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K&N's Kathy Fisher Repeats Quick Rod Final Round Appearance During IHRA Mopar Nitro Jam Nationals

Driver, Tuner, TV Host, Frank Hawley Drag Racing School Rep and more - K&N's Kathy Fisher
Driver, Tuner, TV Host, Frank Hawley Drag Racing School Rep and more - K&N's Kathy Fisher
After a few minor successes this season in her Dragon Racing Fuels/K&N Engineering entry, Ohio based driver Kathy Fisher battled through the brutal heat to put her dragster in the Quick Rod final during the IHRA Mopar Nitro Jam Nationals at Grand Bend Motorplex.
Fisher's K&N clad 1998 Boulton Dragster waits it's turn for winner's circle pictures after the Quick Rod Final.
Fisher's K&N clad 1998 Boulton Dragster waits it's turn for winner's circle pictures after the Quick Rod Final.


"We had to miss our annual trip to Canada in 2010 due to a family emergency and it was great to get back up that way," she explained. "The last time we were there I was able to make it to the final so of course I was looking forward to picking up where I left off. Plus it would be our first time in Canada with Kevin's Top Dragster."

The husband and wife team would have to make the trip north of the border without crewperson, Scott Simmons, due to the late nature of his joining the team and lack of time needed to acquire a passport. Thanks to longtime friend, Pete Hunt of Sarnia, Ontario Canada, they wouldn't be completely shorthanded.
Canadian Friend Pete Hunt and Kathy Fisher take a moment to celebrate the final round.
Canadian Friend Pete Hunt and Kathy Fisher take a moment to celebrate the final round.


Qualifying for Quick Rod [8.90 Index Class] was held on Saturday with three attempts given to each class. Fisher laid down perfect .000 reaction time and a very nice 8.874 to get things started.

"That was a great pass for right out of the box in the conditions we had to work with," she said. "From there, the car was just fantastic the entire weekend. From lane to lane and morning to afternoon, it was just amazing how tight the down track splits times were. I watch those quite closely for many reasons. Many of my runs over the weekend showed that my 1/8 mile to 1000 foot and 1000 foot to quarter mile split times were absolutely identical. I know that says quite a lot of the products we run and how we tune the car."
K&N's Kathy Fisher gets ready to light 'em up during qualifying at the IHRA Nitro Jam in Ontario Canada.
K&N's Kathy Fisher gets ready to light 'em up during qualifying at the IHRA Nitro Jam in Ontario Canada.


IHRA qualifies entries a little different for their Nitro Jam events than others. Qualifying is based on the best package which combines reaction time and how close to index. Should a driver redlight or go under their index, it drops them down farther on the sheet.

"I had a decent 8.913 pass during the second session, but of course it pretty much got thrown out because I also had a .003 redlight," she noted. "So it qualifies you by the redlight and not the elapsed time, therefore it was like running .003 under. Lane choice wasn't all that important to me since I knew how to dial the car based on what lane I would be in anyway. Once you make it through first round of eliminations, drivers are re-qualified to be placed on a ladder for the remainder of the event."
Fisher's 548ci BBC sports all the latest from K&N including the 2nd Gen Composite Dragster Scoop.
Fisher's 548ci BBC sports all the latest from K&N including the 2nd Gen Composite Dragster Scoop.


Eliminations were scheduled to begin on Saturday prior to the two evening Nitro Jam sessions, but due to just a slight amount of sprinkles and a couple of minor oil downs, Fisher and her Dragon/K&N dragster would have to wait until Sunday morning for any more on-track action.

"I would have rather gone right into first round that day, since we were dialed and ready to go, but it was also nice to get out of the firesuit and take a break," Kathy confessed. "And if we thought it was super-hot on Saturday, well Sunday was going to be worse. But based on what kind of numbers we had, we felt confident we would be ready to go right into eliminations in the morning."
Kathy Fisher launches her way to a round victory at Grand Bend Motorplex.
Kathy Fisher launches her way to a round victory at Grand Bend Motorplex.


First round Fisher would find herself paired with Division 1 racer George Williams. Williams had lane choice and put Fisher in the right lane, but he may have wished he would have made another selection after he got a little too anxious and handed Fisher the win when he went .016 red.

"The way the tree and the boards are at Grand Bend makes it pretty difficult to know when your opponent has gone red," she said. "I kinda thought maybe he had gone red, but I wasn't even close to being one-hundred percent sure, so I still treated it like a regular round. When we got down to the stripe, I felt fairly confident where my car was running and I just played it accordingly."

Fisher's 8.895 caused her to just miss the number one qualifying spot by a mere five thousandths of a second, which would have earned her the only bye of the race, and set her up for a match up with Rick Stroud.

"It was about three and a half hours between round one and two," she reflected. "I don't know if I got tired or too hot or both, but I certainly didn't have a light that I would ever want to repeat. I hate even thinking about how late I was and I knew it the moment I launched. I actually yelled in my helmet 'You were so late'."

"My car was just dialed to do exactly what I wanted and she totally bailed me out," she continued. "Kevin was doing such a good job getting the motor and tranny cooled back down to the same temp as I went to the lanes the round before for every pass. Let me tell you, in the heat and scorching sun we had, it wasn't exactly a piece of cake."

A memorable round for Fisher would be the semi-finals where she would meet up with a very close family friend and fellow Lima, Ohio resident, Bill Rudy. "I am going to be perfectly honest and say I don't like to race Bill," she pointed out. "Meeting in the final would have been better. I really had to forget about who was in the other lane that round. Bill and Connie mean a lot to me but I just had to remember, it's racing and there is business to take care of. Good friends or not."

Rudy had Fisher by .01 on the tree but wasn't able to hold her off at the top end. "He had a wheel on me and then I saw him drop back just a hair," she said. "I knew where the car had been and there was no way I was lifting too much, this was a round where that stripe was mine."

Fisher's 8.927 and .012 at the stripe sent her to her second Quick Rod final in row at the Grand Bend, Ontario facility.

"I had a totally different feeling going into this final than I've ever had before," she admitted. "It's a little hard to explain, but for the first time I really honestly wasn't going to be "OK" with just a runner-up. The car was running way too good and it was time to get the job done."

Fisher's final round competitor, Barry Ryan, had been on a roll of double-oh lights in the two previous rounds and while Fisher had sent him home early during her last trip to Grand Bend, this time it would be Ryan's turn.

"I hate to say it, but I have no idea what happened in the final," she said of her uncharacteristic hefty foul on the tree. "I didn't change the delay in the box from the semi's to the final and should have been right there with Barry. I saw the red right away, but I still wanted to know if the car was dialed on the 8.90 I had it set up for in the right lane so I ran it through the 1000 foot mark. Wouldn't you know, heat and all she was on an 8.903 pass based on the numbers."

"To be able to get the kind of consistent numbers we were getting from my Team Dragon Racing Fuels car all weekend is the kind of thing that wins races and championships, [laughs] when you don't give it up on the line by going red of course," Fisher said of the weekend. "Although I have all the say in what to dial and how to set up the fuel for my car, I just can't thank Kevin enough for all that he does to maintain her for me between races and between rounds. It was pretty hot throughout the whole weekend and I couldn't have gone the rounds that I did, let alone as consistent as she was without the products that we use."

"It's absolutely no lip service here," the latest IHRA Nitro Jam Quick Rod Finalist continued. "K&N products are second to none. Everything that can be filtered on our engines is protected by a K&N filter. From the K&N Second Generation Carbon Fiber Dragster Scoop with its specially designed high flow K&N filter to our extra capacity K&N Wrench-Off Oil Filters, why would anyone want anything less than the World's Best Filters on anything they own. There aren't too many items we can use on our race cars or street vehicles that for such a small investment be able to reap the huge benefits gained like we do with all our K&N products."

Find K&N products for your vehicle using the K&N application search then use the K&N dealer search to find a K&N dealer in your part of the world.

Ray Tarheel Tiger Cook Earns UMP Summer Nationals Tour Win at Paducah

The No. 53 team currently finds themselves eighth in the latest LOLMDS point standings.
The No. 53 team currently finds themselves eighth in the latest LOLMDS point standings.
The Brasstown, North Carolina, Late Model Dirt Series racer known as the "Tarheel Tiger" recently claimed the richest payday of his year at Paducah International Raceway in Paducah, Kentucky. For Ray Cook and the D&R Motorsports team this was their third win of the 2011 racing season.
K&N sponsored Ray Cook "The Tarheel Tiger" has been racing since 1987, and to date his most memorable moment has been Winning the 2000 Show-Me 100.
K&N sponsored Ray Cook "The Tarheel Tiger" has been racing since 1987, and to date his most memorable moment has been Winning the 2000 Show-Me 100.


The demanding UMP Summer Nationals Tour visited PIR, and a highly competitive field of competitors were on hand for the "Chris Smith Memorial." After inking the third quickest lap in his group during qualifying, Cook went on to win his stacked heat race. After drawing the pole position prior to the start of the 40-lap feature event, the K&N sponsored driver led flag-to-flag en route to capturing the $12,000 top prize.

Cook was challenged early in the race, but managed to hold off a furious onslaught from NASCAR Camping World Truck Series driver, Austin Dillon from Welcome, North Carolina. Then after building a comfortable lead over the Summer Nationals point leader, Shannon Babb from Moweaqua, Illinois, Cook motored on to claim his second win ever on the month long tour.
The $12,000 prize at Paducah International Raceway was Cook's biggest payday of the season thus far.
The $12,000 prize at Paducah International Raceway was Cook's biggest payday of the season thus far.


In addition to the win in Paducah, the No. 53 team entered three additional races from June 30 to July 3rd, in the states of Tennessee and Ohio. On Thursday evening, Cook finished tenth in a $5,000 to win UMP Summer Nationals program at Clayhill Motorsports in Atwood, Tennessee.

Then in a pair of $10,000 to win Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series battles, Cook wound up seventeenth at the Portsmouth Raceway Park in Portsmouth, Ohio on Saturday, and twelfth at the Muskingum County Speedway in Zanesville, Ohio on Sunday. And after Cook survived the caution plagued race last weekend at Magnolia Motor Speedway in Columbus, Mississippi with another twelfth place finish, he now stands in eighth in the latest LOLMDS point standings.

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Don Gatlin Driving the K&N Sponsored Undercover Dragster Wins at Famoso Summit

The K&N sponsored 4-link dragster is powered by a Sunset Racecraft 582.
The K&N sponsored 4-link dragster is powered by a Sunset Racecraft 582.
An individual's priorities and the things that make them happy speak volumes about that person. During the weekend of June 11th and 12th, for Famoso Summit Series 5 and 6, the first thing that made Don Gatlin happy was watching his longtime racing buddy, Greg Tremain, get his first win on asphalt in three years. Even though Gatlin lost in the third round on Saturday, the jubilation of having a winner in their camp carried over into Sunday's racing, and helped to fuel a high-spirited victory for Gatlin as well.
Gatlin's Undercover Dragster has been the one to beat for the last two years at Famoso.
Gatlin's Undercover Dragster has been the one to beat for the last two years at Famoso.


Gatlin's 2001 K&N sponsored Undercover 4-link dragster is powered by a Sunset Racecraft 582, CRE Powerglide, and a ATI converter.

"The day went well and I was driving well to get to the final," Gatlin remarked. "In the final both my opponent and I were late, but fortunately I had the better light and was able to capitalize on that to get the win. With my late round appearance on Saturday and the win on Sunday, we placed ourselves solidly into second place, only one point out of first, and five-and-half rounds ahead of third, with two races left in the series."
With his Famoso Summit Series 6 win Gatlin now looms only one point away from back-to-back Famoso Super Pro Championships.
With his Famoso Summit Series 6 win Gatlin now looms only one point away from back-to-back Famoso Super Pro Championships.


Gatlin came into the weekend at his home track at Auto Club Famoso Raceway in Bakersfield, California in seventh place, but after this win his outlook on defending his 2010 title has greatly improved.

"I think we have a great chance of winning the Super Pro championship at Famoso this year," Gatlin said. "If we do, it will be back-to-back Famoso Super Pro Championships. We won the 2009 and 2010 SCEDA Electronics Championships going back-to-back, so it would be nice to continue the run."

Next up on the racing calendar for Gatlin and his team is the Infineon Summit Super Pro and the NorCal Top Comp races August 13 and 14. "The September 23 and 24 weekend we will run the final two races at Famoso for the championship," Gatlin adds. "The following weekend we will be at Las Vegas representing Team Famoso and running in the Race of Champions.

Find K&N products for your vehicle using the K&N application search then use the K&N dealer search to find a K&N dealer in your part of the world.

Cody Gerhardt and Western Speed Racing Makes a Showing in His Rookie Year

USAC Pavement Sprint Car Racer Cody Gerhardt
USAC Pavement Sprint Car Racer Cody Gerhardt
Cody Gerhardt rolled into the Rocky Mountain Raceway at Salt Lake City Utah, on July 2, with hopes of making a showing. After winning his heat race, when the waving of the green flag deemed the USAC Pavement Sprint Car Main Event underway, Cody had fifty laps to work his way from his 9th place starting position into first place. With 49 laps behind him, Cody took the lead in front of a near capacity crowd, and managed to hold on to the first place position and take the checkered flag.
Cody Gerhardt won the USAC Western States Pavement Sprint Car Series race Stockton 99
Cody Gerhardt won the USAC Western States Pavement Sprint Car Series race Stockton 99


With a recent win and confidence under his belt, Cody showed up at the Stockton 99 speedway, at Stockton California, on July 9, anxious for the race to get underway in the USAC Western States Pavement Sprint Car Series.

Cody took the lead in the feature at lap 34, and despite two caution flags, the young driver never looked back. At the night's end, Cody had managed to log another victory and had hopefully started a winning streak. Cody's second win of the season situated the driver in second place in points for the Pavement Championship and put him just 23 points out of the lead in the Western Classic Championship.

When asked to give an account of the races he had run during his rookie season, prior to his two consecutive wins Cody said, "My first USAC Pavement sprint car race of the season was at the Madera Speedway. It was the Gerhardt Classic, which is a 100 lap race on a 3/8 mile track, in memory of my great grandfather. I qualified 7th of 15 cars and finished 8th. My second race was at Roseville Speedway, where I finished fourth on the bumper of the third place car. My third race, I was running a strong 4th, then I spun out and finished 8th. My fourth race was at Salt Lake City Utah and I won."

As a rookie, one might suspect that there are many lessons to be learned throughout the next few years, but Cody was aware of what it would take to win upon pulling into the Rocky Mountain Raceway in early June. "The key was being smooth, and not using the tire up too early in the race," explained the driver. "I knew I had a good car. If I was patient, and made clean passes, the race would come to me. After watching the pavement sprint cars race since I was very small, it felt great to get my first USAC Pavement sprint car win."

Cody agreed that his confidence level had increased after each race this season, and stressed the importance of confidence. "During each race I became better at handling the car, and finishing better each time," he explained. "Seat time is everything, and the more I am in the car, the more experience I gain, especially during racing conditions."

Although Cody was the guy who was credited with the win by the fans, he is also aware that his team plays a very intricate role in his success. "My team is everything, and without them, I could not have achieved what I have done so far," Shared the driver. When asked the key to continued success throughout the remainder of the season, he stated "Continual sponsor support and keeping the eye on the main goal of winning a championship. Having been the first driver to win three championships in the Focus Midget series in 2010, I want to add being the first driver to win a USAC Pavement Sprint Car Championship in his rookie year."

Cody credits a portion of his early success to the availability of good equipment. That said, he is also aware that it is of utmost importance to properly maintain one's engine. When asked if he uses K&N Filters, Cody said, "Absolutely. We use cleaners, oil filters, air filters and pre filters (on the race car), as well as fuel and oil filters for our support equipment and tow vehicles. We've been using K&N products five-plus years, and they are just as the advertisement says, "The Best". The entire company has been excellent!"

In closing, Cody said, "I would like to thank all the sponsors for their continued support. They have helped us get to where we are at today. The fans are great, and root me on, which keeps me pumped up. I would also like to thank all of the press people that put race results and finishes on various websites and news print, which allows me to get the exposure I need to further my professional racing career."

Find K&N products for your vehicle using the K&N application search then use the K&N dealer search to find a K&N dealer in your part of the world.

Alan Barton Builds Sprint Show Car For Knoxville Hall Of Fame Museum

Owner Alan Barton and his #17 Winged Sprint Car. Photo by Kirby Laws.
Owner Alan Barton and his #17 Winged Sprint Car. Photo by Kirby Laws.
Two cars in particular likely come to mind when Alan Barton Motorsports are mentioned to race fans in the Park Hills, Missouri area. Prior to 2004, Alan Barton always had an interest in the sport. "You know, I've always had a big interest in racing," explained Barton. "I use to do quite a bit of drag racing, and was always into restoration of cars. I actually started getting into sprint car racing in 1996, he continued.
Tommy Worley is the driver of the #17 Winged Sprint Car. Photo by Kirby Laws.
Tommy Worley is the driver of the #17 Winged Sprint Car. Photo by Kirby Laws.


"Basically, I went to every Outlaw race I could go to, every sprint car race I could go to, and got all of the knowledge I could get. 2004 is when I decided to own a car."

Alan's passion for sprint cars continued to grow, and the owner eventually made the decision to put a second car on the track. Manning the #17 car, Tommy Worley was one of Alan's first drivers, and has driven for him off and on since. In fact, according to Barton, Tommy has been driving for him in the neighborhood of three years.

Apparently, if you throw in Alan Barton as an owner, Tommy Worley as a driver and the #17 AB car as the muscle, you have concocted the recipe for success, as they have experienced four victories in the five races they have run this season at St. Francis County Raceway in Missouri. In fact, the three wins they experienced in June were consecutive.

Although the #17 car got a late start this season, Alan and his team had the # 7 car in the circuit early on, and was consistently finishing races in the top ten. They raced in Iowa, Ohio, and Oklahoma, but to date, Brandon Wimmer, who manned this particular car, is no longer driving with Alan Barton Motorsports. According to Alan Barton, he's presently searching for a new driver and plans are to have # 7 AB back on the track in the near future.

Experiencing success during 2011 with the # 17AB car, Alan and Tommy Worley obviously would like to continue their run. When asked what led to their early success, Alan said, "I feel like we had a lot of good experience there. We've worked very well in the past together along with our team.

Between being able to work together very well and having good car," he concluded, referring to the importance of his team. "They're extremely important. You've got to have a good team. Every man has knowledge and is able to perform his job. I feel like right now, I have of the best teams there is."

As Alan understands that a good team is an essential part of success, he also has an acute awareness of the importance of properly maintaining his vehicles. That said, Alan Barton depends a great deal upon the quality of K&N Filters. "I've been using them for the past five years," explained the car owner. "They're the best out there. Not only do we use them in the race cars, but also use them in the rigs pulling our race trailers. To me, they're the best out there."

Along with experiencing a successful season on the track during the first half of 2011, Alan Barton was also recently honored when he was asked to build a Sprint Show-Car for the Knoxville Hall of Fame Museum. "That is an extremely high honor," shared Barton. "It truly is."

When asked the amount of time to be allotted for the build, Alan said, "Once the parts are here and you can actually get started, you'll be at least thirty days building the car. With the project recently completed the show car will eventually be displayed at the museum of course, but will go on tour around the country for one year prior to finding its home at Knoxville.

When asked if there was a message that he and his team would like to relay to their sponsors and fans, Alan Said, "You know, I'm very, very thankful for all of the support that every sponsor has given me. It has been tremendous, getting to work with them on the show cars. They have been such a great help to me, and to my racing program." Alan continued, "And the fans, you can't ever thank them enough. Without them, we wouldn't even be there."

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