As part of the SAM curriculum, students have the honor of participating in actual racecar assembly. This includes all
aspects of the car, but, most importantly, the engine becomes the focus of the class project. Every possible topic is
covered as the class builds it from the ground up. Projects have included the country’s fasted naturally aspirated ’99
Camaro with a stock block and heads, a ’98 Camaro, and a nasty, little ’79 Malibu that won the ’03 Clash of the Titans
EZ Street championship. All these SAM projects cars have had one thing in common–natural aspiration.
"For SAM, we’re
into natural aspiration," engine building instructor and racecar driver Patrick Topolinski tells us. "There’s nothing
wrong with the power–adder classes–we are currently building a ’92 Mustang notchback for the NMCA’s Street Race class–but
we teach guys how to build engines from the ground up on naturally aspirated power. It’s the most challenging. You’re
not creating the atmosphere that the engine sees, and you have to have a perfect combination to take advantage of whatever
air you are given on that specific day. It is the most challenging, and it fits our school’s mentality. If we’re down
on power, I can’t just turn the boost up. We have to look at every single aspect of the engine and ask our students how
they could build it better. It forces us to work harder, analyze the entire engine, and ultimately teach our students better."
With all–muscle power as the school’s moto, it made sense to pick the NMRA’s Hot Street class as the proving grounds for the next SAM
project car. Hot Street is the realm of all–motor small–block Fords on the edge of insanity as they routinely spin their crankshafts
past the magical 9,000–rpm range. Simply put, if you can build a car to be competitive in NMRA Hot Street, you are among some of the
most elite drag racers in the country. And, Patrick Topolinski wanted to put his SAM class to the test–the ultimate naturally
aspirated thesis.
Ironically, Patrick found their starting material from Matt Jones, the driver that he beat to win the COTT EZ Street Championship
in 2003. The car was set up for FFW, which allows its Street Bandits to indulge in a few more modifications than Hot Street
racers. The SAM class had to remove the Lexan front window, install a stock transmission tunnel, install a new interior with
head liner and dashboard, remove the clutch pedal and install an automatic shifter, and rewire the car for the Edelbrock Qwik
Data logger. So, after those repairs were made, it was off to the homeroom.
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