The
Northeast, Part 2
By
Danny White
In
this round of 80s Funny cars, we go back to the Northeast and
feature the Arrows of R.C Sherman, Jim Wemett, Tom Gambardella,
and Bobby Lagana. The Challengers of Gary Richards and Frank
Kramberger are showcased, as are the GM products of Jerry
Caminito, Nick Boninfante, and Chuck Etchells, and the lone Ford
of Joe Amato. - January
28, 2010
In 1978, when Jim Beattie
sold the Black Magic Vega to D.A. Santucci, driver R.C. Sherman
built his own AA/FC. Sherman had Ken Cox build this Keith Black
powered Arrow, which he raced from 1978 to 1986. RC participated
mostly in match race action in the Northeastern United States. The
car raced under many banners, including the Dirt Shirt Express,
the K-Mart Motivator, Polaroid, and with Sherman’s own name. The
Arrow's known best was a 6.29 at 230 MPH in 1980. Due to a lack of
funding, RC raced the car rarely and was never able to reach its
full potential. (Photo by Big Bob Snyder)
In 1980, Jim Wemett and Tom
Anderson teamed up on this Arrow. Wemett had won the 1979 NHRA
Division 1 championship with driver George Johnson, while Anderson
had been driving the Speed Racer Vega for Mike Kase. The team
proved very tough, achieving success in the NHRA, IHRA, and match
races. The car ran a known best of 6.16 at 240 according to
Draglist files. The Arrow was replaced by the final Speed Racer
Omni in 1982, and the team raced together until 1983. (Photo by
Mike Beach, courtesy of Curt Swartz)
Owner and driver Tom
Gambardella debuted the Electric Warrior Arrow in 1979. Tom’s
machine was high dollar all the way, featuring a Pat Foster and
Jim Hume built H&H Race Craft chassis and an injector-to-pan
Ed Pink Hemi for power. Gambardella painted the car himself, then
had it lettered and airbrushed by Glen's Designs. Tom said that
the car's longer than normal headers made it louder than the
average funny car. That sound, long burnouts, and a lack of oil
downs made it a popular match racer from 1979 to 1984. Gambardella
said that many small problems kept the car from reaching its full
potential. Best times were 6.92 seconds at 215 mph. The body is
still being run today on the old Scarlet Fever TA/FC chassis.
(Photo & information courtesy of Tom Gambardella)
Gary Richards raced several
funny cars before building the Gold Coast Challenger. (In fact,
Vic Brown won the Summernationals in Richards’ Black Shadow
Mustang). Richards used the Gold Coast name originated by Don
Nieves, and he tapped Scott Weney to drive. Weney, the son of
S&W Race Cars founder Walt Weney, had been driving blown
alcohol dragsters and funny cars since the age of 16 and was a
perfect fit. Gary and Scott tuned the car to solid middle of the
road performances, hitting a known best of 6.10 before parking it.
(Photo by Norman Blake)
Former Pro Comp racer Frank
Kramberger stepped up to fuel funny cars with the Philadelphia
Flyer Challenger. Kramberger bought the car and the rights to use
the name in the early 80s. Victor Terenzio built the Challenger
for the original owner. The car was powered by a standard Keith
Black Hemi of the day. Frank raced the car with limited
success into 1985 season, when he built a new Thunderbird.
Unfortunately, the T-Bird quickly burned to the ground. Kramberger
then built a new Mustang that finally achieved long overdue
success. (Photo by Eddie Dale, courtesy of Thomas Nagy)
Popular low-bucker Bob Lagana
has raced for decades without big bucks and sponsorship money but
he still does it. In the early eighties, Lagana bought this Arrow
from Bob Pickett for match racing action. The car received the
beautiful Twilight Zone paint scheme shown here. Bob’s Keith
Black Hemi powered machine was rarely a threat for low ET, but he
made solid, consistent runs. Lagana was easy on parts because he
had no spares and he regularly scrounged for other teams’
trashed parts to continue racing. Bob ran a 6.39, 222 known best
in the Arrow. He updated the chassis with a couple of new bodies
over the remainder of the decade. Lagana would become known as the
last fuel racer to haul a nitro car on an open trailer. He and his
sons race in the Top Fuel class to this day. (Photo by Art
Cimilluca)
Chuck Etchells was known
primarily for match racing before building this Trans Am in 1984.
This version of the Future Force brought Etchells national
acclaim. Chuck hired recently-retired driver Tom Anderson to tune
the car, and Tom put Etchells into the fives. Chuck ran a best of
5.89 at 236 and qualified for several national events.
Etchells later burned the car to the ground in a 1985 match race
at Englishtown. (Photo by Norman Blake)
Joe Amato built this
super-sano Hurst/TRW backed Mustang in 1984 to race on the IHRA
circuit after the association axed the Top Fuel class. Al Swindahl
built the car and Amato’s famed crew chief Tim Richards built
the Keith Back Hemi. Joe ran a 5.80 at 254 at the IHRA Spring
Nationals at Bristol. He only raced the car a couple of times in
1984 and 1985 before returning to concentrate solely on his Top
Fueler. (Photo by Charlie Carroll)
In 1986, Nick Boninfante and
his longtime driver Pat Walsh stepped up to AA/FC with a Corvette.
They replaced that car in 1987 with this new Keith Black powered
Oldsmobile Firenza. Walsh ran a good 5.70 at 240 in the new U.S.
Male machine before stepping out of the seat. Boninfante hired R.C
Sherman to drive and Raybestos stepped in to sponsor the car. The
team became a solid player in NHRA and IHRA national event action.
(Photo by Mike Beach, courtesy of Curt Swartz)
By the end of the decade,
longtime funny car racer Jerry Caminito had become one of the best
funny car racers in the country. Caminito’s cars were known for
their clean appearance and this Oldsmobile was no different. The
beautiful Blue Thunder Cutlass was built by Murf McKinney and
powered by a Keith Black Hemi. Although Jerry did not make it to a
final round, he finished in the NHRA top ten through solid
performances. Caminito ran a best of 5.45 in 1989. (Photo by Mike
Beach, courtesy of Curt Swartz)