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Block: It is an all-aluminum 461-inch Donovan small-block with 4.155 bore and a raised cam location to accommodate the 4.25-inch stroke. Rick sent it to LSM after the lifter collapsed and wiped out the bores. LSM repaired them with brass sleeves and opened up the cam journals for big roller bearings. The rest of the assembly was performed by Dave Ebbert at DNE Motorsports Development.
Cage: The 'cage only has four connection points because the old owner never did decide what kind of racing he wanted to do. Rick will go with an NHRA-approved setup.
Cam: The primary problem with the valvetrain is the raised cam location and aggressive profile combined with the stock small-block-style lifters and pushrods. And even though the former owner claimed he never over-revved it (sure, dude!), the stock equipment just couldn't compete. Now the engine has Chrysler dimension lifters (0.904 inch) and a custom-grind solid roller from LSM. Rick thinks it can take 7,200-7,300 rpm, but the shift light is set for 6,800.
Chassis: The original intent was to run the Silver State Classic open road race, so Ray's Fabrication assembled the Chris Alston tube-frame chassis with the help of J Bittle from JBA. At some point, the old owner changed his mind and tried to make it a drag car. The result is a car that is neither top-speed ready nor NHRA approved but is great for the street. Rick says, "With 275s on the front, at low speeds it is a little tough to turn, otherwise it rides good on the freeway with the adjustable shocks. I've never taken it around a corner hard, I am afraid that the rear will step out and I will wreck it."
Dash: Basically, Rick's done nothing to the dash except the backlighting. Nothing else works, and there is no speedo conversion for the Jeffco transmission. He's covered the whole thing up with a Pro Comp tach. It works for us. The wiper switch controls the electric fan and the water pump, and the switch near the shifter toggles between the horn and the line lock.
The Dominator: Only the jets had been tinkered with on the out-of-the-box 1050 Holley Dominator. It was then sent to a DaVinci Performance expatriate for some booster work to get the engine to work on the street. "I think it's really driveable; I can have it at 2,000 rpm in Fourth gear and it will just start to buck a little bit. It hasn't had a burp or hiccup since. It was one of the happy surprises for me."
Exhaust: The headers were custom-made by Bob Butler. They are 2.125 primaries that step to 2.250 with a 3.50-inch collector. The system then dumps into an oval tube for ground clearance and set of MagnaFlow 3.500-inch mufflers.
Fuel: The cell is pretty small in terms of it being a street car, so Rick has to hit the gas station pretty often. There is a fuel cell that holds about 12 gallons, and a piece of foam seems to keep the fuel from sloshing around in there on the street. Rick likes it though: "Part of the appeal is popping the trunk to fill the gas tank, and the battery switch is mounted where the filler neck should be."
Heads: The shaft rockers on the Brodix CV SP 330 heads were rebuilt by T&D after the broken lifter opened up the lash and metal from the distributor gear spread glitter into everything. Otherwise the heads retain their original 14-degree canted-valve setup. According to Rick, they flow like crazy, but because some of the bolts are under the springs, you have to take some of the parts off the heads to install and remove them.
Intake: Brodix has two different port sizes for its heads and only makes one manifold, so Rick had Wilson Manifolds port the intake runners to match that of the head. Wilson also worked the floor a little and milled half an inch off the top then added the four-hole tapered spacer to help low-end driveability and still have some hood clearance.
Paint: Right now it is midnight blue, but Rick has always been partial to red. Who knows? He just doesn't want it to be too pretty, so he can drive it and not worry too much.
Pedal: Covers! He got them from an auto parts store in Yorba Linda, California, in the chrome section.
Rearend: The Camaro has a Chassisworks chromoly FAB 9 housing with a Strange aluminum dropout designed for GM 12-bolt guts, including an Eaton Posi, Strange 30-spline axles, and 3.42 gears.
Seats: The Corbeau seats are going to be replaced from bottom-of-the-line metal frames with foam so thin the springs poke you to top-of-the-line carbon-fiber seats with better pads and comfort. After the 'cage is done.
Transmission: Essentially, the Jeffco is a manually activated automatic. You have to have a clutch to start and stop but not to shift gears. You can no-lift shift, but on the street, it is a firm shift, and scary. Instead, Rick just lifts off the throttle then gets back into it. If you are just pulling levers, it is equivalent to a really stiff shift kit in an automatic. There is no park, so the car needs to be put in the opposite gear to stay put. It will roll back when it is in a forward gear or roll forward when it is in a reverse gear. Not so nice on a street car with no parking brake. The four levers are all forward, and each gear is pulled in descending order. All levers pulled back is Fourth, and when you get to a traffic light, you have to push each lever forward.
Water: The log on the front of the engine is required because the intake has no provisions for a traditional water neck. The Meziere electric pump circulates the water through custom braided lines in and out of the head.
Wheels: The 17x11-inch Budnik Prisms in the rear have a ton of room because that part of the chassis was custom-made. The 17x9.5-inch front wheels rub the headers at full lock. It never had a good turning radius to begin with.
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