| Supermodified Racing - Super Secrets Supermodifieds Are The Ultimate
Thrill In Circle Track Ranks writer: Rob Fisher,
Circle Track Racing Magzine
Imagine a car with the speed of an Indy Car and the handling of a Midget.
Imagine a car so fast in the corners that it'll try to suck your head off
your shoulders. Imagine 847 hp dangling next to your left leg. Imagine no
more. We are going to introduce you to one of the most exciting forms of
circle track racing there is and take a look at the demographics and technical
details of these wild race cars.
Welcome to the world of Supermodified racing, possibly the best kept secret
in American motorsports. Fans of the Supermodifieds call them the ultimate
short-track racing machines on the planet. They are viciously fast, handle
like they're glued to the track, and deliver heart-stopping, edge-of-your-seat
excitement.
Supers, as they are affectionately called, are largely home-built race cars
with monster engines, different-sized tires, and mammoth wings on the top
of the car. They are lightweight open-wheeled machines with tube frames scantily
clad in aluminum bodywork. If we could picture Steve Kinser rear ending Michael
Schumacher, that's a Super. Part Sprint car, part F-1 ride, the Super is
a hybrid that sits a razor-thin 3 inches off the ground. In the hands of
a capable driver, these cars can do things that a Nextel Cup car could only
dream about.
Supers are raced primarily on short tracks under a mile in length. It's not
uncommon to see a pack of winged Supers three and four abreast, darting in
and out of traffic, and even changing lanes in the middle of the of the turns.
Coast To Coast
Supermodified racing is a cult phenomenon. It is club racing in one area
of the country and a touring series in another. Bare-to-the-bones, big-block
race cars on one coast, and highly tunable chassis with small-blocks on the
other.
There are four sanctioning bodies putting on Supermodified events in the
USA. The New York-based International SuperModified Association, or ISMA,
is the largest of the four and a true touring series. In 2006, ISMA Supers
will visit 12 tracks in 6 states and Canada during their 16-race schedule.
Routinely packing the grandstands, it is not unusual for 30 cars to show
up for the ISMA shows, which run from May to October.
ISMA's West Coast counterpart is the Western States Supermodified Racing
League, or WSSRL. It is the youngest sanction and an outgrowth of the old
Supermodified Racing League. This year, its first full year of competition,
it will sanction 11 races at 6 tracks. Two smaller sanctions are the
Colorado-based Englewood Supermodified Association (ESA), which puts on five
races at two tracks, and the Midwest Supermodified Association (MSA), sanctioning
11 races in Ohio and Michigan.
The Most Outrageous Race Car Not only is ISMA the biggest sanction, but it
is also the home of the baddest of the bad. An ISMA Supermodified is unlike
any other race car in the country. The first thing you'll notice about it
is the wing. It resembles a Sprint car wing, with 24 square feet of surface
area and multiple foils across the back. But any similarities to Sprinters
end when the cars hit the track. The wing moves as the car is in motion.
It lies flat when the car runs down the straightaway and then pops back up
when the car races through the turns.
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