Drag Illustrated Issue 123, July 2017 | Page 70

PARTNER SPOTLIGHT Chassis Engineering: Clayton Murphy’s Passion Shows Through C It’s clear that you’re passionate about what you do. How do you think that passion shows through in the work you do? My biggest motivator is just racing, period. I raced motocross when I was young, in my early teens. I got injured and couldn’t race anymore, so I turned to cars. All my buddies had cars in high school and we started going around to the local racetracks here and just having a good time. Through the years, I met people who wanted me to put cars together for them. I did a lot of wiring and plumbing back in the early ‘90s. I just had a love for it. I don’t how to explain why I got it or what bug bit me or whatever it was, but I just really got into the tuning aspect of it. My passion has always been race cars. I love building complete cars. I think it’s a really cool thing when you can start from scratch, have a body and roll a complete running car out the door and the customer is extremely excited when they get them. With our tuning side of the business, we go to the racetrack with the customers and are able to have a lot more hands-on time with them as well. I want to make sure that the cars perform like they’re supposed to do, and also help the customer get down the racetrack and have more fun. How does your combination of talents and abilities come together to benefit your custom- ers? I’m the type of person who honestly, truly, 70 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com believes that we don’t build anything necessar- ily better than anybody else. (Jerry) Bickel and (Jerry) Haas and RJ (Race Cars) and all those guys, they build top-quality cars, as do we. I think the difference that we have is that I race every single weekend. I can go to the racetrack with a customer and help them tune the whole car, not just the chassis itself, but the whole car from front to back. We’ve tuned a lot of other people’s chassis, so we find the good points and bad points about all of them – and we all have them. The fact that we actually go out and tune cars every single weekend gives us a little bit of an advantage over some others because we know what it takes to get a car down the track, whether it’s power- related or combinations issues or shock problems. Whatever it is, we’ve been there and learned a lot. We don’t know everything by any means. We try to learn every time we go to the racetrack. We have great fabricators here. We have a guy here named George Magale, who’s our head fabrica- tor in the race car shop. He’s built probably 400 cars in his life, but he doesn’t race. So he has a great understanding of how the car should go together. I have a great understanding of how the car should work. The marriage between the two is really good. I know you’re also passionate about help- ing new talent enter the industry. What’s the driving force behind that? My passion isn’t just cars, it’s the industry as a whole. A lot of these new kids don’t know enough about it to want to get into it, and I think Drag Illustrated is helping with that, obviously putting the word out. The Street Outlaws show is promoting some of that as well. These kids shouldn’t be afraid to get involved in this industry at all. We try to hire as many young people as we can when they come around. We get guys that are welders when they come out of school and we try to bring them in and teach them. A lot of people think they can’t do it, but it’s really not that hard. I struggled through school with dyslexia and learning disabilities and all kinds of other stuff, but I’ve learned how to tune these cars from the feel and sight. Learning the computer side of it is really not as hard as most people think. The big thing for me is trying to promote the industry as a whole. A lot of companies don’t do that. We all have struggles through our lives; it’s about what you do with them when you get there and how you deal with them. There’s nothing that anybody can’t overcome, that’s for damn sure. You just have to have a passion for something, regardless of what it is. Find it, learn and push it as far as you can. - NATE VAN WAGNEN Issue 123 layton Murphy started working at Chassis Engineering when he was still a teenager, sweeping the floors and taking care of basic tasks around the then-small speed shop in Jupiter, Florida. Through hard work and dedication to his craft, Murphy climbed up the company ladder to the point where he was running the day-to-day operations and was able to purchase the company outright. While Chassis Engineering still manufactures and provides high-quality chassis, suspension and driveline components for drag racers and hot rodders, the Riviera Beach, Florida, shop has also expanded its capabilities to include building complete rolling chassis. It’s a personal passion of Murphy’s, who spends nearly every weekend at the racetrack as a tuner for customers in PDRA Pro Nitrous, Top Sportsman, Top Dragster and local series. The soft-spoken fabricator and chassis builder is deeply passionate about everything he does, whether he’s welding up a rear-end, tuning a nitrous-huffing doorslammer or fostering the next generation of fabricators. Drag Illustrated recently spoke with Murphy at the PDRA Mid- America Indy Showdown to learn more about him and gather his thoughts on the industry.