Welcome to another In Wheel Time podcast, a 30 minute mini version of the In Wheel Time car show that airs live every Saturday morning 8 to 11am.
Central yes channel Live from Studio A.
It's the In Wheel Time car talk show.
Coming up, chief instructor at the Radford Racing School, daddy Bullock, joins us.
We're going to talk about racing.
We're going to talk about Dodge SRT.
It's going to be good.
Conrad's going to have the In Wheel Time car clinic.
What are we talking about today?
Cold air intakes.
Cold air intakes and I'll bring you this week's automotive news Howdy, along with David Ainsley filling in for the COVID infested, mike Mars, infested, infested.
We have King Conrad DeLong.
We always need more Jeff Zeek and I'm Don Armstrong.
Thanks for joining us today.
Well, here he is and everybody here says man, that guy looks familiar because we're looking at him on the zoom.
His name is Danny Bullock.
He's the chief instructor at the Radford Racing School and official Dodge SRT Experience School.
Danny, have you been on with us before?
Hey, good morning gang.
This is my first time with you folks.
We've done a bunch of different interviews with people all over the country, but I think this is my first time with you folks.
Perfect.
That's good.
Yeah, I'm sure it was in jail last time I saw you.
Yeah, jail cell, I'm sure, but anyway it's great to have you with us today.
Thank you so much.
Tell us, give us a brief overview of Radford Racing School.
When did it start?
What's it for?
So the Radford Racing School we were founded back in 1968.
We were a previously named school before that.
Bob Bonneron started the school back then.
Ah, a Bonneron name, yep.
And so we had a change of ownership in 2019.
Brand new group of people came in and bought the school.
Amazingly enough, several of those partners were former students of the school before they came and bought it.
And when they came in, they really wanted to carry on this legacy that the school has been known for, and so they wanted to be a part of it, and they obviously had a good enough time with us that they said hey, you know what?
We want to have a piece of this, we want to be a part of the growth of this company.
And, as being a part of it, we want to come out there and race for free anytime we want to.
That might be a side benefit for sure.
Yeah, no doubt.
Yeah, so we see them out here on a regular basis.
They're always out here with different events that are going on here Some of the sponsor events that we have here with Dodge or the team from SRT.
We also have a partnership with the Gary Cines Foundation, so we see them out here several times a year and so they're here with that event as well.
And anytime we have any sponsor events when it's power stop breaks or shell gasoline you know, pencil fluids, the Goodyear Tire Company whenever they come out here, the ownership team likes to be a part of that and say hi, because this is a very special place to all of us and they like coming out and having that face to face time with those folks that help support the school.
Now you're out there at Wild Horse Pass, motorsports Park correct, yep, chandler, arizona, yeah, which is outside of Phoenix.
Yeah, we're just 18 minutes south of the airport.
It's actually a very quick drive.
It's a fantastic easy ride right down the I-10 to our place here and a 12 turn 1.1
mile track course.
Yeah, we have a 12 turn 1.1
mile course, which could be expanded into 1.6
miles and 15 turns, depending on the configuration that we have, and so we've done a lot of improvements on that track.
In June of 2020, while things were kind of on that shutdown area, they said, hey, you know what, this would be a great time to do some good improvements.
So we went and demolished the track and repaved it, did a bunch of improvements there, we did a bunch of seal coding, we did some remodeling in the buildings.
It was a great opportunity to catch up on those things that the new ownership wanted to do.
And they thought it might be a little farther down the road.
But then, when 2020 happened, they said, hey, you know what, this is a great opportunity.
Let's take this window of time to put into effect all those things we want to do, all those projects, so that when we start opening up again, we're full bore.
And you also have a drag strip there.
Now Is NHRA, the pro tour, still going through there.
So 2023 was supposed to be the last year of NHRA coming down the Wild Horse Pass.
That may or may not change.
We are working on that right now as we speak, and there's nothing in concrete just yet.
But we have been talking with them and they want to put something on the calendar.
So I think it's going to happen.
I just can't say for sure.
Yeah Well, we're keeping our fingers crossed because I know that Phoenix, that track out there, it was always on the circuit early on in the season and there's testing out there all the time.
I mean it's a very active place.
If you're into any kind of motor sports, that's the place, Yep.
So let's talk about the connection with Dodge and SRT.
Yes.
So we started our relationship with the team from SRT back in 2016.
When we first partnered with them, we had a fleet of Dodge Vipers here.
We had eight ACR Vipers and 32 Viper GTs with the TA 2.0
package on them.
They were phenomenal cars.
Let me just scrape cars.
Then we also, alongside of them, we had the Hellcat Challenger, the Hellcat Charger we had a whole fleet of different SRT vehicles that we could utilize here at the school.
Two years into the program we know the Vipers was going away.
They said we're not going to support the Vipers anymore because we're discontinuing it.
So we said, okay, well, look, we got all these Hellcats around here that work awesome.
Why don't we just replace those Vipers with those Hellcats and use those as that main vehicle?
And we've been using them ever since.
I think we've given them some feedback that may have influenced the team to develop the wide body now, with the bigger tires underneath it, that's what we use.
Basically.
Everything here is wide-bodied Challenger or wide-body charger.
I got to tell you these things work fantastic.
Dodge will always say, hey, we tout this as our muscle car, but when you see what they do on the track here, you'd be amazed.
You would not believe the performance that this car can put going through a corner as well as going down a straight line.
So we utilize 85 SRT vehicles here at the school for everything from our defensive driving courses all the way up to the advanced road racing class for drivers who have prior race experience and are looking to brush up before their next competition, and then also we use those vehicles on the drive strip.
We have five of the original 2018 Dodge SRT demons.
We've got some new Dodge Demon 170s on order and when they come here, we're going to be promoting a new class for that car and for the owners of that vehicle.
That vehicle is just phenomenal specs Over 1,000 horsepower.
I mean these things come with a parachute.
I mean anybody who takes a class with that car.
They're going to be wowed by what that vehicle can do down in the drive strip.
So we're excited to see that coming here pretty soon.
And don't you guys also have an agreement or an understanding or some sort of a deal where you buy an SRT Dodge?
You're one of those tracks that they hey, come on out here, let us show you how to drive your new car.
Absolutely so.
The partnership with SRT, the whole purpose behind it for them is that they want drivers to have a little bit more wear with all and car control knowledge before they start driving these cars on the streets and getting themselves in trouble.
Right, because there's so much horsepower, so much torque.
And so if you buy an SRT branded vehicle from Dodge, it automatically comes with a free one day SRT owners experience program.
That's already part of the sale.
So you buy the car and then you go through a little ownership verification process.
Once that's done, we can put you on the calendar and we have these programs one to two times a month and it's a fantastic program.
It's kind of a mix of inciting more enthusiasm for the SRT brand and giving you good, safe car driving skills for when you're out there trying to survive on the streets, and the camaraderie between owners.
Here.
I mean, we get upwards of 50 to 80 drivers in a program and they get here and they look around.
They're like, oh my gosh, this is awesome.
It's automatically a brotherhood amongst everybody in that room because they all have the same enthusiasm for the brand and they start talking about what they've done to their car, what they want to do to their car and oh, you live in that area, I'm just an hour away.
We got to get together and it's just.
I mean, it's about an hour's worth of them just mingling and bonding together before we even start class, and then we get into the program and by the time we're done, these folks are so ramped up.
It's an amazing time, not only for them, but for those of us that are teaching it too.
So I just bought I'm just using this as a let's just say that I bought a brand, not brand new, but an SRT that's, let's say, got a slight 50, 15,000 miles on it and I want to come to the school Now.
That's going to cost me to go to that school, correct?
Yeah, it's going to cost you if the original owner did not take advantage of the program.
Well, actually you have to be the original owner to do that.
So, yeah, if you're a second owner, you'll have to pay for the program.
How much does that cost?
It's $14.99
for the day $1500 for the school for the day Boy.
That's chump change for me.
I mean I'd save up my money for you here to do that Some of your instructors are professional drivers, correct?
Yes, a lot of us either formally raced or we are currently racing right now.
I've got a few of them that are racing right now in the Road Racing Series, sro, and one of them was running in IMSA for a while.
A couple of us ran together in the Grand Am Series years ago.
That's where I ran.
My pro series was Grand Am back in the day, and I also used to Road Race motorcycles in the championship cup series for five years a phenomenal time there.
Everybody here, all the instructors, have some kind of race experience and that's really what helps mold them into a.
It's one piece that helps make them a good instructor.
I want to know about some sort of a go kart.
Do you have a go kart track there?
Yes, yeah, we've got that.
You said that like yes, we do.
It's a 0.9
mile little road course for karts and we have some really cool.
You know they're gas code karts.
They're one speed.
They're awesome for, like the group programs, because you can get a bunch of people and it's just a gas pedal and a brake, we pull, start these things and people go out and start driving.
And we're also looking at expanding that car program to have some purpose-built race karts like a shifter kart or something similar.
If you've never driven a shifter kart, these things have a 125cc two stroke dirt bike engine, basically attached to the back axle, and it also comes with that six speed transmission that comes on that dirt bike.
These things are capable of going from zero to 100 miles an hour in about six seconds and we're looking at possibly bringing those down here again.
We used to have them a long time ago and we're now developing plans to see if we can get them out here again.
That is so much fun, all right.
So I've got a 16 year old daughter.
I want to put her in a driving school.
I don't know what to do.
They've got some around here, but I've heard of Radford, slash, bondurant and we've got, you know, aunt Mary that lives out there in Phoenix.
We're going to come visit her.
Do you have something for the 16 year old and learn how to drive?
We absolutely do.
If you have a driver who's newer to being behind the wheel, we have a one, two or three day advanced teen driving course.
Now, we call it the advanced teen driving course because we don't teach them how to drive.
We teach them how to drive better.
We want them to have a little bit of real time before they get here to the class, because we want them to have good wear with all with the vehicle Right, and what we do is we give them these survival skills that you would look at If you came and watched the class for even just a couple of hours.
You go, my gosh, why didn't they teach us this when we first got our licenses?
Yeah, this should be mandatory.
And so we teach them evasive maneuvers, how to avoid an accident that happens in front of them.
We teach them the basic vision skills, which you would think, well, what's big about vision?
Most people don't look far enough ahead, so it's one of those big foundations that we start with.
We also get every teen class into this kid car, the most valuable vehicle we've got here to teach with, and when you get in that car, what we are able to do is we have these hydraulic rams on these days.
Can they kind of look like training wheels?
I've seen it.
Yes, wow, yes, as you can raise the back end or the front end up to reduce the grip and make it feel like they're driving on snow or ice, and they learn that very quickly.
It's such a phenomenal teaching tool.
And you know, jeff's got a granddaughter that just started driving this past year and she drives grandma's car.
She doesn't have a car of her own yet, but she's getting there.
I'm thinking, ok, well, now here is a real Christmas present.
Absolutely.
This is the best thing you could do for your child who's driving or a grandchild that's driving.
You get them something like this as a birthday gift or a Christmas gift and, believe me, it is not like any other driving so you would think of.
When teens think of going to driving school, they think, oh, I'm going to be in a classroom with a teacher in front of me the whole day.
And when we see them here, we come in the morning and there are, their heads are slumped in their arms, going oh boy, this will be boring.
And when we're out of that classroom after about a half hour of talking and we go out and start driving and their eyes just light up and they're like, wow, I never knew about this, this is so much fun.
What do we do next?
And the excitement just ramps up.
From there, it's, it's.
It's very satisfying actually to see it because that means they're into it.
And what we all as driving enthusiasts want is we want the next generation to be enthusiastic about driving to we.
You know my daughter is.
I've got three daughters, one 21 now and at first she wasn't really that much into driving.
We did some kart racing a little bit in the beginning, when she was a young teenager, and then when it came to getting her license, she didn't seem into it too much.
And then when she finally did get it, all she wanted to do was drive.
That's all she wanted to do.
Oh, you need something from the store, I'll get it, mom.
And so it was it.
Now she is enthusiast, and I think we all try to garner that in our on our kids and hopefully keep this love of automobiles and driving a lot.
So is there an age limit?
Or we ask that?
Yeah, we ask that they.
They are at least 16 years old and have had some driving experience for at least six months on the road.
Now I have seen us take drivers that were a little younger, maybe didn't have as much a seat time or maybe didn't have their license for as long, or maybe they had their permit and so, but they've grown up driving trucks on the farm.
They drove side by side or quads and we look at that and say, hey look, it looks like this driver.
They already kind of know how to handle a vehicle a little bit.
We can still take them on as well, but we definitely want them to have some seat time under their belt first.
Yeah, could you also offer counseling for Don's older daughters who didn't realize they had a 16 year old sister?
Hey, yeah, I don't know if I can contribute to that or not.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, you don't have to, it's all right, I've already been.
I've already been relegated to the back seat anyway, so no worries there, all right.
So where do we find out all of the things that that Radford Racing School has got to offer?
You can go online to wwwradfordracingschoolcom.
We're also on Instagram.
We're on Facebook, radford Racing School.
You can find us everywhere online and if you're in the area, stop down and see us.
We're right down the street, right Just 18 minutes out of town, downtown Phoenix.
So if you find yourself visiting the Phoenix area or have some family, stop on down here.
Where Wild Horse Pass Boulevard Just, it's called gate number three.
There's four gates to the race facility.
We're down gate number three.
You'll come down and see all the chargers and challengers all brightly colored, and you'll know you're in the right spot.
Well, let me just say this you know, I know that the Bob Bondarant School is no more, but it really is, because he was the one that really started this.
And I remember back years and years and years ago, the Bob Bondarant School of driving or racing, whatever it was, but that's the one name that stands out to me and, you know, there's got to be a sense of pride that this is the new version of that, because he was the guy that really brought it all together.
The evolution of it.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
We're all very proud to be here and be working for the Radford Racing School.
A lot of us started our careers under Bob.
I took my first racing lesson with Bob when I was 14 years old, and then I came out to Phoenix to start working for him about a dozen years later and I've now been at the school a little over 25 years.
Well, congratulations to you.
It looks like a ton of fun, great information and a good vacation, that's for sure you bet.
Absolutely.
Come on out and see us gang.
We'll see you soon.
Danny, thanks again.
We'll talk to you again soon.
Danny Bullock, chief Instructor at Radford Racing School, official Dodge SRT experience kind of school.
All right, let's move on.
Let's get to a Conrad's car clinic now, shall we?
So, yeah, we're going to talk today about cold air intakes.
You know we've been talking about engines as air pumps and how they work.
You know many, many of factory production cars had cold air intakes.
One of the original ones was this one, which was on the Z11 409 in the Chevy Impala.
She's real fine my 409.
Well, they actually pulled the cold air from the base of the windshield, the cowl intake and that's a factory air intake on that.
So you know.
And then the evolution of it as it went through years.
That one was 63.
Here's a 66 cold air intake and those big tubes that are coming out of the side.
That's on an Oldsmobile W-30.
Of course it is Tri-power, that's got three two-barrel car tires and those big tubes actually went to scoops that were mounted under the front bumper and that's what brought the cold air in that intake.
That air cleaner right, there is probably about a $3,000 air cleaner today.
So if anybody's got one in their trunk, keep it.
And then they evolved.
Or on their engine.
Yeah, this is a 68 and 69, the W-31.
I love the gold engine.
Well, that is that the gold at Oldsmobile meant it was a 350.
You know, Oldsmobile 455s were blue, the 425s were red and the 400 was a bronze color.
So when you pop the hood of an Oldsmobile, if the engine stole the original color, visually you should be able to tell what size engine is in it.
And then they went from that 68 and 69 and in 70, they offered this.
Now this is what fits underneath those two big snorkel hood scoops and if you look right in the center of that there's kind of like a little butterfly flap that has a vacuum hose going to it and the engine would go wide open, throttle, that vacuum hose would lose its vacuum and that flap would open up and would allow the hood scoops to ram air into the intake manifold.
Pretty cool, pretty cool operation.
And that's what's on my Rally 350.
And then Pontiac also did it with their Ram Air 3 and Ram Air 4s.
Through the hood scoops that dumped right into the intake manifold.
But it wasn't just the performance cars, you know, even some of the everyday stuff would have cold air intakes on them from the factory.
This next one is off of a Chevrolet pickup truck from the 90s and instead of going to the cowl of the windshield they just collected air from behind the headlight, out of the fender area, because they didn't want that hot air in the engine compartment to get into the engine and they wanted to kind of keep it a little, keep some colder air coming in.
And then in the early 2000s they changed to this kind of an intake manifold.
Now this still dumped.
What the hell is that?
Well, this still looks like some sort of a gun.
Yeah, well, it's still dumped over to the uh, an, uh a port in the fender to draw the air in.
But to see all those weird little tubes and chambers.
Those weird little tubes and chambers were designed to create to eliminate the harmonic noise, the droning noise that could be created by an intake, uh, air intake tube.
You know we were talking off the air before about how, when we were kids, you just flip the air cleaner on your, on your carburetor, and you'd hear that noise.
While manufacturers didn't want that noise, they put all these extra tubes and chambers to kind of counterphase that noise.
Oh, and then, uh, you know you talked about your Corvette.
Next one is, uh, um, an air box that again takes air from the fender, uh, and, and dumps it into a cold air box Uh, that's an aftermarket air box, uh, and then, uh, the Corvette, uh, would pull from, excuse me, would pull air from in front of the radiator Again, looking for an area that the air wasn't already heated.
Um, because hot air, uh, has a negative impact on performance.
Cold air is more dense and has more oxygen in it.
Hence cold air intakes.
Very cool, yeah, very, but the horsepower increases were were relatively miniscule.
My, you know people that advertise oh, we can get you 15 horsepower with a cold air intake.
Uh, put it on a dyno.
I don't think that I always had a fascination and love for the look of the cowl induction from Chevrolet with the little flap up on the hood.
Well, and that's like, uh, I showed you on the Oldsville that little flap is under the hood.
With that little flap they were taking the air from that high pressure area right at the base of the windshield in the hood and that's why that cowl induction flap would open up.
When that would open up, that would push air into the uh, into the air cleaner.
That's great stuff.
You didn't talk about any about the air filters.
No, and the K and N I've discovered has less restriction than, say, for instance, a Fram filter that you would get at Walmart.
And that's that's.
I'll do that next week.
That measures the micron of what allows the air to go through.
The problem with that is the larger the micron, the more debris can get through.
The way K and N gets around it is their filters have an oil on them, but we'll talk about that next week.
Okay, let's do it next week.
Uh, one thing that I didn't want to mention before we go to break an EV adoption increase.
As EV adoption increases, JD power says industry leaders should be concerned.
Satisfaction with public charging during the first half of the year fell to its lowest level recorded in JD power studies, and as electric vehicle adoption increases, industry leaders should be concerned.
According to the research firm, most consumers are reluctant to buy an EV worry that public chargers are not available.
Poor charger performance could be another hindrance.
According to Brent Gruber, executive director of the EV practice at JD power, automakers and public charging stakeholders, such as network operators and charger manufacturers, should improve the charging experience before it becomes a runaway train.
Thank you.
Charging satisfaction at both level two chargers and level three chargers declined in nearly every category of the 2023 US electric vehicle experience public charging study released Wednesday.
Satisfaction with level two declined an average of 617 points on a 1000 point scale, 16 points lower than a year ago.
Level three chargers sunk 20 points to an average of 654.
Tesla was the only company to score above average.
He was fielded in collaboration with Plugshare, an EV driver app maker and research firm.
More than 15,000 owners of battery electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles participated from January through June of this year.
Plugshare.
Isn't that where Joe Biden went to get more hair?
That's good, I like that.
I got it.
Plugshare.
We should have thought of that.
Jeff just saying well, you too, Conrad, look at you.
I know you got just a few wisps left, Grast is catching up with the back.
Grast does not grow on busy streets.
David, are you listening to this down here?
Listen to him, look at him.
Full head of hair.
Where's your hair?
My room to talk.
Well, at least I've got some.
Hey, quick break.
Now I'll bring you from the side over the middle.
You're on the end of the time Car talk show.
We'll wrap up today's show right after this.
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About this episode
Danny Bullock, chief instructor at Radford Racing School, shares insights on the evolution of the school, its partnership with Dodge SRT, and the unique driving programs offered. The discussion highlights the school's history, the impressive fleet of SRT vehicles, and the advanced teen driving courses designed to enhance driving skills. Bullock emphasizes the importance of safe driving education for new drivers and the camaraderie fostered among participants. The episode also features a segment on cold air intakes and their impact on vehicle performance.
Joining us on this episode of In Wheel Time Car Talk, it is Danny Bullock, the Chief Instructor at Radford Racing School.
Ever wondered about the transformation of Radford Racing School under new ownership or the thrilling partnership with Dodge SRT? Danny unveils all and takes us on a virtual tour of the remarkable 12 turn 1.1-mile track at Wild Horse Pass Motorsports Park. We also get a peek into the future with the possibility of NHRA returning to Wild Horse Pass.
We shift gears and tackle the crucial topic of teen driving education with an in-depth look at Radford Racing School's advanced course. Discover the innovative 'kid car' and how it simulates different driving conditions to equip youngsters with vital skills.
In our Feature segment, it is Konrad's Car Clinic - we discussing the evolution of cold air intakes in cars, from the Z11 409 in the Chevy Impala to the air boxes of the early 2000s.
All this and more on this episode of In Wheel Time Car Talk!
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