Friday, May 11, 2018
MoParty time
As this is being written, Paul and the Cuda Beast team are on their way to Brainerd Motorsports Park outside Chattanooga, Tenn., to participate in the Southeast MoParty Picnic event today. Paul and the Beast will be on hand to make exhibition runs as part of the show. It's a win-win deal -- picking up a few bucks while getting to test. Looks like a great time for MoPar fans.
This will be the third test session at BMP this year for the Beast, and the second testing weekend in a row, and the track time is starting to pay off.
Paul said the team has discovered that the rear shocks were bad, a problem that was likely cropping up before last year. The car is sporting new Penske nitrogen filled shocks, and Paul said the Beast's tire-shake gremlins appear to be gone.
The team made two runs last Friday, getting all the way down more or less on one of them. On test one, Paul said the car basically overpowered the track prep about halfway down after a good launch. For the second run, Paul said he let his right foot be the traction controller instead of the electronic box, and slapped the throttle when the Beast started to spin the tires after another strong start. The front wheels lifted when the power came back in, the car got loose and the front lifted again after more throttle manipulating. In what was basically a shutdown run, the Beast carded a 4.60 at about 100 mph.
Paul said he has his eye on the track's 3.92 promod record. If you can't make the MoParty event in person, BMP has a pretty good Facebook page that can offer information.
Labels:
Brainerd Motorsports Park,
DJ Safety,
Fowler Engines,
Hoosier racing tires,
Jeffers Pro Cars,
NMCA,
PDRA,
promod racing,
PTC torque converters
Saturday, April 7, 2018
Idle this weekend
Paul Gibbs and the Cuda Beast team had hoped to be racing this weekend just down the road at the NMCA meet at Atlanta Dragway, but Paul decided to stay home in the face of a rainy forecast. When I spoke with him Friday, he said he was expecting the race to be cancelled, but the race is trying to move ahead today despite some rain delays.
Paul did say that he tested again last weekend at Brainerd Motorsports Park, and one test pass was encouraging -- a 4.29 after a 0.95 60-foot time and shutting off at midtrack when the car shook. Paul said that indicated the car was overpowering the track setup.
Paul said he is looking at renting the Chattanooga track for a testing day, which would give the team total freedom to run without affecting other racing. We'll let you know if that happens.
Paul did say that he tested again last weekend at Brainerd Motorsports Park, and one test pass was encouraging -- a 4.29 after a 0.95 60-foot time and shutting off at midtrack when the car shook. Paul said that indicated the car was overpowering the track setup.
Paul said he is looking at renting the Chattanooga track for a testing day, which would give the team total freedom to run without affecting other racing. We'll let you know if that happens.
Labels:
Brainerd Motorsports Park,
DJ Safety,
Fowler Engines,
Hoosier racing tires,
Jeffers Pro Cars,
NMCA,
promod racing,
PTC torque converters
Thursday, March 22, 2018
Test hit
(UPDATE, MARCH 24: RACE CANCELLED BECAUSE OF RAIN. I think Paul will try the last week of March to test, before the Atlanta race the first weekend in April.)
After what must have seemed like an eternity, Paul Gibbs finally got the updated Cuda Beast onto a racetrack, testing last Saturday at Brainerd Motorsports Park outside Chattanooga. In two test attempts, the pumped-up Beast succeeded in destroying its Lenco transmission. Paul said he suspects an air pocket in the transmission cooler led to the loss of a couple of quarts of trans fluid, and on to the eventual end of the Lenco.
But when I got Paul on the phone this week, he was on his way home from Holbrook's in Chattanooga with a fresh Lenco in the truck bed. He said he expects to test again at BMP this weekend, with an eye on resetting the track's 3.92 pro mod record.
I recommend checking the track's Facebook page, which does a fine job of covering the racing. Here's video of Paul's first test attempt last Saturday. The sound of the new drivetrain is incredible.
Cuda Beast test
Labels:
Brainerd Motorsports Park,
DJ Safety,
Fowler Engines,
Hoosier racing tires,
Jeffers Pro Cars,
NMCA,
promod racing,
PTC torque converters
Friday, March 9, 2018
No racing this weekend
Paul and the Cuda Beast team will delay the start of their 2018 season for another month as Paul is moving into a new house this weekend. He had hoped to race this weekend at the NMCA meet in Bradenton, Fla. The new opener for the team will be the NMCA race in Commerce, Ga., in early April. In the meantime, Paul said he hopes to get in a test session or two at the Brainerd Motorsports Park in Chattanooga (I think that's the facility's new name).
Labels:
Bradenton Motorsports Park,
Brainerd Motorsports Park,
DJ Safety,
Fowler Engines,
Hoosier racing tires,
Jeffers Pro Cars,
NMCA,
promod racing,
PTC torque converters
Thursday, January 25, 2018
Weather delay
Paul Gibbs and the Cuda Beast team hoped to be starting their 2018
season this weekend in Bradenton, Fla., but bad weather and a few loose
ends related to the racing effort will keep the new-look Cuda in the
garage -- but not for too much longer.
The first NMCA race is scheduled for March 8-11 in Florida. That is followed with a race just down the road from Paul's shop, at Atlanta Dragway April 5-8. A likely third race would come May 17-20 at Beech Bend Raceway in Bowling Green, Ky. Depending on how he stands in points after the early races, Paul said he might run the entire six-race NMCA series.
There is a lot of anticipation for this season, as the Beast is packing several new upgrades that should put it in the upper tier of pro boost cars. The visual differences include Hoosier tires (actually, Paul switched for last year's abbreviated season), and a sleek new Bohr/Hammer blower hat.
The new hat creates a vastly lower profile for the Beast, apparent in the top photo. As Paul put it, "The car looks two feet longer." The hat sits atop a new Fowler supercharger,
the company's latest offering, which in turn sits atop the BAE hemi that has seen just minimal track time since it was installed. All of those upgrades are being handled by the latest torque converter from PTC.
The mechanical state of the Beast has never been higher. The test now will be transferring all of that potential onto the track. That should come in a few weeks.
Paul, who is a homebuilder, said the recent spate of bad weather has
put his work way behind schedule, so he couldn't spare the time to race
this weekend. Also, he is getting some work done on his two duallies
that will move car and team to the races this year -- one to pull the
trailer and the other to pull a camper that will provide sleeping
quarters for the team.
Still, the Bradenton track remains the target for the season's first
race, as Paul has been invited to run the NMCA (National Muscle Car
Association) promod series this year.The first NMCA race is scheduled for March 8-11 in Florida. That is followed with a race just down the road from Paul's shop, at Atlanta Dragway April 5-8. A likely third race would come May 17-20 at Beech Bend Raceway in Bowling Green, Ky. Depending on how he stands in points after the early races, Paul said he might run the entire six-race NMCA series.
There is a lot of anticipation for this season, as the Beast is packing several new upgrades that should put it in the upper tier of pro boost cars. The visual differences include Hoosier tires (actually, Paul switched for last year's abbreviated season), and a sleek new Bohr/Hammer blower hat.
The new hat creates a vastly lower profile for the Beast, apparent in the top photo. As Paul put it, "The car looks two feet longer." The hat sits atop a new Fowler supercharger,
the company's latest offering, which in turn sits atop the BAE hemi that has seen just minimal track time since it was installed. All of those upgrades are being handled by the latest torque converter from PTC.
The mechanical state of the Beast has never been higher. The test now will be transferring all of that potential onto the track. That should come in a few weeks.
Labels:
Bradenton Motorsports Park,
DJ Safety,
Fowler Engines,
Hoosier racing tires,
Jeffers Pro Cars,
NMCA,
promod racing,
PTC torque converters
Wednesday, January 3, 2018
'17 Wrap, '18 Preview: Fowler Play
It would be gross understatement to say that 2017 was difficult for Paul Gibbs and the Cuda Beast team. Paul's mother died early in the year, and then Paul was involved in a serious traffic accident that put him in the hospital. Any thoughts of racing went to the back burner quickly.
After a lengthy recuperation, Paul got the Beast out in July for a race at Chattanooga, but did not make the field. In August the Beast went to Steele, Ala. (above), and again did not qualify, but there Paul sensed that something was not right with the new engine. Back home, he started going through the engine and found bad valve springs. Fortunately, there was no damage and all the cylinders checked out at 100 percent.
But when Paul cranked the car, it wouldn't idle, reaction to the throttle was slow, and then it just didn't sound healthy. Back into the engine, Paul found oil in some of the cylinders. He hooked up the computer to get some fuel usage data and cranked the engine a few more times. The data indicated that there was no fuel boost -- in fact, the car was idling with negative boost, which got worse as the RPMs went up.
The next day, after a night of poring over the engine data, Paul removed the blower belt and started to turn the blower pulley by hand. He said that if all is good inside the blower, the pulley is hard to turn. This time, it turned easily with one hand. That indicated serious problems inside the case, which Paul subsequently found. It's a lot of technical stuff, but is basically this: A real important gear inside had all of its teeth sheared off. Hence, no boost.
When he learned that it would take four months to get a replacement part, Paul changed course and bought the latest Roots-style blower from Fowler Engines of Columbus, Ohio. Fowler has long been respected for the performance of its superchargers, and Paul is excited by the change. It's a win-win in every respect -- more boost, less weight, etc. In fact, Paul said the Beast should be lighter, as the new engine weighs less than the old one. The injector hat will also be new, which means I might have to change the picture of the car on the website masthead.
So, when will this new combination hit the track? How about this month?
Plans are to make this race at Bradenton, Fla. Right now, it's in the 40s, 50s and 60s, down there, so we hope the "Outlaw Winter Warmup" will truly live up to its name. I'll be back closer to race day with another post.
Labels:
Bradenton Motorsports Park,
Brainerd Motorsports Park,
DJ Safety,
Fowler Engines,
Mickey Thompson Tires,
PDRA,
promod racing,
PTC torque converters
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