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- Newsgroups: alt.hotrod,wiz.hotrod
- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!emory!rsiatl!hotrod
- From: hotrod@dixie.com (The Hotrod List)
- Subject: tractor pulls
- Message-ID: <rdfs-5#@dixie.com>
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 93 17:54:12 GMT
- Organization: Dixie Communications Public Access. The Mouth of the South.
- To: hotrod@dixie.com
- Reply-To: hotrod@dixie.com
- Posted-Date: Thursday, Jan 28 12:53:55
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- Approved: jgd@dixie.com
- Lines: 69
-
-
- Earlier today I got a free entry into the USHRA tractor pull in Little
- Rock. It was much different than what I'd expected from what people
- who'd been to previous ones had said, or from what I'd seen on TV.
-
- I was a guest of one of the sponsors, a local Chevy dealer. None of
- the track officials were in the least officious, most of 'em being
- downright friendly. The drivers were friendly. Everyone was friendly.
- It was downright eerie.
-
- I was with my buddy Tommy, who was driving a wrecker in the parade lap.
- We're sitting there waiting to drive in, and I noticed there's a girl
- with something-Arfons on her jacket. "Hmm," I mention to Tommy. "I
- wonder if she's related to Art Arfons?"
-
- "Who?" says Tommy.
-
- "Never mind."
-
- Then this older guy comes up, just sort of hanging around, you know?
- There are people wandering around all over anyway. Then he turns
- around, and it's Art Arfons. For some reason I keep thinking he's dead,
- though it was Breedlove who kicked off some years ago, not Afons.
-
- "Hey, Tommy - it's Art Arfons!"
-
- "Who's he?"
-
- "You're a cretin, Tommy."
-
- I didn't get a chance to talk with him due to the noise, but he seemed
- like a nice enough guy. The girl (Dusty) was either his daughter or
- granddaughter, I didn't catch which. They both ran twin engined
- turboshaft diggers. She beat him in the last round.
-
- The sponsors/family/pit crew seating was right by the starting line -
- you could lean over the rail and touch the tractors as they came in.
- We got a good view of how the sleds work, which I thought was very neat.
- After dealing with the Safety Nazis of the NHRA, the sight of the sled
- operator *riding* the sled, with no helmet or body armor, was slightly
- shocking. The clay surface was so hard none of the machines even threw
- dirt.
-
- Dusty Arfons got massive applause every time she fired up the Dragon
- Lady. I'd noticed the Coliseum looked more-than-normally sad. It
- turned out that during the first two days of the event, she'd blown
- eight foot flourescent tubes, ceiling tiles, and 4x8 sheets of
- corrugated iron out of the ceiling "like falling leaves" according to
- Tommy. I guess she'd shaken loose everything that'd fall by the time I
- got there, 'cause nothing else fell down. Need I mention the noise of
- twin-engined jet diggers in a smallish building? How about the
- four-engined piston jobs with zoomies? There at the starting line the
- sound pressure was so high it was blurring the viewfinder of my little
- Nikon.
-
- One class was "funny car" pickups with hydraulically operated hinged
- bodies. Again, I was a bit startled to notice about half of them had no
- firewalls - one guy had his foot pedals mounted on the bellhousing, and
- propped his foot on the valve cover of his Arias 8.3 while waiting to
- stage. Turns out that although they run 8-71s and alcohol, most of them
- only turn 5500 to 6000 RPM. Quite a few run the engine an entire season
- between teardowns. Compared to drag racing, it's pretty low budget
- stuff.
-
- Well, anyway, I had a lot of fun, and I might go again sometime.
-
-
- ----------
- Posted by: emory!chaos.lrk.ar.us!dave.williams (Dave Williams)
-