Drag Illustrated Issue 112, August 2016 | Page 77

Nitro Rebel PHOTOS: CHRIS GRAVES Since his Top Fuel debut in 2002, Scott Palmer has been earning respect from fans and competitors due to his persistance and devotion to the “cool factor” of nitro racing. A major program overhal last season has the Missouri native winning rounds and running career-best numbers. August 2016 it and Lagana just says, ‘Oh, well, I know you’re not going to stop doing it, so no use discussing it.’ We used to do it twice per warmup. So, we made a deal with him to do it once instead of twice. We compromised. Speaking of things we do because we think it’s cool – I wasn’t big on lowering the wheelie bar to get wheel speed because, hell, I want the wheels up in the air. It looks cool. Like Larry Dixon and Don Prudhomme’s car back in the day, I mean, holy shit! That thing was the coolest car ever. It just carried the front wheels out there and looked so awesome. Our motor is 37 out, and everybody else’s is 40, and when Murf McKinney built it he asked me, ‘Where do you want the motor?’ I said, wherever it was on Prudhomme’s car when Dick LaHaie was tuning it and it was doing those badass wheels-up launches. We’ve had two new cars since then and they were built the same way and for that very reason. That’s not a good reason, but it’s my reason. We have ended up using the wheelie bar a little bit. In Sonoma, on Saturday, we ran 3.92 and had it backed all the way down and it still carried the front wheels pretty good. And then another deal we have is for every round we win; we whack the throttle another time. So the fans, like in Sonoma, they’re at the back of our pits and they’re out of their minds – just going insane. It was a mosh pit back there because we were going to the second round and they knew we were going to whack it twice. If we would have won second round, we’ d have whacked it three times going into the semis – just like the Laganas did in Las Vegas back in ’09 or ’10 when they went to the final. We were pitted by Torrence, so as soon as we backed it out to warm it up, I looked over there and there they were – Bobby Lagana is just over there looking. He knew what was coming. He knows I’ve got to do it twice. But, yeah, it’s just cool. I do it for the fans. I was a fan. I went to races to hear that. And now you can just watch it happen – whenever the fans watch a warm-up and they shut the motor off, they just walk off. Our pit area during the warm-up looks like John Force’s pit. It’s insane. I’ll never quit doing that. I’ll quit racing before I quit doing that. We’re seeing low car counts at a growing number of races this year. As a longtime competitor and fan of Top Fuel racing, what is your biggest concern with the current state of nitro racing? I don’t really have a concern. I think they’re working on the purse and trying to find ways to get more teams out here. The problem right now is it’s just so expensive to get into it – the initial startup cost is insane. I’ve been lucky that I’ve had breaks along the way that helped us get started back in the early 2000s. I’ve just kind of DragIllustrated.com | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | 77