stocker".
The plan is to convert from a fuel injected
iron head 302 to a carbureted, aluminum head
320 hp / 302 Ford crate motor. I will be building
the engine from scratch according to IHRA legal
specs and I will show some of the details that
make a stocker engine different from a no rules
type endeavor.
The goal is to eventually run a 10 sec. pass,
and set the national record in my chosen category.
Trust me, it won't be easy!
www.roederperformancemachine.com
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