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Glossary
of drag racing terms
Air box: Used
primarily on Pro Stock Motorcycles, it settles “negative
air” around carburetors the way a hood scoop does on a
car.
Air foil: the same
as a wing — a stabilizer, generally used to create
downforce, which increases stability and tire-to-track
adherence at high speeds.
Bang the blower:
an explosion inside the supercharger caused by a flame
from the combustion process accidentally re-entering the
supercharger, where fuel and air are present. Generally
caused by a stuck or broken intake valve that normally
would be closed during the combustion sequence.
Breakout: Used
only in handicap racing, “breakout” refers to a
contestant running quicker than he or she “dialed” his
or her vehicle (predicted how quick it would run).
Unless the opponent commits a more serious foul (e.g.,
red-lights, crosses the centerline, or fails a post-race
inspection), the driver who breaks out loses. If both
drivers break out, the one who runs closest to his or
her dial is the winner.
Burned Piston:
When a cylinder runs lean (too much air in the
air-to-fuel mixture) and excessive heat burns or melts
the piston.
Burnout: spinning
the rear tires in water to heat and clean them prior to
a run for better traction. A burnout precedes every run.
Christmas Tree:
Also called the Tree, it is the noticeable electronic
starting device between the lanes on the starting line.
It displays a calibrated-light countdown for each
driver.
Clutch Can: The
bell-shaped housing, or bellhousing, used to encase the
clutch and flywheel.
Clutch Lockup: The
progression of clutch-disc engagement controlled by an
air-timer management system.
Deep stage: to
roll a few inches farther into the beams after staging,
which causes the pre-stage lights to go out. In that
position, a driver is closer to the finish line but
dangerously close to a foul start.
Dial under: when
drivers in Super Stock and Stock (handicap categories)
select an elapsed time quicker than the national index.
Drivers select a dial-under, or e.t., that they think
their cars will run based on previous performance. The
breakout rule is in effect.
Diaper: an
absorbent blanket made from ballistic material, often
Kevlar, that surrounds the oil pan to contain oil and
parts in case of an engine explosion; required for Top
Fuel, Funny Car, Top Alcohol Dragster, and Top Alcohol
Funny Car.
Dropped cylinder:
when a cylinder runs too rich (too much fuel in the
air/fuel mixture) and prevents the spark plug(s) from
firing.
Elapsed time: the
time it takes a vehicle to travel from the starting line
to the finish line. Also called e.t.
Eliminations:
After qualifying, vehicles race two at a time, resulting
in one winner from each pair. Winners continue in
tournament-style competition until one remains.
Foul start:
indicated by a red light on the Christmas Tree when a
car has left the starting line before the green light,
or starting signal.
Full Tree: used in
Competition, Super Stock, and Stock, for which a
handicap starting system is used to equalize
competition. The three amber bulbs on the Christmas Tree
flash consecutively five-tenths of a second apart,
followed five-tenths later by the green starting light.
A perfect reaction time on a full Tree is .500.
Header(s): a
fine-tuned exhaust system that routes exhaust from the
engine; replaces conventional exhaust manifolds.
Hemi: A Hemi
engine has a hemispherical shaped cylinder-head
combustion chamber, like a ball cut in half.
Holeshot: when a
driver reacts quicker to the Christmas Tree to win a
race against an opponent with a quicker e.t.
Hydraulic: when a
cylinder fills with too much fuel, thus prohibiting
compression by the cylinder and causing a mechanical
malfunction, usually an explosive one
Index: the
expected performance for vehicles in a class as assigned
by NHRA. It allows various classes of cars in the same
category to race together competitively.
Interval timers:
part of a secondary timing system that records elapsed
times, primarily for the racers’ benefit, at 60, 330,
660, and 1,000 feet.
Methanol: pure
methyl alcohol produced by synthesis; used in Top
Alcohol Dragsters and Top Alcohol Funny Cars.
Nitromethane:
Produced specifically as a fuel for drag racing, it is
the result of a chemical reaction between nitric acid
and propane.
Pre-stage: to
position the front wheels about seven inches behind the
starting line so the small yellow lights atop that
driver’s side of the Christmas Tree are glowing. The
next step is to stage and be ready to race.
Pro Tree: used in
Top Fuel, Funny Car, Pro Stock, Pro Stock Motorcycle,
Top Alcohol Dragster, Top Alcohol Funny Car, Super Comp,
Super Gas, and Super Street, which feature heads-up
competition. All three large amber lights on the
Christmas Tree flash simultaneously, followed
four-tenths of a second later by the green starting
light.
Reaction time: the
time it takes a driver to react to the green starting
light on the Christmas Tree, measured in thousandths of
a second. The reaction-time counter begins when the last
amber light flashes on the Tree and stops when the
vehicle clears the stage beam.
Sixty-foot time:
the time it takes a vehicle to cover the first 60 feet
of the racetrack. It is the most accurate measure of the
launch from the starting line and in most cases
determines how quick the rest of the run will be.
Slider clutch: a
multi-disc clutch designed to slip until a predetermined
rpm is reached; decreases shock load to the drive
wheels.
Speed trap: the
final 66 feet to the finish line where speed is
recorded.
Stage: to position
the front wheels right on the starting line so the small
yellow lights below the pre-stage lights are glowing.
Once both drivers are staged, the calibrated countdown
(see Christmas Tree) may begin.
Supercharger: a
crank-driven air/fuel-mixture compressor, also called a
blower. It increases atmospheric pressure in the engine
to produce more horsepower.
Turbocharger: an
exhaust-driven intake air compressor (see supercharger).
Wedge: an engine
with a combustion chamber resembling a wedge in shape.
Weight transfer:
critical to traction. Vehicles are set up to provide a
desired weight transfer to the rear wheels. Upon
acceleration, the front wheels lift and the weight
shifts to the rear wheels, which makes them less likely
to spin.
Wheelie bar(s):
used to prevent excessive front-wheel lift.
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