Drag Illustrated Issue 122, June 2017 | Page 32

Dirt Wiseco’s Victor Ellinger finds success with unlikely combination By Lisa Collier I t could be said that Victor Ellinger didn’t pick the Volvo so much as the Volvo picked him. Ellinger’s a Mopar guy at heart and cherishes his ‘70 Duster above many things in his life, including the ‘80 Volvo Bertone that, last fall, took him to the biggest win of his career thus far. “I happened to be cruising around on Rac- ing Junk one day and found the Volvo,” Ellinger told of how his story with the Volvo began. “A couple weeks went by and it popped up again. It kept dropping in price, so at one point we made a call in to see what the deal was, because it was almost too-good-to-be- true pricing. Being a Car- penter chassis car, it was a well-built piece intended for Top Sportsman racing originally, capable of going 7.50s. The guy dropped his price to $7,000 and gave us two days to go get it. I figured we could part it out for what we paid for it. We wound up getting home and thought, It’s so ugly it’s cool. We took it all apart, painted it, rewired it, went over the whole car. We weren’t really attached to it and thought we’d sell it in a couple of years, but it’s been with us for 10 years now. “I don’t think it’s going anywhere anymore,” laughed Ellinger. “The Volvo was by chance, the black sheep that never left the stable.” Still, Ellinger is quick to point out he still owns the Duster he started with at 14, and that it’s a successful machine as well. And to keep true to his Chrysler roots, the Volvo is powered by a 440 Chrysler with Trick Flow heads built by Mark Cook at Badman Racing Engines, comprised of parts from Cometic Gaskets, Trend Compo- nents, Comp Cams and Lifters, APD Fuel System, Pypes Exhaust System, FireCore50, ATI Torque Converter, and Moser Axles. Ellinger also cred- its Strange Engineering, Wilwood, Autometer, Digital Delay, Mickey Thompson Tires, Fleenor Transmissions, K&R Engineering and Holley with aiding in the success of his operation. “It’s a group effort. It’s never just the driver, never just the car. I have a lot of help from in- dustry guys. Running a Chrysler’s not as hard when you have some help from the best in the industry. There’s a lot of brains behind it to help make a maybe not-so-common combination like this work.” Ellinger’s cars wouldn’t be complete without pistons built by the company he’s served for the last decade, Wiseco Piston Company. “I’ve always used Wiseco pistons and wanted to work for a company I could believe in. I’ve got to meet a lot of guys and gals I read about and idolized growing up. Now I’m helping guys that I used to cut out pictures of their cars from magazines and hang on the wall. I’m helping them build their engines now, which is really cool! It’s been a huge bless- ing. It’s not too hard to do my job here every day when you are one of your customers. I’ve got in my mind what it takes racers to be successful, the sacrifices they make, like eating peanut butter and jelly or bologna instead of going to Applebees after a race. Anything you can do to save money for the next race – I keep that in mind in my ports Park in Norwalk, Ohio. However, when time permits, he’ll travel down to an IHRA track, Thompson Dragway. It was a lifelong goal of his to win the Summit Super Series Division 3 title. “I’d been to the semis a bunch of times when Norwalk held the IHRA Finals, but never won it,” Ellinger storied. “Then last year I won the Division 3 Finals at Pittsburgh Raceway and that qualified me to go to Memphis for the world championship for IHRA. I was pretty happy with just winning the Divisional Finals. That was the goal and all I was really setting out to do. I didn’t think I would put enough time and effort in to be a