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2004
Challenge Series Finals & Car Show Report
September 4th & 5th Virginia International Raceway |
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What is
probably the largest field ever of 1965 roadster replicas takes to
the track @ VIR Labor Day weekend 2004! |
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The 2004 Factory Five Racing Nationals
made its return to the home of the very first FFR Challenge Race: Virginia
International Raceway. Almost exactly four years to the day, the FFR
Challenge Series was held Labor Day weekend in conjunction with the FFR
Nationals car show and customer event.
The once-a-year event brought together
over 100 customers and 27 of the fastest FFR-NASA Challenge series drivers
from all four national regions for the two day event that was both car
show, customer rally and race finals. |
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Owner Rick Lacourse and his red 289 powered
roadster. Barry from Whitby judges the 100+ car show field. |
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The variety of customer cars was amazing,
and the quality of the hardware on display was beyond belief. Special
thanks to customer Bob Frederick (FFR3297) for a really comprehensive
group of photos of the cars in the car show. Take the time to download
his killer photos of all the show cars as well as the nice
movie mpg clips
of the racing action on the track. Bob happened to catch the high speed
pass and ensuing crash that happened mid-race and forced last years
defending champion Brian Dobyns out of the race! |
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| The racing action was
up-close and exciting! David Lang chases Bob Evans (#55) |
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The car show
included awards for many categories. The crew from
Whitby Motorsports
assisted the FFR Owners Group in the judging of the full field of
stunningly beautiful cars. The car show began at 10:00 am and judging
ended at 4:00 PM. The results were as follows… |
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Left: “Best in Show” … and a blue car. Right: The
quality of the hardware was unbelievable! |
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Car Show Awards and Prizes
Best in Show Over-all
Best Use of Chrome
Henry Renaud
1st Place
Jimmy Marcus
2nd
Place David Ward
Best in Show FFR Roadster
3rd
Place Kevin Moses
1st Place
Oliver Hemphill
2nd Place
John Knight Most Innovative Design
3rd Place
Jerry Carleson 1st Place
Henry Renaud
2nd Place Oliver Hemphill
Best in Show FFR Coupe
3rd Place David Ward
1st Place
Joe Drumheller
2nd Place
Stewart Sklut High Mileage Award
3rd Place
Mark Mayberry 1st Place Dan Garoury 38,738 miles
2nd Place Rob Walker 36,000 miles
3rd
Place David Ward 33,000 miles
Best Engine
1st Place
Jay Young
Best Paint
2nd Place Henry Renuad
1st Place Sonny Young
3rd Place Tom
Miller 2nd Place Oliver
Hemphill
3rd Place Bob Jones
Best Interior/Details
1st Place Brad
Edwards
2nd Place
Sonny Young
3rd Place
Oliver Hemphill |
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The gang from Whitby did the difficult work of
judging the car show. They brought a 100 point show-car coupe that
they did NOT enter into the show for fear that folks would
complain. It was a real winner. |
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The car show was hotly contested as there
were numerous “multiple award” winners. In what has become an expensive
FFR tradition, one customer who had his car present at the show and race
was selected in a random drawing to win a free FFR kit of his choice! The
winner was selected to be Rob Twine, whose silver 428 powered FE car was a
great entry among many show winners!
The car show wasn’t the only action at the
Nationals… |
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Evans Racing was all business with a fleet of four cars
making the trip from the west coast! |
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The racing action was intense as this year
saw a wide variety of talented drivers, from excited and talented amateurs
to experienced professionals. (some text courtesy Dan Elam).
The team from Evans Racing came from the
west coast with a fleet of four Challenge cars and notable drivers David
Lang and Donnie Edwards heading up their team of talented drivers. Bob
Evans, team owner is one of the series best sponsors and race team owners
in the west coast series. We want to thank Bob for his excellent support
and also for many of the high quality photos used in this story. |
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Series driver David Lang talks shop with Donny
Edwards and crew. Edwards leads in practice. |
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Marcus
Motorsports also fielded a team of four challenge cars. The east coast
based team Marcus motorsports is headed by team owner and driver Steve
Marcus, whose team included some very talented and recognized names.
Steve was the very first Challenge car customer, having taken delivery of
the first challenge car kit back in the spring of 2001. Driving for
Marcus Motorsports was Brian Cunningham (Danville, KY), who has competed
successfully in Grand-Am/World Challenge racing, was the fastest on the
track during qualifying. Brian is also the grandson of the legendary
Briggs Cunningham. Also driving for Marcus motorsports was Grand-Am
driver Spencer Pumpelly (Lime Rock, CT), and Hugh Plumb (Richmond, VA).
The three Marcus team drivers qualified in the front of the pack with some
of the fastest lap times. Hugh Plumb was driving a Panoz-built FFR
Challenge car that suffered cooling problems all weekend long and failed
to complete the Sunday finals. |
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Bob
Lawson gets the “feel” of east coast racing (grass not dirt on the
shoulder..) |
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The addition of pro drivers made for great
racing as last year’s 2003 Nationals defending champion Brian Dobbyns
(Manassas Park, VA) and 2003 Nationals second place winner Spencer Sharp
(Phoenix, AZ) were forced to drive hard to stay up front. 2003 returning
drivers included a good field of seasoned racers and amateurs alike who
kept the top ten drivers within only three seconds on the 3.27 mile VIR
roadcourse. .
Brian Cates
(Cates
Engineering) (Broad Run, VA) tore off a
2:12 was driving out of his mind fast, check out the cockpit video from
Cates as he battles with Cunningham during lap 2 of the race finals. Many
folks have wondered if the spec cars are fast enough with “only 225 hp”.
Watch Cates at speed and you’ll be BLOWN away with the speed and handling
of these latest generation FFR Challenge cars!
Victor Seabor (Raleigh, NC) and Robert Mau
(Montpelier, VA) rounded out the locals who ran incredibly fast all
weekend. The west coast contingent included crowd favorites like the
Lawson brothers (Sunnyvale and Santa Cruz, CA) and Mike Easton (Freemont,
CA). The regular crowd of spec racers, led by defending Nationals
champion Bryan Dobyns, showed that they were ready to fight. The title
race would prove to be a hard fought race.
The Friday practice featured
Grand-Am/World Challenge drivers Brian Cunningham and Spencer Pumpelly
running less than a second ahead of Dobyns by lap times. More interesting
however was that a total of nine drivers would end up running faster laps
than the track record set by Dobyns the previous May.
Saturday
morning qualifying saw Robert Mau breaking into the top five and Marcus
Motorsports third driver, Hugh Plumb, who also races Grand Am and ALMS go
fast. |
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One big factor was obviously track
familiarity as last years 2nd and 3rd place drivers Spencer Sharp and Gary
Cheney were stuck further down the pack. Spencer’s lap times plummeted
when he swapped motors between races, bringing his lap times down to the
2:12’s! Cheney never found his rhythm and ended in the bottom third of
the pack.
A Saturday exhibition race for the crowd
was run with an inverted field. The expected chaos showed Donny Edwards
(Napa, CA) taking the early lead before being replaced by Dan Elam
(Richmond, VA). When Elam mistakenly put the car into first gear it
resulted in contact with Edwards which allowed Brian Cates to slip into
the lead. Brian Cunningham worked his way from 23rd position
to first in the short seven lap race to claim the win in the fun and
mayhem filled exhibition race.
With the fun and games out of the way, the
attention turned to Sunday. A short practice session left racers with some
last minute testing and final tuning. Outside pole-sitter Cunningham
jumped the start and the starter waiver off the start. It was a decision
that would have later implications.
The second time the field came around it
wasn’t bunched up properly and the starter again waived off the field. The
third time proved the charm as the 20 car field roared to life and down
the front straight towards VIR’s first right hand turn one.
Pumpelly, Cunningham, Dobyns, Cates, and
Mau opened a small gap after three turns while Plumb and Elam fought at
the lead of the next group with drivers with Midwestern regional champion
John McIver (Detroit, MI), Factory Five engineer, Dave Riha (Wareham, MA),
Victor Seaber (Raleigh, NC), David Lang (Napa, CA), Bob Lawson (Santa
Cruz, CA), and Spencer Sharp. |
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The
four Evans Racing cars staged for qualifying laps. Right: 2003
Champion Dobyns and his crew of one racing effort. |
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After the first lap Dobyns had moved into
second place and was chasing Pumpelly while Mau lead Cunningham and Cates.
The next few laps resulted in some passes, a Dobyns spin, and Plumb’s car
retired due to overheating. Robert Mau made a spectacular, gasp-inspiring
save from 140MPH when he and Cunningham had contact that spun Mau sideways
before he collected it and kept charging down the track. At the halfway
point of the race it was all east coasters as Pumpelly maintained the
lead, Cunningham in second, followed by Cates, Mau, and Elam.
As the pack came down VIR’s
“rollercoaster” and into “hogpen” the race changed. Elam and Riha ended up
in contact with Elam spinning in front of a hard charging Dobyns and then
into a nose-to-nose collision with Sharp who had driven the Levy Racing
car extremely well and into contention for what might have been a
Top 5 finish.
Victor Seaber, who had his car damaged at
Sears Point two years earlier en route to setting the track record,
managed to get through the carnage unscathed and continue racing. When the
checkered flag fell the finish order was Pumpelly 1st,
Cunningham 2nd, Cates 3rd, Mau 4th, and
Seaber crossing the line in fifth.
Spencer Pumpelly, who
normally drives Porsches in the Grand-Am Rolex Series, performed
flawlessly to win the Factory Five National Race Title, coming home
12.753sec ahead of Brian Cunningham, the grandson of the late Briggs
Cunningham who raced at VIR in the 1950s and 60s.
Unfortunately, Cunningham was disqualified for being five pounds
underweight, handing the runner-up position to Brian Cates of Broad Run,
VA. Robert Mau of Montpelier, VA, recovered from a big spin early in the
race to come back and claim the third position. |
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In a real testament to the improvements
made to the Factory Five Challenge cars and the caliber of the drivers in
the series, the slowest cars in the field would have challenged for podium
finishes in the very first spec race four years earlier! It was also a
great indication of how much the series has grown since the early days and
just how thoroughly competitive the field was for the Nationals weekend.
A lot of speculation had been focused on
whether competitors were cheating with engine combinations and the
post-race inspection was particularly important since it would either
confirm the rumors or put them to rest. A very thorough inspection showed
that none of the cars had illegal engine configurations, but Cunningham’s
car was found to be a mere 3 lbs under the weight limit. The car was
disqualified and someone later calculated that each waived-off start
resulted in the cars burning about 3.5 lbs of fuel for each lap. The jump
start that Cunningham had made ended up costing him a podium finish!
It was
obvious to everyone that the cars were evenly matched and while the pro
drivers undeniably raised the performance bar of the racing, the series
regulars proved that they could compete with anyone in what was arguably
the best racing the series has seen yet. |
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Left:
East Coast show winner Rick Lacourse drove straight from NH to get
to the show on time. Right: The Challenge car field was bigger and
better than ever! |
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At noon on Saturday all the
show cars left the field and took to the track for what would prove to be
the fastest “parade” laps ever conducted. NASA director Chris Cobetto
lead the group of 89 cars around the 3.27 mile roadcourse. The pace was
pedestrian at the start but as more and more cars filled the track and
began to get separated from the pack the cars began to, in some cases,
drive ahem.. a bit too fast. FFR President Dave Smith commented that with
89 cars on the track it was curious that the average speed was also about
89 mph! But seriously, the parade laps were a hoot and ended safely, with
everyone getting a great close-up look at the path that the Challenge cars
would soon be following for the race finals and title.
Ordinarily NASA events
require a “donation” from drivers (usually $5-$10) that goes to the track
charity. Since FFR customers had to pay a gate fee at the entrance to the
track, Factory Five Racing decided to cover the parade laps donation and
presented the track officials with $1,000 to the charity “Victory Junction
Gang” which is Kyle Pettys charity that benefits sick children. Check out
the press release on
VIRclub.com. |
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The Roush Coupe sets out to pace parade laps. Right: Mike Easton
gives a friend a few thrills in the parade laps. |
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Saturday ended with a cookout and awards presentation. One great moment
during the awards presentation was particularly sweet. FFR customer Henry
Renaud was awarded “Best in Show”. While receiving his award, the FFR
President asked everyone to recognize Henry for his service to our country
during combat in Afghanistan and Iraq! The crowd came to their feet and
everyone made Henry feel their deep thanks for his work. |
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The 2004 Factory Five
Nationals are a memory (a great one!). The event was a huge success and
we’re in the process of trying to set a date and track location for next
year. The staff at VIR was BLOWN away with the FFR customers and asked to
be kept in mind for next year’s event. Thanks to everyone for a great and
successful Nationals… We’ll see you in 2005 or sooner! |
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