Drag Illustrated Issue 123, July 2017 | Page 72

PARTNER SPOTLIGHT Cynergy Composites S ince starting Cynergy Com- posites in 2001, Tim Hodgins’ standout company has excelled in producing top, lightweight Pro Mod bodies. His recent success story was with the 2015 C7 Corvette Pro Mod body used by Troy Coughlin and also Bob Rahaim when he won his first NHRA Pro Mod race. But Hodgins now has something new and improved up his sleeve. Cynergy Composites has branched well outside the drag racing world and Hodgins has done extensive work with aerospace, military and several other global com- panies, with it only furthering his passion for drag racing. Working harder than ever to push body development forward, including rigorous, outside-the-box testing, Hodgins has what he considers some very exciting discoveries. He talked with Drag Illustrated about the new body he is preparing to debut, the work that went into that, how industries outside of drag racing have helped his body development and what he considers an exciting future. You’ve got something very exciting on the ho- rizon. Can you talk about the new body you’re about to release and what makes it stand out? I have taken my popular C7 Corvette body and completely redesigned it to make it better. It’s a highly competitive sport and I have listened to all the feedback from our customers about what they would like to see changed. I’ve basically made a new and improved version of what’s going to be a 2017 Z06 Corvette Pro Mod body. Because I developed the whole car in 3D Auto CAD, it gives me the ability to do a proper, computer-simulated aerodynamic analysis within the computer.  After bringing all the C7 molds back to Cynergy from Tim McAmis’ shop, I spent a lot of time over the winter putting the C7 body through virtual wind tunnel tests, and we learned pretty quickly that there was a lot of opportunity to make the body more efficient, to make it more stable, and to make it more drivable. What we came away with is a solid baseline and a deeper understanding of what these guys need from their race car. The data made it clear that changing the nose back to the factory styling would make the car easier to drive and we needed to make the biggest changes on the back end of the car. We kept dropping the rear spoiler and the rear deck inside of the car, and we kept doing it in a creative way to maintain the styling, and we made the car 13.75-percent more aerodynamically efficient at 250 mph. That’s a lot. I was thinking we can get 2-4 percent and we ended up getting almost 14 percent. And it takes 90 horsepower less to push this body at 250 mph. So, again, that’s a lot.  72 | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | DragIllustrated.com I didn’t want to make any changes to that body unless it was calculated. I didn’t want to make changes because I “thought” it was the right thing to do, only when I “knew” it was the right thing to do. It’s certainly an arduous process to put to- gether a new body style with the goal to sell a great deal of them. But as you’re pouring in resou