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A K&N Cold Air Intake System Can Increase Your Car's Horsepower While Protecting Your Engine

It only takes 90 minutes to reap the benefits of a K&N cold air intake system

It only takes 90 minutes to reap the benefits of a K&N cold air intake system

It doesn’t matter if you own a 15-year-old commuter or a brand new sports car, you can always find a reason to want more power out of your car. Whether it will allow you to merge onto the highway more safely or to pull ahead of your buddy between stoplights, the need for more power is insatiable. However, most power-adders are either too expensive or too labor intensive for a casual enthusiast. What if we told you there was a bolt on solution that can add power and was easy enough for you to do in your driveway?

One of the fastest ways to add more airflow, horsepower, and throttle response to your car while still protecting the engine is with a cold air intake. The way an engine works is by taking in air, mixing it with fuel, and combusting the air/fuel mixture, which then sends power to the crankshaft and onto the transmission. The more fuel you can add to the mixture, the more power you can make, to a point. But if you just add fuel without increasing the amount of air in the cylinder, you will run the engine rich and lose power. That is where the cold air intake comes into play.

K&N air intakes provide a less restrictive, more direct path for air into the engine

K&N air intakes provide a less restrictive, more direct path for air into the engine

Cold air intakes are also called cool air intakes and performance air intakes. They typically consist of a type of plastic or metal tube, a heat shield or air box, and a filter. The way they help your engine is by providing a larger, less restrictive airflow path to the engine. By allowing the engine to intake more air, the vehicle’s computer can add more fuel, resulting in a more explosive mixture, thereby making more power. Let’s take a look at a cold air intake to help you better understand how it can help your car make more power, while still protecting your engine.

This particular intake is from K&N Engineering. They have been making cold air intakes longer than any other company and are the worldwide leader in cold air intakes for cars and trucks. As you can see, the air intake tube is made of a black plastic, which is called high density polyethylene, or HDPE. This material allows the engineers the ability to maneuver around obstacles in the engine bay when looking for the best airflow path. At the end of the tube is a signature K&N red washable air filter. These filters are made from multiple layers of cotton filter media that has been treated with a special oil to help stop contaminants that can be harmful to your engine. Around the filter is a custom aluminum heat shield. When the hood is closed, it seals against the weather stripping on the heat shield, making a sort of air box that helps prevent the intake from ingesting hot engine bay air. That is where the cold in the name comes from.

If you ever questioned the power gains, here is a 2007 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 dyno chart: 56 hp!

If you ever questioned the power gains, here is a 2007 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 dyno chart: 56 hp!

The cold air part is also important in making more power. Cold air is denser and contains more oxygen molecules than warm air does. So if you can get cooler air into your engine, your car will be able to mix more fuel with that air, making more power. Combine that with the more air through the larger and less restrictive filter and intake tube and you can see up to a 10-15 horsepower increase. K&N has even reported an estimated increase of 56.96 horsepower out of the 57-2571 intake for 2007-2009 Shelby GT500!

Companies like K&N typically offer several different cold air intakes for vehicles. These vary by type of materials used in the intake tube, to type of filter: from a traditional oiled cotton media to a non-oiled synthetic media. The choice is ultimately up to you. One cool thing about K&N intakes is that they come with a 10-year/Million Mile Limited Warranty and are guaranteed to increase the horsepower of your vehicle. Check them out to see all the intakes they have to offer.

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K&N Engineering to be Official Sponsor of the 2017 Mint 400 Race in Las Vegas, NV

Mint 400 Banner with K&N as an official sponsor of the race

"The Great American Off-Road Race”, aka the Mint 400 will happen March 1st - 5th 2017

One of motorsports’ oldest off-road races is upon us. Over 350 vehicles including trucks, UTVs, and buggies will be competing in an off-road race that has been around probably since before you were born. Surrounded by thousands of miles of open desert just south of Las Vegas, the famous (or infamous) Mint 400 is about to come to life once again.

You may or may not have heard of the Mint 400. If you’re a race fan and haven’t, well, you’re not a race fan. If you frequently visit Las Vegas, there’s a good chance you might have spotted a flyer while checking in at your hotel. Or perhaps you noticed one of the wall posters on the way to the casino to lose your first $100 at blackjack. (Buy a K&N intake next time; the joy of horsepower lasts longer!) Maybe you’re just a huge Johnny Depp fan and you remember the scene from the movie Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas where Depp’s character is shooting photo coverage of the Mint 400 while attempting to drink a beer amidst the slew of dirt and dust. (Spoiler alert - he ends up dumping the muddy beer.) Of course, that’s just one of the many outrageous antics that happen in the film adapted from Hunter S. Thompson's novel of the same name, but truth be told, even Johnny had no clue what was in store for the Mint 400.

Mint 400 Day Racing

The first Mint 400 race was an endurance race from Las Vegas to Lake Tahoe, California

Here’s a little bit of what we know about the Mint 400. Back in 1967, a Las Vegas Journalist and auto racing enthusiast by the name of Norm Johnson was working in public relations for Del Webb's Mint Hotel in downtown Las Vegas. To generate buzz for the new hotel, he created an endurance off-road race between two identical dune buggies from The Mint Hotel in Vegas, to the Sahara Hotel in Lake Tahoe, California. Media coverage caught race teams and auto racing fan’s attention and thus, the Mint 400 was born.

Norm took title of Race Director through 1974 and even participated in the race from 1969-1982. During the second year (1968) Norm’s close friends and famed race car drivers Mel Larson and Parnelli Jones helped him with financing a purse prize of $30,000, increasing the participant list exponentially. Some of the most famous and recognizable names that have raced in the Mint 400 include Parnelli Jones, Al Unser, Mickey Thompson, Jack Flannery, Walker Evans, James Garner, Steve McQueen, Mort Sahl, Gordon Cooper, and many more.

Pit Crew Challenge Mint 400

The "Pit Crew Challenge" has become a popular event at the Mint 400

In 1972, the Mint Hotel executive and longtime Mint 400 Race Director K.J. Howe created “The Girls of the Mint 400” to add glamor and PR value to the race. Today it is known as the “Miss Mint 400” competition. Hundreds of girls submit their photos to the Mint 400 website and then are posted up for viewers to vote. Six Miss Mint 400 Finalists are then selected and one winner is determined through a series of interviews made by a team of judges.

Come 1988, the Mint 400 race ended when the Las Vegas Mint Hotel was sold to new owners. After a 20-year hiatus the “Great American Off-Road Race” was revived in 2008 by longtime sponsor General Tire with help from the Southern Nevada Off-Road Enthusiasts group. Trucks with newer and better-than-before race technology were competing and media coverage was abundantly improved due to social media and portable cameras and phones used by teams and fans alike.

Mint 400 Night Racing

The various Mint 400 races tend to go on into the night

In 2012, the Mint 400’s new owners, film and TV producers Matt and Joshua Martelli, partnered with the Best in the Desert Racing Association to get the Mint 400 on the championship schedule. For the first time, a new one hundred mile loop was carved out for the 400-mile race.

With the 2017 race coming up fast, last minute modifications and testing is being done by race teams and spectators are booking their Vegas suites. Sponsor spots have all been claimed with the Polariz RZR taking the title role and BF Goodrich as the presenting brand. K&N is proud to be an official sponsor not only of the Mint 400 race, but also of many of the teams and drivers competing in the race as well. A few of the K&N-sponsored racers include names like Bryce Menzies, Curt Leduc, Tracy Graf, Steve and Brett Sourapas, Mitch Guthrie Jr, Nicole Pitell-Vaughan of Total Chaos Fabrication, and even Katie Vernola, a former K&N Calendar model who will be racing in the UTV Pro Turbo Class.

Miss Mint 400 Contestants 2016

Race Director K.J. Howe created “The Girls of the Mint 400” to add glamour to the race

It makes sense for K&N Filters to be a part of the Mint 400 because of our involvement in the development of filtration technology for all kinds of off road vehicles. When racing off-road, filtration can be the deciding factor between a win and a loss. Many K&N products are available for trucks, dirt bikes, and UTVs.

So get ready for the action! Get ready for the madness! Go grab the family and make a trip to Las Vegas that you’ll never forget. The “Great American Off-Road Race” is just around turn 2 and coming up fast!

Miss Mint 400 Contestants 2016

Six Miss Mint 400 Finalists are selected and one winner is determined by judges

Bryce Menzies race suit red bull

K&N-sponsored Bryce Menzies will compete in the 2017 Mint 400

Bryce Menzies mint 400 race

K&N-sponsored Bryce Menzies will competing in the 2016 Mint 400

Mint 400 parade Las Vegas Blvd.

There is a parade for the Mint 400 on Thursday through Las Vegas Blvd

Katie Vernola Miss Mint 2016

K&N-sponsored UTV racer and former calendar model Katie Vernola will be racing in the Mint 400

Graf racing Mint 400

Over 350 vehicles will be competing in the Mint 400

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K&N's Own Steve Williams Wins NHRA Super Comp Title at NHRA Winternationals

Steve Williams took home his third Winternationals win in a row at the 2017 Winternationals

Steve Williams took home his third Winternationals win in a row

At the NHRA season opening Winternationals at Auto Club Raceway in Pomona, someone told Steve Williams that when his luck turns around, it realty turns around. Williams parlayed a winning streak that started two years ago and added his name to a short list of drag racing greats.

Williams won the NHRA Super Comp title in Pomona, defeating Dave Alves in the final round by 0.0028 seconds. It was the last of a long weekend of close races and tight challenges. It was his third win in a row at Pomona putting him in company with Don Prudhomme and Greg Anderson, NHRA drivers who have won at least three races in a row at the same event.

“We went from having really bad luck at Pomona to really good luck,” said Williams, who is the Chief Engineering Officer at K&N.

There was a time when Williams did not have success at Pomona. He was a runner-up five times at the track. His cars, championship cars at other tracks, had mechanical failures and malfunctions. Sometimes it was difficult to pinpoint the problems. But for the last three years, no one has been able to beat Williams at Pomona.

“The coolest part is I’ve had success at a lot of different race tracks across the country,” Williams said. “Pomona has not been one of them. I lost a lot of finals here because of breakage. Just crazy stuff. All of a sudden in 2015 it turned around. We won last year in the dragster and I won again.”

The 2017 Winternationals win made for 12 national wins and 42 event wins of Steve's NHRA career

The 2017 Winternationals win made for 12 national wins and 42 event wins of Steve's NHRA career

Gordon Collett was the first NHRA driver to win three events in a row from 1966-1968. Prudhomme won four events in a row from 1975-1978. Bobby Taylor won three in a row from 1995-1997. Rick Santos won four in a row from 1998-2001. Anderson completed the trifecta from 2006-2008.

Williams brought two cars to Pomona. His other car was not working well. He had transmission problems, which forced him and his team to focus on the Super Comp car.

“It was one of those strange weekends where I lost second round in my other car,” Williams said. “It was a much better car than the dragster.”

His Super Comp car, on the other hand, was nearly flawless.

“I honestly raced with a pretty fast car all weekend,” Williams said. “All of a sudden I just noticed the car was so consistent. The last three or four rounds, I just started to trust it. We just had some killer races. I think in the fourth round I won by three-thous (.003 seconds).”

He won his 12th national event and the 42nd event of his NHRA career. But in the finals, he was at a little disadvantage. Alves won the right to choose lanes and put Williams in a spot with the setting sun in his eyes.

This third Winternationals win in a row puts Steve in the same category as greats like Don Prudhomme

This third Winternationals win in a row puts Steve in the same category as greats like Don Prudhomme

“In the final, to be honest with you, the sun was in my eyes,” Williams said. “That left lane is just tough, he won the coin toss and I was able to just push my helmet down enough to get that glare out. I caught the tree good. I think we ran dead on with a three.”

The celebration after he won the final race was huge. People from K&N celebrated with Williams’ team and family. He said nearly 50 people were on stage with him for the celebration photo at the track.

“Considering we dodged rain the first couple of days, it was pretty uneventful to be honest with you,” Williams said. “Sunday went off without a hitch. We were pretty much just round-robining. Cool the car down, 15 minutes, they call you back. They had a good crowd. Sunday was a beautiful day.”

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Olsbergs MSE Rallycross Team Recognizes Partner K&N in Custom Carbon Fiber Intake

2016 was the first season with Honda for Oldsberg MSE, who had been running Fords

An Olsbergs MSE Honda kicking up dirt during the 2016 Global Rallycross season

If you’re looking for another motorsport that you can compare to Rallycross, why not take NHRA Pro Stock? In both cases the car bodies need to remain stock appearing and by rules there’s very little allowed in terms of driver’s aides, unlike some forms of motorsports. It puts the outcome squarely on the shoulders of the drivers and in both cases it makes for a great show.

The easiest way to imagine a Rallycross course - if you’ve never seen one - is to think of a Supercross circuit, now make it a little wider, with a few less jumps (that still launch the cars for 70 feet) and more space between them. Now turn 10 race cars loose and the barely-controlled mayhem that results is Rallycross.

"Rallycross is quite a pure sport. It’s put a lot of emphasis in the last 15 years on driver performance," said Ian Davies, team manager for the K&N-supported Olsbergs MSE Red Bull Honda team. "We don’t have electric aids, we have to have a mechanical gear lever, there are no semi-automatic gearboxes in our industry. We’ve kept things real," he explained to Red Bull Motorsports.

Wiman is a former Rallycross champion, both in Europe and the United States

Joni Wiman sliding his Honda Civic Coupe at the 2016 Phoenix Global Rallycross event

What the cars do have are engines tuned to produce around 600 horsepower for a 2.0L turbocharged four cylinder engine, with maximum kept in check via a 45 mm intake restrictor. The cars all carry a launch control that’s effective for just two seconds at the start. Olsbergs MSE is utilizing a sophisticated all-wheel drive system from Sadev that Davies is not willing to talk about. Combined it provides the ability to reach 60 mph within a rear wing of a Formula 1 car. That’s less time than it takes to say “zero to sixty” even if you talk really fast.

2016 was the first year for Olsbergs MSE running the new Honda Civic Coupe (having run Fords in the past), so there was a learning curve involved. Their top finishing driver was Joni (pronounced Yoni) Wiman, a rallycross driver from Finland. While Wiman was Global Rallycross Champion for OMSE in a Ford in 2013, in 2016 he finished sixth overall. Drivers for 2017 have not yet been announced.

A quick look at their record and you’ll understand why Honda secured OSME’s services. The team has earned a sizeable haul of 19 Summer X Games medals, including podium sweeps at Los Angeles in 2011 and Brazil in 2013, and its drivers are podium regulars in World and European Rallycross competition.

Oldsberg MSE has been partners with K&N Filters for a number of years and relies on its products

Olsbergs MSE formed a custom intake with K&N logo to house the conical filter and Precharger

2017 will be the second season that OMSE Red Bull will compete with Hondas in the Global Rallycross. Preparation for the coming season is well-underway. The cars are being completely stripped down and according to Davies there are upgrades in every area. The team utilizes the resources of its home base in Sweden as well as its shop in the Charlotte, North Carolina, area. Being based in North Carolina during the season avoids having to ship cars and parts back and forth between their home base for what is an entirely American series.

Part of the having preparation includes a new custom fabricated carbon fiber air box for the Honda. It’s an upgrade to the 2016 design but we can’t say anything more. Besides all we can do is look at the beautifully embossed K&N Filters logo on the air box. Their motivation for fabricating this amazing piece? “We have used K&N Filters for several years now and have a great belief in their product and are proud to give them something back by demonstrating our commitment to them,” Davies said.

The 2017 Red Bull Global Rallycross event schedule is as follows:

Round 1: Memphis, TN (April 29)

Round 2: Louisville, KY (May 21)

Round 3: Thompson, CT (June 3)*

Round 4: Thompson, CT (June 4)*

Round 5: Canada (June 17)*

Round 6: Canada (June 18)*

Round 7: Indianapolis, IN (July 9)

Round 8: Atlantic City, NJ (August 12)*

Round 9: Atlantic City, NJ (August 13)*

Round 10: Seattle, WA (September 9)*

Round 11: Seattle, WA (September 10)*

Round 12: Los Angeles, CA (October 14)

*Indicates doubleheader

Specific event details, including venues, ticket sale information, and broadcast times, will be released in the coming weeks.

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Ultra4 Unlimited Class Racer Pellegrino Takes 11th Place at 2017 King of the Hammers

Photo of Tony Pellegrino's Ultra4 Unlimited Class Car driver's side ready for race day!

K&N Brand Ambassador, Tony Pellegrino's Ultra4 Unlimited Class beast ready for race day!

Different people are fascinated by different things. Some are fascinated by art and music while others have an insatiable need to see what makes things tick or how they work. The simple act of taking a four-stroke apart can inspire and perhaps even mold a young mind. So is the case for a K&N Brand Ambassador and loyalist, Tony Pellegrino, whose father learned early on that it might be a good idea to keep his tools under lock and key if he ever had hopes of mowing the lawn again!

Pellegrino, grew up in sunny Southern California and was afforded a very outdoorsy lifestyle. Tony’s dad, Jim Pellegrino, spent quality time with his 3 boys teaching them about the finer things in life, like how to ride a dirt bike, and that really cool things come with motors! In fact when Tony was just five years old he raced a little mini bike that his uncle Frank had built for him, complete with ape hanger bars at Conejo Valley Days, back when Conejo Valley Days had motorcycle races! At the age of twelve Tony would go on to be the youngest competitor on two wheels to race the legendary Barstow to Vegas 175 mile desert race. Who knows, he might still hold that record to date!

Photo of Team GenRight putting the transmission back into the Ultra4 car

Team GenRight getting the transmission repaired and replaced for race day

As a high schooler, Tony would hop in his car and cruise with his buddies on a Friday or Saturday night. He and his friends would show off their killer rides in hopes they might turn a head or two. Toward the end of high school, Pellegrino met a fellow car guy named Mike Kirby, who was extremely knowledgeable when it came to cars. Kirby built and raced his own cars and would go on to be a mentor and teacher for Tony.

In his early twenties Tony met a young lady who would ultimately become his wife, the mother of their two boys and the yin to his yang in business. Debbie Youngers Pellegrino earned her degree in psychology from Chico State and later went on to study business. Nicknamed the Badass Boss Lady at GenRight Offroad, she’s responsible for anything to do with money! From ordinary tasks like paying the bills and keeping the shop lights on in their 45,000 square foot shop to making sure that GenRight Avenue is on the map at Hammertown. With a growing business comes growing responsibilities and Tony’s marketing prowess shows no signs in slowing the momentum of GenRight.

Photo of Pellegrino chasing the competition down the Back Door trail

Pellegrino chasing the competition down Back Door trail

For this family, stuff like camping, motorcycles, and off-roading is just a way of life. From four-wheeling from Santa Barbara to Solvang on their honeymoon to getting their oldest on a motorcycle at the age of 7, the Pellegrinos enjoy their life outdoors. But according to Pellegrino, with age comes a cage and in this case a Jeep. Before long Debbie and Tony found themselves checking out other Jeep builds and soaking up all they could with regards to modifications and improvements. Having experience in dirt bike riding and four-wheeling, Tony collected parts that folks would recommend and before long he discovered that too many of these parts simply didn’t work together.

Photo of GenRight Team Driver's - Jordan, Jami and Tony Pellegrino talking race prep

GenRight Team Drivers - Jordan, Jami, and Tony Pellegrino talking race prep

Always interested motorcycles & RC cars, a self-proclaimed motor head who loved working on cars, Tony founded GenRight in 2005. Born out of necessity for better parts for his own Jeep, GenRight has grown into a nationally recognized brand. An off-road vehicle builder, parts fabricator, and dealer with a reputation that stands up to its original concept and mission, Genuine Ideas Engineered Right. Over the years they have stretched and grown beyond their original investors, moved five times from the result of rapid business growth and were influential in growing the rock-crawling movement. But that doesn’t seem to phase this self-motivated, driven, and persistent business owner, it simply adds fuel to his fire. And to think it all started with a gas tank!

Photo of Pellegrino passing the competition on Jack Hammer

Pellegrino once again picking the better line passing the competition on Jack Hammer

After hearing rumblings about a relatively new desert/rock crawling event, King of the Hammers, Tony headed back out to Johnson Valley with fresh eyes and his Jeep to check it out. While tooling around the lake bed and hitting a few trails, something Pellegrino was very familiar with, a guy by the name of Randy Slawson (Bomber Fabrication and 2x King) offered to give him a ride in his desert prepared car. Tony vividly recalls Randy suggesting that racing his Jeep at KOH was kinda like bringing a knife to a gunfight. So the next question became whether to build or buy a project car. The end result, buy a project car for Team GenRight to race at the next King of the Hammers in just three short months. After the first test day out on the lake bed with the car, the project became a tear down and total rebuild of epic proportions. Team GenRight couldn’t get back to the shop fast enough to get started on reworking the chassis, rebuilding the suspension, and creating a setup that would allow them to finish the race, much less on the podium. Team GenRight's Crew Chief, Darren Ruzicka, scrambled to prep the car for the next KOH race, testing the setup as they moved toward race day. The team went through three LS1 motors during testing and ultimately grabbed an LS1 out of a 5th Gen Camaro at the junkyard the week of the race. In the end, Tony Pellegrino was one of 100 entrants to start the 135 mile race, crossing the finish line in 14th place at the 2010 King of the Hammers event.

Photo of Pellegrino climbing a trail, highlighting the articulation of the GenRight suspension.

Pellegrino showing how capable and nimble the GenRight Ultra4 Car is in the rough

KOH changes course every year. They use the same trails, but change the course configuration to keep the racers on their toes. Whether a figure eight, clover leaf, or running out of the main pit in the opposite direction, King of the Hammers is considered the toughest one-day off-road race in the world. It is the largest off-road race event in North America in terms of both competitors and spectators. In its 11th year, this world renowned event shows no signs of stopping any time soon. This year, 300 plus race teams along with more than 35,000 spectators converged on the Means Dry Lake Bed at the Johnson Valley Off Highway Vehicle Area in Lucerne Valley, California, from February 3rd to the 11th, featuring desert racing at its very best.

Photo of Pellegrino and Rea in the GenRight Ultra4 Class Car on Full of Hate trail

Pellegrino and Rea twisting their way through the Full of Hate trail at King of the Hammers

2017 marks Team GenRight's 8th running of the King of the Hammers. It's safe to say that GenRight was instrumental in helping to grow not only the GenRight brand but collaboratively the other brands and sponsors involved with KOH as the event has grown exponentially over the past few years. GenRight became involved with K&N in 2014 at the Off-Road Expo after a K&N Rep noted that his Ultra4 Car had a dinky little air intake, not nearly what he needed to get maximum airflow for all that horsepower. Now Tony runs two big K&N intakes improving the efficiency and performance of his 800hp motor. In fact, every Jeep, truck, UTV, or Ultra4 car they build comes equipped with a K&N intake and products.

Photo of GenRight Ultra4 Car on Outerlimits Trail

Pellegrino and Rea coming down Outerlimits Trail at the 2017 King of the Hammers

In 2015, Darren Ruzicka built Tony a brand new Ultra4 car. Every part has been CNC’d and nothing has been left to chance. This year they updated the transfer case, put in a new Reid Racing Turbo 400 racing transmission and torque converter. The new LS based motor is a solid Billet block by RHS, without a single Chevy part. Called a tall block, this normally aspirated 454 ci. uses fewer parts and boasts 755 lb-ft of torque. Perfect for trails like Backdoor and Chocolate Thunder. It also has 800hp, plenty of top end for reaching speeds upward of 130 mph in the open desert. Telemetry showed that Pellegrino got his Ultra4 car up to 118.8 mph out on that open desert, during this year's race.

Photo of Pellegrino and Rea coming to the podium for a post race interview

Pellegrino and Rea heading to the podium post race for a follow up interview and debriefing

Heat, environmental elements, and the nature of the race cause engine and suspension components to take a beating and can cause parts to rapidly deteriorate. To eliminate heat soak the engine compartment was reconfigured to allow for better airflow producing greater cooling. The team switched to Fox shocks along with bringing KMC Wheels on board for all three race cars, complete with Falken Wildpeak MT tires getting all that power to the boulders!

The 2017 King of the Hammers saw the addition of a short course just off of main pit, used for last chance qualifying and Power Hour and an added benefit for spectators. Pellegrino would stage to qualify for his start position. His Ultra4 car was working flawlessly. The green flag dropped and he was on the throttle hard. It looked like it would be one of the fastest runs, only to end early after breaking a U-joint, resulting in a 113th start position for Tony on Friday.

Photo of Tony and Debbie Pellegrino post race next to the Unlimited Class Ultra4 Car

K&N Brand Ambassador, Tony Pellegrino with wife, Debbie all smiles after a successful race

King of the Hammers Ultra4 Unlimited Class race would start precisely at 8:00 a.m. on Friday. While Pellegrino's start position was less than ideal, he and his co-driver, Christopher Rea, would make the most of what lay ahead. Cars were staged in pairs and released every 30 seconds. Tony would have a start time of 8:28.00 and with the King crowned based on "time", Tony had as good a chance to be King as any of the other competitors. The strategy was to go fast, be smart and safe. His pit crew was ready and on point. This race can easily be won or lost in the pits. By mile marker 10 Tony had already passed a fellow competitor. This more than 200 mile race requires the driver to pace themselves, and take care throughout. Before Tony checked into Remote Pit 1, he had moved up substantially in the field. But there was no time to rest on his laurels and the team kicked into high gear to provide a flawless F1 style pit stop. He was back on course, kicking butt and taking names. The first run through Sledgehammer and Chocolate Thunder saw traffic and signs of carnage. Staying in the game, the experienced Pellegrino had the advantage when it came to the right line on the trails. Team spotters can make all the difference on technical trails.

Photo of GenRight Ultra4 Unlimited Class Car crossing the finish line

GenRight Ultra4 Unlimited Class Car with Pellegrino and Rea crossing the finish line

In the end Tony came from behind and passed 102 cars earning him and his co-driver Chris an astonishing and well deserved 11th place finish in his 8th running of KOH. His car performed better than ever and even though he didn't make the podium he feels like a winner being able to compete at this event and enjoy this experience and race with his boys. Team GenRight had three cars entered in the races, UTV Class, SmittyBilt Every Man Challenge, and the King of the Hammers. All three Pellegrino men, Tony, Jami, and Jordan, and their co-drivers (Chris Rea, Matt Lasher, and Gunnar Velasquez) finished and have memories that will last a lifetime. One Pellegrino did make the podium this past week. Jordan Pellegrino and Gunnar Velasquez qualified in pole position in the 4400 Class and were first to cross the finish line in their class. However, adjusted, official time had them 1 minute 26 seconds behind the first place finisher earning them a solid 2nd place finish, their second consecutive year, by about the same margin. Hats off to the Pellegrino's, their co-driver's and Team GenRight for their commitment to motorsports and their commitment to the K&N brand.

Photo of Co-Driver Christopher Rea being interviewed in the car with Tony Pellegrino

Co-Driver Christopher Rea sharing his thoughts on the race and the finish

Team Genright Photo including driver's, crew members, volunteers and family

Team GenRight team driver's, crew members, volunteers, and family. Go Blue!

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