USR takes 1st place at GTA Road Atlanta!!!

Global Time Attack Road Atlanta 2018 Recap – 1st Place Street FWD

We, United Speed Racing, were hard at work preparing for the first big time attack event of the year. As power has increased and other modifications have allowed me to push the card harder on track, the coolant temp issue became even more of a problem. Previously we had been trying to keep from cutting the hood, or bumper in search of ways to help the issue that most other enthusiasts would be willing to do. Many things helped a little in their own ways, but ultimately we were still having the issue. We have been lucky enough to get plenty of opportunities to hit the track to test changes, rather than hoping it works.

The week of GTA we made the decision that some cutting needed to be done. 1st on the list of venting the hood to achieve a few advantages. Give the heat trapped under the hood a place to escape easily and in addition help to rush air through the radiator, but also relive that pocket of air under the hood in an effort to achieve a little extra front downforce. Previous testing and data showed that the stock hood scoop wasn’t very effective for anything except looking cool. We removed the stock scoop as well as the aluminum ducting from the underside of the hood. We then cut out more area from the scoop portion of the hood. The idea was to fabricate an aluminum plate to fit this recess in the hood and cut louvers into it to help draw heat out as air passed over the louvers. We have used CNC cut panels to achieve this previously but with little time to work, and no cutter in house we started with a sheet of aluminum and went through the tedious process of cutting the shape, smoothing out the curves for better fit, making the cuts needed for the louvers and working on a mounting solution. After all was done, it was a bit rough around the edges, but would work well for the event. Next on the agenda was a larger oil cooler. We have been running a long cooler setup in the lower bumper opening just below the stock intercooler and it has worked well to lower the temps, but we have been testing a Mishimoto prototype intercooler that was much larger and lacked a bit of room to properly fit that cooler, but has greatly decreased intake air temperatures to improve power during hot track sessions. Previously we had looked into installing a side mounted cooler but had little room to work with, and didn’t want to make many changes to the car at the time. We decided to go back for a second look. Taking measurements, forming a mock cooler based on multiple cooler sizes available, we decided on the largest cooler we could possibly fit. This meant though that we would need full ducting, cut out the side grill opening, and would require the loss of the brake duct. The loss of the duct wasn’t a big issue with our higher end braking upgrade as well as running time attack. We got the cooler in and went to work mounting it, this part was a fairly simple task. Next was the ducting. Due to space and complexity this was a challenge, but I am up for a challenge when fabrication is involved. We used aluminum to create the ducting and attached it to the cooler and the chassis for simple removal and installation of the front bumper. All that was left was to cut the opening in the grill. For now we just made a simple cut rather than trimming out each honeycomb opening, then riveted in some aluminum mesh, removed the fog light and installed mesh here as well for added air flow. Finished the cooler off with new lines, and an exhaust vent in the fender liner. With these 2 new modifications we were eager to hit the track and had positive thoughts that we would see results closer to what we wanted.

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Other changes made was the addition of Konig Ampliform 18×9.5 +35 wheels. The offset was a little more than we wanted, but with the new Essex/AP Racing brake upgrade, clearance of the face of the caliper made wheel selection much less. Konig helped to check clearance based on measurements provided by Essex Parts and they were spot on. We added a 3mm space to help with expansion, but this extra .5″ of wheel width meant a 265 front tire would fit better, once we had a pair.

The day before GTA practice, we went over the car with a fine tooth comb, performance a nut and bolt, brake fluid bleed, fresh oils, fresh 245 Maxxis VR-1 tires all around, rechecked suspension settings and corner balance, etc etc. We felt there wasn’t much more we could do, but wished we had more time.

Happily the test day had great weather and it was Hot. We needed some hot weather to see how the cooling additions worked. First session and I was instantly happy, the coolant temps were staying lower, taking less time to heat soak, etc. I knew it would be a good weekend and was fully looking forward to the competition. We ran some more, made some suspension changes, tire pressure changes, and just worked on feeling out the car more….the Motion Control Suspension 2-way damper setup was still something we were learning, as well as the increased braking from the Essex/AP Racing Radi-Cal 355mm brake setup allowing me to brake harder and much later. We finished the day back at the shop, going over things once again, making sure everything was ready. We didnt want to have to do too much work at the track, instead concentrate on improving lap times, watching other competitors runs, and enjoying hanging out with friends. GTA is about the competition but we all generally get along, and it is more of a competitive track family.

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Day 1 of competition: It was hot, and got 10 degrees hotter each session. As I said still learning all the changes to the car, but now being able to turn 2 or more laps back to back without being overly concerned with coolant temps, this helped my confidence and allowed me to push harder and harder and even with the ambient temp rising, I was still able to drop the times little by little. By the end of Day 1, I wasnt down to the time I wanted and felt like I needed to make a change to help get more front grip. Lucky for me, the only 2 Maxxis VR-1 265/35zr18 tires in the USA were waiting for me, not far away. I went a snatched them up, headed over to our friends at Gran Turismo East, and even though I got there right as they were closing, they fit me in and swapped the front tires out and had me ready to go quickly.

Day 2 of competition: We were starting an our earlier, which meant the first session would be a good one. I knew that the front tires were fresh and would come in, and just aimed to make the best of the weather. Instantly I noticed more front grip and was able to turn in harder and get on the throttle sooner. I dropped my fast time by just over 1 second, pretty good with just a wider front tire. Second session ambient temp was about 8 degrees higher and still went a bit faster, and set what would be my fast time for the event, 1:38.635, and good enough for a 1st place victory in Street FWD. I had been a little faster previously, but with ambient temps 20 degrees cooler and pretty much perfect track conditions. For GTA we had United States Formula 4 Championship running as well, they kept having incidents and putting fluid on the track which even after cleanup with decrease traction in areas and lower confidence to push beyond the limit.

Overall we are very happy with our performance and how well the car performed. We will continue to develop the car with modifications and tuning the current setup, as well as helping customers and other CTR owners across the globe to improve their experience. In 1 week we will be driving the car up to Dominion Raceway in Virginia for Type-R Expo East, followed by more testing at Road Atlanta, Atlanta Motorsports Park, Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval, and some others possibly. Our next competition event will be GridLife South Festival at Road Atlanta in August. It will be hot, but we are working on new changes based on Data collected during GTA, to further help cope with the heat, and hope to shave another 2 seconds off our lap time.

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We thank our sponsors for your continued support which is greatly appreciated and helps us to achieve our goals:

Maxxis Tire
Motion Control Suspension
Hasport Performance
Ktuner
Essex Parts Services
PTP Turbo Blankets
Konig Wheel
Gran Turismo East
Hybrid Racing
JZilla Track Days
Spec Clutch
Mishimoto
Setrab USA
Liqui Moly
Coast Lighting
PRL Motorsports

Jason is running Konig Ampliform in 18×9.5B et 35mm in Bronze all around. The Konig Ampliform is Flow Formed.

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Kevin Lawrence on FDORL ’18!!!!

Kevin Lawrence takes time and gives us his experience at Formula Drift Orlando! With a such a busy schedule this year, we are always super excited to hear how it went down and what he has in-store for us this 2018 season…

“Hey Everyone! Kevin here again with my recap of Formula D Orlando.

After a bumpy start to the season with having to run our R32 demo car for the season opener in Long Beach. We rushed back to Florida and got to work on getting the S14 back together and ready for OSW. We were able to get the engine that seized before long beach back together and back in the car which meant another quick trip to see my tuner Martin from RS Enthalpy on Monday before the event. Thankfully we had a quick easy session on the dyno with the car putting down around 850whp we were ready for Orlando.

Thursday Practice

Thursday I got in about 6 laps at the track, this being my first time driving the car with the new tire brand, tire size, and much more power I was able to put down a few runs more so to just shake the car down. But over all, the car did great for its first passes since last September in Pro2 TX.

Friday

Friday morning started with a gear change in the car to take out some excessive wheel speed the car had and to dial in more car speed. I was able to put together some clean runs before it was time for qualifying. My first pass for qualifying I scored a 77 with a nice and easy pass just doing what I could with the minimal amount of time I had in the car. Going into my second run I wanted to push a bit harder for a higher score but also not being 100% settled it in the car yet I ended up dialing it back just before I entered causing some wavering on the bank which ended up resulting in me scoring a 76 on my second pass.

After the Friday drivers meeting it was confirmed that my first battle would be Odi Bakchis which I was stoked for.

Saturday

After getting only another 4-5 runs in during practice before the top 32 battles it was time for me to pull to the line. Odi being the higher qualifier was up to lead first. Odi is known for being extremely fast so I knew not to give him an inch on the run up, However this ending up messing me up in the end. On the run up I was overly aggressive behind him and didn’t give myself much room behind him to set the car properly on initiation. I choked up after initiation on the bank and wavered a bit which immediately pushed me to a lower line on the bank. I did everything I could to gain proximity to him as well as keeping my run as tidy as possible but going into the second battle I knew he had the edge over me. Now in the lead position I gave it my all and put the car high on the bank and ran the best pass I had done all weekend. I kept the car super high on the bank bumping the wall once or twice as we went around and checked off all my marks on the clipping points before passing the finish. This was the line/pass I should have been doing all weekend but with no prior testing to get acclimated to the car it just came to be a bit late unfortunately. After a few minutes from the judges they came back with awarding Odi the win where he would advance on to the top 16.

All in all the weekend went off great, first time in the car I learned so much. No major problems with the car all weekend and for once I could say I left Orlando with my rear bumper 100% intact haha. Huge thanks again to the crew for all their hard work and enduring the heat of Orlando and helping keep the myself and the car cool. Also, many thanks to my sponsors, friends and fans. You all are the reason I’m out here doing this and with out the love and support, who knows where I would be haha.

Thank you everyone!”

-Kevin

Kevin is running Konig Dekagram in 17×9 et 25mm front and 18×9.5 et 25 rear. The Konig Dekagram is Flow Formed.

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Ryan Litteral finishes top 4 at FDATL Pro 2!!!

KORUWORKS takes us up-close, personal and gives us a behind the scene look of Formula Drift Atlanta. Capturing amazing footage of the teams hard work and dedication. Koruworks faces a few issues early on and races the clock on getting the build in tip-top shape for competition. At the end, the team succeeds with an amazing performance in Pro 2 with Ryan Litteral solidifying a TOP 4 Finish at FDATL!

We are super excited for the future rounds and from all of us here at Konig, go get’em fellas!

Ryan is running Konig Ampliform in 18×9 et 15mm front and 18×10 et 20mm rear in DARK METALLIC GRAPHITE. The Konig Ampliform is Flow Formed.

For more on Koruworks follow them on instagram: @KORUWORKS

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Podium finish for Travis Reeder at FDATL 2018!

FORMULA DRIFT PRO 2 ATLANTA, GA – ROUND 1 | May 11th and 12th

New year, new team and a whole new energy. Coming into the 2018 formula drift pro 2 Season, I was uncontrollably excited, anxious and hungrier than ever. After an extremely successful 2017 pro 2 season and a relatively uneventful off season I was more than ready to jump in the car and throw down at my favorite track in the formula drift series, Road Atlanta.

Coming into our first practice of the season the team and I had our data from last year collected and set up the car quickly. We immediately found out that having previous experience at a racetrack, especially one this challenging was more valuable than anything in this sport and it showed after executing a very strong first few laps in practice. The car was fast, settled and extremely drivable right out of the box, which allowed us to really dial in and fine tune the setup efficiently as well as develop a good strategy for the weekend.

With qualifying coming up quickly Thursday night, I knew I needed to improve on how I performed last year drastically considering only a few qualifying points had cost the team and I a championship in 2017. My first qualifying run was a conservative one, only to try and guarantee a spot in the big show Friday night. I had been a little shallow in outer zone 2 in the keyhole but hit all my clips, touch-and-go’s and zone the rest of the run. We were given a 91 and a second position seeding at that time which guaranteed the team a top 16 showing the next day. On qualifying run 2 we pushed harder as we had nothing to lose. I was deeper into the 2nd outer zone and was extremely committed and on throttle 99% of the lap as well as hitting all my clips with angle. The judges awarded the team and I a 95, which earned us the top qualifying position for the event!

After practice and opening ceremonies, the team and I were excited for top 16 and to put on a good show for all the awesome fans Road Atlanta attracts. My first battle was uneventful as I was set to battle Crick Fillipi but he had unfortunately broke minutes before, giving me a free ride into the top 8. So, I had taken advantage of the opportunity to practice putting down my closest rendition of a perfect qualifying run. On to the top 8!

Kelsey Rowlings was our opponent for the top 8. I lead first and put down a solid lead with minimal corrections and had pulled a bit of a gap on her after the first front clip. Going into the second run I was in the chase position and new I had to apply consistent pressure and maintain proximity to get the team into the final 4. Rowling’s was on fire for her lead run, which allowed me to really attack in the chase. I followed close with great proximity and it was enough to give me the win, the final 4 was set!

Our final 4 Battle was against Ola Jaeger, who was on an absolute war path all weekend. I led first and had a killer lead run hitting all my clips with angle and smoke and only sacrificed a few points in outer zone 2, as well as pulling a couple car lengths away from Ola in the chase. Going into the second run I knew he had a unique and difficult entry style to adjust to, so I had to try my best to match and apply pressure in the chase position and not lose ground. I was close on entry and on his door after our first transition up the hill, but he was fast and pulling away. I sacrificed angle and line slightly to gain proximity in the keyhole and throughout the rest of the run. Blazing across the finish line a foot off his door we came to a stop at the top of the hill. After review from the judges they had concluded that my correction in the chase position had outweighed Ola’s falling back during my lead run and he was awarded the win and moved on to the finals.

Thankfully, by qualifying p1 in the event, I was guaranteed a 3rd place podium finish if I had made it to the final 4. So not only were we the top qualifier but we were still able to go home with a carbon fiber trophy! I can’t complain about one thing over the whole entire weekend. The car ran flawlessly as did my crew! With round one being in the books, and the team and I in the chase for the championship, I can’t wait for St. Louis as well as more great times at the track.
I want to give a massive thank you to all my family, friends, fans and amazing sponsors for the support to chase a crazy dream that is professional drifting. Without you all I wouldn’t be able to do it. Period!

Travis is running Konig Ultraforms in 17×9 et 25mm front and 18×9 et 25mm rear. The Konig Ultraforms is Flow Formed.

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Federik Wiborg recap of TANU RD1 at Ring Knutstorp in Sweden!!!

TANU: Ring Knutstorp – ROUND 1 | May 11th and 12th

After pulling of somewhat of a miracle the team lead by Mikael W managed to have the car finished and engine started for the first time after returning from the dyno at 20:00 on Thursday evening, this came after working more or less 24/7 for 3 months to catch up to the first round.
So on friday 05:00 the team headed towards Knutstorp to take on round 1 of the 2018 TANU championship.

Knowing that the car was more or less completely new there was for sure gonna be issues during Friday free practice, amazingly during the first heat cruising around for 3 laps everything seemed to be working flawlessly, all systems were running ok and the car seemed to behave as supposed. After going over everything the team headed out for free practice nr 2, on just the second lap upping up the phase the power steering went down, the coming 4 heats where just about trying to figure out why the power steering did not work. After the Friday practice and only running 10 laps at cruising speed the power steering issue was still not solved.

Entering Saturday and race day all hoses, pump reservoir had been exchanged, rerouted and the pump reservoir had a bigger return valve welded on. However this still did not fix the issue and the warmup was aborted after just 1 lap. Coming in to Q1 help arrived after JapTuning and Stefan Påhlsson had brought a backup power steering pump, pump reservoir and hoses. Although replacing all this parts the power steering was still not working so Q1 was aborted with no real time set. Coming in to Q2 the team started to realize there where probably no issues with the power steering system itself, the issues was more due to the steering forces on the rack being to high this year causing the belt to slip on the pump demanding to much pressure. So as a last attempt to at least make it better a new “to short” belt was forced on causing higher tension on the belt then intended by the belt-tensioner.

However going out in Q2 it was soon obvious this wasn’t working either. So knowing there was nothing else to do for the final it was just to accept the situation and deal with it best possible. After only runing 15-20 laps at cruising speed and without a working power steering it was just about trying to get a time set. Although not having driven the car on attack and having to roll through the quick section and overall struggling to turn the car a 59:0 time was set taking the overall win and being less then 0.5 sec slower then current Time Attack track record, showed som real potential in the car. Now the team has 3,5 weeks to fix some small issues and most importantly fix the power steering issues before round 2 at Kinnekulle. I would like to take the opportunity to thank some people involved in this build making it possible to do what we are doing.

Mikael Wiborg – The mastermind (and most likely Swedens no 1 chassis manufacturer) behind putting this incredibly vehicle together, putting almost every free second for the last 8 months into building this beast from scratch. Not only is it incredibly light and strong and fast but if you have the chance to take a look at the car in real life. Make sure to pay attention to all the small details and amazing solutions to shave of a few grams here and there.

Stefan at KBM Racing Engines – Amazing work in making the engine mapping during the winter and the support for the 2018 season.

Patrik at Street Performance – Our first sponsor on board this project supplying us with great parts from D2 and AEM.

Scott at Konig Wheels USA – For providing us with some amazingly light and strong racing wheels.

Pelle at Würth Svenska AB – Tools, bolts, machines, glue, paint whatever you might need in the garage there is nothing Wurth can´t solve.

Stefan at JapTuning – Although not been a partner of Wiborg Engineering Stefan always helps out when in need of spares or just having questions regarding the Japanese tuner engines.

Not to forget is, Martin, Jimmy, Lucas, David, Adam, Marcus, Helge and Peter helping out in the garage.

See you at Kinnekulle in 3.5 weeks.

Frederik is running Konig Hypergrams in 18×9.5 et 25mm all around in Matte Grey. The Konig Hypergram is Flow Formed.

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Vankirk recounts FDATL ’18!!!

FORMULA DRIFT Atlanta, GA – ROUND 3 | May 11th and 12th

Formula Drift Round three this year was held at Road Atlanta, one of our favorite tracks of the series! Road Atlanta is a very iconic track and I am more than stoked to compete against the best drifters in the world on it! Last year we had great success on this track finishing in 2nd place for Pro 2. With a tiny bit of more power than we had last year and the same suspension set up, the team felt confident going into this round.

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Thursdays practice came with a few hurdles. After doing a few laps I realized the same issue we had in Long Beach is also affecting us here in Atlanta. Coming up the hill I was throwing a lot of angle in the car to set me up for going into the horseshoe. However, doing this was making our car’s steering lock up and understeer causing the vehicle to go off course. With it being Thursday, grip levels were not at its peak yet and after talking to some teams it sounded like they were understeering in the same spot as well. We decided to make a few adjustments to the car and the fact it didn’t do this every lap we decided to see how things go the following day. Other than that, we got our entry location down as well as our line throughout the course and the team felt good after Thursday’s practice session.

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Friday’s practice before qualifying went extremely well compared to Thursday’s practice. The car had a lot more grip without changing any tire pressure or suspension settings. The weather was a bit hotter and there was a lot more rubber down on the track. We did roughly 6 laps before qualifying and the car’s steering only locked up once and it was on our first run. The team and I figured the car was good to go as our front tires were not warmed up yet on our first run and the remaining laps we did the car felt great. Going into qualifying I felt really strongly about our vehicle setup and this track and was ready to put down a very solid run. On my First qualifying lap I initiated a lot deeper than I have all weekend, the tires rode the rumble strip and we had a good amount of angle going into the first inner clip. After passing the first inner clip we transitioned up the hill, full throttle and was coming up to the horseshoe fast. I chucked the steering wheel to throw a lot of angle at the car. The car angled out and when I downshifted into 2nd to power through into the horseshoe the steering once again locked up and unfortunately we understeered off course. This was very unfortunate as this was my first qualifying run and knowing we had only one more lap to make it into the main event our nerves were high as there was an obvious problem with the car. I drove back to the pits and talked with the team about what was going on with our s13. Matt Coffman came by our pits to see how things were going and I showed him a video of what happened on our qualifying run. We jacked up the front end and he quickly pointed out that we were missing the bump stop for our Wisefab angle kit. Every time I drove the car aggressively and threw a lot of angle at the car our steering was over centering which was causing my steering wheel to lock up and the front end to wash out. Since we didn’t have any time to properly fix this our crew chief Greg Leone made a temporary bump stop with duct tape. Knowing this was my only chance to qualify and knowing the vehicle still had the issue my nerves were very high. During our 2nd qualifying pass I hit all the clips just like our first run but coming into the horseshoe I took it very conservative and did not angle out like our previous run. The car did not understeer this time around and we finished off the course strongly. Due to use being conservative through the horseshoe the team scored an 80 on our second qualifying pass and we were in the show for top 32. After qualifying we ended up buying a Wisefab bump stop from Faruk Kugay and fixed our over centering issue. Knowing the car was fixed we were excited for competition on Saturday.

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Our qualifying result paired us to go against 2017 3rd place champion Odi Bakchis for our top 32 battle. Odi is a great driver and is one of the fastest cars on grid and we were looking forward to do battle with him. Our goal for Saturday’s practice was to get as many follow laps as possible. This quickly came to an end, on our 2nd practice run of the day we snapped a stub shaft exiting the last turn. Knowing we didn’t have a spare and that top32 was close to starting, I frantically ran through the pits looking for a team with a spare stub shaft for our s13 differential. Luckily Enjuku Racing was kind enough to lend us their spare. Funny thing is we actually broke an axle last year in Atlanta and Enjuku Racing also helped us out, big shout out to the guys over at Enjuku! Since the stub shaft broke inside the differential we were unable to get it out and ended up swapping the differential with a spare that we brought. This took quite some time as top 32 started and we were about 75% of the way done. Our battle was the fourth battle in the bracket so we ended up having to call our competition 5 minute timeout. With 30 seconds left on the clock we finished installing the new differential and stub shaft and headed to line up against Odi. I knew we would have to give it our all for this battle. We initiated with Odi and kept great proximity through the first inside clip. Coming up the hill we surged forward on him into the horseshoe, I had to check up pretty good and when we hit the throttle the car was out of its power band and I sustained drift but started to shallow out. After the 3rd clutch kick we got the rear tires spinning again and transitioned to go back down the hill. Unfortunately this put me and an awkward line and I just fell into Odi’s tire smoke. We were in Odi’s smoke for about 3 seconds which felt like eternity when going those speeds not being able to see a thing. I was contemplating on when to transition and did not want to transition late due to that outside wall taking out a few vehicles this weekend. When I ended up transitioning we were just a tad too soon and I ended up going tires off and hitting the inside clip. On our lead I knew we had to give it everything we had. I laid down what I thought would have been a 100 point qualifying run. We hit all our clips and even through tons of angle going into the horseshoe. Coming down the hill we actually pulled a few car lengths away from Odi but unfortunately that wasn’t enough to upset our mistake.

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The next day we went to the local event at Lanier Speedway across the street and had a blast driving with some of the local guys. It was also Mother’s day and I was able to give my Mom some ride alongs which was awesome! The team and I learned a lot this weekend and we all worked together to get the car fixed just in time for our top 32 battle. I could not have been prouder of everyone and we look forward to driving at Wall Speedway for the first time next round!

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Matt is running Konig Hypergrams in 18×9.5 et 25mm front and 18×10.5 et 25 rear in Race Bronze. The Konig Hypergram is Flow Formed.

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Scott & Joey breakdown FDATL on Behind The Wheel Podcast: FD Edition!!!

On this special edition episode of BEHIND THE WHEEL PODCAST, Scott and Joey Redmond of Wrecked Magazine discuss what went down at Formula Drifts Round 3 in Atlanta and much more! Tune in and give us some feedback!

Behind the Wheel Podcast

You can also, subscribe or download the podcast on our website, iTunes, Google Play, Youtube & Sound Cloud:

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Thanks for listening!

FOLLOW:
Scott Weiss (Konig): Scott_Konig
Joey Redmond (Wrecked Magazine): joeyredmond
Konig Wheels USA Instagram: @konigwheelsusa

Knapik makes top 16 at FDATL 2018!

FORMULA DRIFT PRO 2 ATLANTA, GA – ROUND 1 | May 11th and 12th

Round One of the Formula Drift Pro2 Series is finished and in the books and it was definitely not with out some challenges. About a week before needing to leave for Atlanta our built LS2 suffered a catastrophic failure during testing. A flaw in the block gave in, and the block cracked (let that be a lesson, always have the block x-rayed for flaws). So with no time to spare, and our engine builder not being able to crank out a bottom end in that short of a time frame my crew chief, Adrian Quiroz, and I went for a hail Mary. Scouring craigslist we found a used LQ9 with about 150k miles on it for a good deal and swapped it into the S14, chucked the Edelbrock supercharger on it, gave it mild tune of 500 HP so that it wouldn’t (hopefully) explode and set off on our cross country road trip from California to Atlanta!

The drive went great and we made really good time. So good in fact that we where able to get the car teched a day early so that we wouldn’t have to be rushed the morning of practice. During practice though is when some gremlins would start rearing there heads. The oil pressure started to drop below safety perimeters and would cut power to the car to save the motor. We lowered the perimeters a bit to get in some runs with out the car cutting, but then the oil pressure only kept dropping. After practice we went through the car to check for leaks but came up empty, so we decided to change the oil to something thicker thinking maybe the oil was oiling over and thinning out. The thicker oil helped but the pressure would keep dropping, and we came to the conclusion that the oil pump was possibly on its way out. With not time to be able to swap oil pumps, I decided to turn off all the perimeters and send it, as qualifying was coming up. As luck would have it the moment I line up for the first qualifying run, it begins to rain. I put down a safe run to at least get some points on the board, scoring a 76. On my second qualifying run, coming up the hill the clutch pedal gets stuck on the floor and because of no drive, the car straightens. So the first run or 76 would have to do. We sat anxiously waiting to see if the 76 would hold up while all the other drivers finish off their 2nd passes. After the smoke had settled the score was good enough to get us into the show with a 15th qualifying spot and pairing us up with the 2nd place qualifier Dylan Hughes. After watching some replays of his qualifying and practice runs (and he did get 2nd) I knew he was a solid driver that wouldn’t play any games.

The day of competition always has a practice session before and our oil pressure was still a major concern, and now our motor is running a bit hot as well. But we had made it this far so we decided that we would go for it. I decided to only do one practice run to save the motor as much as I could, not even letting it idle, the team would push the car up to the starting line. Dylan and I had a hard fought battle for our first run, each making some minor mistakes. The judges deemed it was too close to call and we would go on to a One More Time decision. On our second battle it was another close call with the judges needing to review the replays a few times but after some time they would call Dylan the winner.

After all the ups and downs the team and I are happy with the outcome. We put some points up on the board and are pumped for Round 2 coming up in St. Louis, Missouri. This is a new track for Formula Drift so we’ll see what challenges it throws at us! Now its time to pull out the motor (again) and get to work on something with a bit more confidence. See you guys at Round 2!

Adam is running Konig Rennforms in 18×9 et 23 all the way around. The Konig Rennforms is Flow Formed.

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Behind The Wheel Podcast: FD Edition – RD3 Atlanta

On this special episode of the Konig Behind The Wheel Podcast, Joey Redmond of Wrecked Magazine sits down with us to discuss his “10 things learned from FD Atlanta”. You can find Joey’s “10 things learned after each and every event on Formuladrift.com.
We also touch a few of the more notable highlights from Formula Drift Atlanta, interesting things from FD season so far and revisit the PRO 1 probable/potential podium finishers that we talked about from the last special FD episode …. (details/cheat sheet below!)


CONTENT CHEAT MENU:
0:18 | Intro
1:20 | Quick Review of FDATL
3:25 | Bottom Pro1 Drivers vs Top Pro2 Drivers
7:27 | Pro1 vs Pro2
14:08 | Pro1 Rookie of The Year Race
16:37 | Qualifying scores consistently higher
19:30 | Touchback on 100pt qualifying score
20:54 | Tuerck might have ended landed on podium
21:58 | Where’s the line…being accountable for contact
26:58 | Jumping the starting light
31:25 | James Deane’s Kryptonite appears to be Kristaps Bluss
32:36 | Bluss Wins!
35:44 | Uncharacteristic crashes at FDATL
39:06 | End of season podium prediction
44:33 | Lawrence qualifies!
45:11 | No tire, no problem! …de-beading
48:27 | Wrap up / Contact info

FOLLOW:

Scott Weiss (Konig): Scott_Konig
Joey Redmond : joeyredmond
Konig Wheels USA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/konigwheelsusa/

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Behind The Wheel Podcast – EP02 – Caleb Quanbeck

On this episode of BEHIND THE WHEEL PODCAST we chat it up with Drifter, Pro BMX’er and Youtube Personality, CALEB QUANBECK! Caleb gives us his story about how he got into drifting, being a Pro BMX’er, the struggles of a You-Tube Personality and we also get to talk about his future journey into fatherhood! Tune-in and give us feedback on what you think…

Behind the Wheel Podcast

You can also, subscribe or download the podcast on our website, iTunes, Google Play, Youtube & Sound Cloud:

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Thanks for listening!

FOLLOW:
Scott Weiss (Konig): Scott_Konig
Caleb Quanbeck: Calebquanbeck