Drag Illustrated Issue 112, August 2016 | Page 76

Scott Palmer time driver in the NHRA Top Fuel points standings, holding down 12th place behind Terry McMillen. Palmer has long been a fixture in the NHRA nitro ranks. He’s been driving ground-shaking Top Fuel dragsters on a part-time basis since his debut in 2002, but the Scott Palmer of 2016 is different than the Scott Palmer of the past. Armed with the latest go-fast parts and advice from a host of friends in the Top Fuel pits, Palmer and his team are intent on solidifying their place as a legitimate threat on race day. Win lights and lower elapsed times are the ultimate goals, but the Marck Industries-backed driver wants to accomplish his goals while preserving a certain “cool factor” that has slowly made its way out of professional nitro racing. A fan-friendly pit area, mid-warm-up throttle whacks and wheels-up launches are all part of the program for Palmer and his team, led by crew chief and fiancé Ashley Fye. In between events on the NHRA Mello Yello Series tour, the SPR team also fields a Top Fuel Hydro in the Lucas Oil Drag Boat Racing Series (LODBRS). Palmer and Fye jumped into drag boat ownership at the urging of friend, sponsor and series benefactor Forrest Lucas after the couple got hooked on the sport in 2014. The venture into the liquid quarter-mile racing scene has even resulted in a new major sponsorship for the dragster, as drag boat legend Tommy Thompson stepped up to support the SPR dragster and boat after seeing the increased exposure for boat racing courtesy of the massive LODBRS logos across the side of Palmer’s dragster. The “Liquid Voodoo” Top Fuel Hydro is probably the one thing on Earth that Palmer won’t drive, so he picked one of the boat crew members to handle the driving duties – one of the many decisions the Cassville, Missouri-native has made simply because it feels like the right thing to do. As if burning nitro on land and sea weren’t enough. Palmer also played the role of drag racing’s Dr. Frankenstein earlier this year, creating a monster of a Pro Mod with a bona fide, raceready Top Fuel motor serving as the powerplant. As one could imagine, the “Studezilla” became an instant Internet sensation as soon as video of its maiden voyage at Jeffers Motorsports Park surfaced on Facebook. The header flame-throwing 300-foot launch was everything that the project’s supporters were hoping for and nothing like its doubters predicted. The car might just seem like another fun way to burn some nitromethane and draw up a few match races, but Palmer has every intention of seeing the car break the quarter-mile speed traps at 300 mph. For our annual Interview Issue, Drag Illustrated spoke with Palmer about his fleet of Top Fuel machines and how he manages to do it all with a skeleton crew. How has the nitro racing landscape changed since you started racing Top Fuel in 2002? In 2002, there were 25 or 26 cars going to every race it seemed like and, honestly, it seemed like it was easier to qualify back then. It might not have been easier exactly, but everybody had similar parts and there weren’t all these latest-and-greatest cylinder heads and blowers. There are so many trick parts on a fuel car now that weren’t on it when we started. It makes it pretty hard to keep up with the technology, you know? That’s been a problem for us the last five years or so. We ran good in probably 2007 or so when it was quarter-mile. Right before it went to a thousand-foot, we’d run a few 4.50s and, you know, back then that would have been a 3.85 to a thousand-foot, but nobody was looking at those times back then. We go back to that setup now, and actually we’ve been trying to force that setup down the car’s throat because it ran 3.80s. But everything has changed on the car, and we can try all we want to go back in time, but it just doesn’t work. We just couldn’t get back to where five years and then wanted to go back home, so he’s back helping us now. Clint Brewer is our clutch guy. He’s a construction guy and does dirt work but he’s got his own business, too, so he goes back and does that through the week. Jason Farmer – he’s also pretty much full-time. He’s a guitar tech and a road manager for big rock bands – actually turned down a job with Sevendust this year because he was on the road with us. It’s crazy. And he’d never been involved with racing. We met him in San Angelo last year at a boat race an d he’s been with us every race since. So we got kind of a mixture of people. And then of course Ashley [Fye] – we work together at the shop every single day that we’re not on the road. Our entire team consists of five people. Now, we also have ‘Peaches’. We call him ‘Peaches’, but his real name is Alex Stapleton. He’s a kid who’s helped us before and he’s out here with us now. He wants to get on a big team. He’s doing the ‘Western Swing’ with us and I think we have him a job on Clay Millican’s car after the ‘Swing. He’s good help, but he’s a floater – he’ll be gone on another team after this. There’s a lot of crew guys that come from our team. If they want a big job and they come out here – you can’t get a job if you’re sitting at home sending in a resume to Don Schumacher Racing or somebody. You’ve got to be out there. Anyway, that’s pretty much our team. We won the first round at Sonoma, serviced the car, had it on the ground and ready to roll out in 50-minutes. That’s pretty good for a small team. That seems like beyond impressive. It is. And I told them, I said, ‘Hey, listen. Okay, we won the first round. We’re going to go back up here and try to run the same. So whether [Morgan] Lucas runs a 3.78 or smokes the tires, one way or the other we’re going to be there.’ We missed the tune-up because we didn’t compensate enough for the heat and whatever – smoked the tires early. Luckily, they ran a 3.78 or .79, so it made losing better. But, like I told them, I said, ‘Part of winning – even in the second round – it’s not really if we win, it’s if we can roll up there and not be bolting shit on the car as we get in the staging lanes.’ Part of the deal is being able to service the car and get it up there, start it, have it go into reverse and stage it – you know what I’m talking about. If you get up there and you’re clusterfucked whenever you get up there and you look like you don’t belong, well, it’s hard to get people to take you seriously. You’re one of the few fuel guys who still do the throttle whacks in the pits to seat the clutch. Why do you continue to do that when so many others have abandoned the tradition? The only reason we do it is because it’s cool. That’s the only reason. Torrence’s team helps us and it’s one of the things that, honestly, they would really rather we not do. We’ve talked about 76 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com we were. So, basically, last year, we didn’t run many races – just did some match races here and there and ran the boat. We decided it was time to regroup and start over. We took the car to [Steve] Torrence and the Laganas helped us. We did the whole car – new clutch management, fuel management, new Darren Mayer badass blower. He’s building another one for us right now. It was just time to revamp and try to catch up a little bit. There’s just so much that we got behind on, though, and if you don’t run similar to everybody’s combination…nobody can help you. That’s hard to do for a small team. I never say ‘low budget’ team because nobody in the stands feels sorry for you. They don’t think you’re low budget if you’re racing a Top Fuel car. I hate it when people say, ‘Hey, man, it’s tough for a low budget team like you guys, isn’t it?’ It is, but nobody thinks we’re ‘low budget’ except the big budget teams. Most of the teams you race against are made up of 10 or 12 full-time crewmembers. How do you compete with teams that are essentially small armies? Rick Ducusin – he’s pretty much full-time. He works on a Pro Mod back home and we’ve been buddies for 25 years. He moved away from Missouri for a while and worked on Kalitta’s car for Issue 112 PREVIOUS PAGE PHOTO: TERA WENDLAND GRAVES “I never say ‘low budget’ team because nobody in the stands feels sorry for you. They don’t think you’re low budget if you’re racing a Top Fuel car. Nobody thinks we’re ‘low budget’ except the big budget teams.”