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2007 NHRA NATIONAL EVENT
SCHEDULE

Listen to Trackside Interviews
with Champions, Drivers and Crew Chiefs
Robert Hight
Hillary Will
Bob Vandergriff
Dave Connolly
Ed Iskenderian
Cory McClenathan
Robert Hight
Jim Yates
Tony Bartone
Hillary Will
Whit Bazemore
Byron Hines
2005 Interviews






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| Chevrolet Brings Impala SS Funny Car to NHRA POWERade Series
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| Impala SS Funny Car will debut in competition at NHRA
Winternationals |
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DETROIT, Jan. 11, 2007 - Throughout its rich
history as a leader in drag racing competition, Chevrolet has built a
winning legacy unsurpassed by any manufacturer in the history of the
sport. Now the red bowtie will continue to raise the performance bar in
NHRA Funny Car this season with the introduction of the 2007 Impala SS
beginning with the series' first event at Auto Club Raceway at Pomona
(Calif.) on Feb. 8 - 11.
Few vehicles have enjoyed the ongoing
success of the Chevy Impala. Its quiet strength is an inherited attribute
that is blended into a sporty sedan that offers stylish design,
captivating performance and surprising details, including the latest
version of the legendary small-block V-8 in the Impala SS. The legendary
nameplate is ready to reaffirm the red bowtie's commitment to excellence
in NHRA Funny Car competition and continue the American Revolution that is
uniquely Chevrolet.
"Chevrolet has firmly established itself as one
of drag racing's most successful automotive brands," said Ed Peper,
Chevrolet General Manager. "The Chevy red bowtie competes to win, and like
its production counterpart, the new Impala SS Funny Car has been designed
and engineered to carry forward that performance heritage."
The new
Impala SS Funny Car, which has been over a year in the making, is the
first GM drag race body devised and developed utilizing a 3-D
computer-aided-design process, something GM Drag Racing Group Manager Dan
Engel has wanted to do for a long time.
"There was no
physical model that we were working from," said Engel. "It was all done on
a computer. Once it was designed and a CAD file created, the file was sent
to a CNC machine and it cut out the shape as it was designed on the
computer screen."
Working within an extensive list of parameters
established by the NHRA, GM engineers first had to accumulate mathematical
data on the production Impala and then design the new racecar conforming
to the tolerances established by the sanctioning body.
"We knew we
had certain dimensions where we had to stay within tolerance," said Engel.
"We took those measurements, and said, 'Okay, let's optimize those
dimensions that would make a better racecar.' And that means either
shortening the dimensions or lengthening them, or in the case of the angle
of the windshield, we're allowed three degrees tolerance so we take
advantage of the full three degrees. All those dimensions get optimized
for the best aerodynamic conditions. Then it's a matter of, and although
it's not as easy as it sounds, smoothing in the car."
The goal of
GM Racing engineers is always to gives its Chevy teams the best body
possible, but the key objective was to make the nitro version of the
Impala SS look as similar as possible to its showroom
counterpart.
"We wanted the new Impala to come out a slightly
better car aerodynamically than the current Chevy Monte Carlo Funny Car,"
said Engel. "Even though there isn't a big advantage with the new car,
there are some incremental advantages with the Impala SS that will
certainly help our Chevrolet Funny Car teams. We really wanted it to look
as much as possible like a production car. That's the direction we think
the NHRA wants with this class."
After construction of the body,
the Impala Funny Car was taken to the GM Aero Lab for a series of wind
tests to confirm the aero numbers on the car and to gather additional data
that will be distributed to all Chevy race teams.
"The wind tunnel
test confirmed that we hit it pretty close right out of the box," said
Engel. "We then went back for another test to get the car dialed in and we
finished that up during the second week of January."
Safety changes
made during production of the Monte Carlo Funny Car including a stronger
carbon-fiber body, a larger burst panel to allow greater dissipation of
energy from an engine explosion, and an enlarged roof-hatch escape to
compensate for the increasing numbers of drivers wearing a HANS, have been
incorporated into the new Chevrolet. An NHRA-mandated change to the escape
hatch (which is now required on all new Funny Cars) will be an additional
feature on the Impala SS.
"From a safety standpoint we did a great
job with the Monte Carlo and were able to roll those features into the
Impala," said Engel. "A new rule from the NHRA requires a little recess on
the roof hatch so that somebody from outside can get a grip and get it
opened. Those hatches tend to lay pretty flat so if the driver can't open
it, you need a way to open it externally."
After a year in the
making Engel is pleased with the final product and is anxious to see the
new Impala on track.
"The Impala is a good looking Funny
Car, and if you didn't have the big spoiler on it, it looks amazingly
similar to a production car," said Engel. "A lot of people get deceived
when they look at these cars because of the spoiler kind of camouflaging
the car or even distorting it. But if you look at it without the spoiler
it looks like a production car. The Impala is also a four-door and one of
the things the teams will do is black out the second side window on the
car and make it look like a real four-door. There's even a small quarter
window on the side.
"To finally complete the Impala is a great
feeling. This is the first Funny Car project I've been in charge of, and
doing it in 3-D, and going through the whole process, I feel very excited
about its potential and can't wait to see it race."
Crew chief Mike
Green, whose Skoal Racing team was instrumental in the development of the
Chevy Impala SS and received the first new body, shares Engel's enthusiasm
for the new car.
"In the years I've worked with GM, this is the
most comprehensive attempt at our making a competitive Funny Car body,"
said Green. "With the Monte Carlo, we kind of morphed what we had in the
Camaro and made some improvements, but Dan Engel spearheaded this Impala
SS project and started from a clean sheet of paper. The result is a much
better racecar body than we've ever had before.
"It's been great
working with Dan because he's an engineer and likes the engineering side
of the sport. He's really dedicated to making us a first-class body that
will be competitive. We'll hit the track for the first time when we test
in Las Vegas on Jan. 19th, and we'll expect the Impala to be competitive
the first few runs down the racetrack. It'll take us a few runs to get the
aero balance right so Tommy (Johnson Jr.) can drive it, get the right
amount of downforce on the rear, and get it balanced a little bit, but
even then, we'll have it really close coming out of the wind tunnel. When
we first hit the track with it, I think it'll give us the amount of
downforce we need and have quite a bit less drag than our Monte
Carlo." And as one of the drivers who will be piloting
one of the Impala SS in competition this year, Tommy Johnson Jr. is
looking forward to his first race in the new Chevrolet.
"I'm
excited to debut the Chevy Impala SS this season," said Johnson. "GM and
Don Prudhomme Racing have worked closely on this new body and they've come
up with one of the best looking Funny Cars I've seen in a long time. Not
only does it look good, but the extensive wind tunnel time we have with
the body tell it's going to be a fantastic racecar. I can't wait to get
the car on the track and see how it performs. "With a larger
cockpit area, it is definitely a different view from a driver's standpoint
and will take a few runs to get used to. As with any change, after a
couple of runs, I'll feel at home. This might be the thing we need to put
us out in front of the competition."
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The Reinhart
Report















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