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Greg Anderson, Bo Butner Battle for NHRA Pro Stock Championship in Pomona

Greg Anderson racing in the Auto Club Finals in Pomona against teammate Bo Butner

Greg Anderson racing in the Auto Club Finals in Pomona against teammate Bo Butner

Pro Stock driver Greg Anderson is trying to treat the 53rd annual Auto Club NHRA Finals at Auto Club Raceway in Pomona like any other event. Except it’s not like any other event.

Anderson comes into the finals as the leader in the NHRA Pro Stock standings. He has a 40-point lead over teammate Bo Butner.

Jason Line, the third-place driver in the NHRA Pro Stock standings, is 76 points out of first place. To make it more challenging, NHRA is awarding 1.5x points to the drivers this weekend. The top-four drivers in the standings are within striking distance of the Pro Stock championship. Still, Anderson said he wants to treat this weekend’s finals like it’s any other race.

“I try not to do anything out of the norm,” Anderson said. “Try not to make it more than it is. Obviously, it’s what we race for all year long. You’re supposed to put it all on the line and do something special and try to get it done. If you do that, you’ll probably make a mistake. Put too much pressure on yourself and go backwards. Just trying to stay calm and relaxed and trying to tell myself that it’s just another race. It’s not. But that’s my goal.”

Greg Anderson took first place and another Wally earlier this year in Las Vegas

Greg Anderson took first place and another Wally earlier this year in Las Vegas

Anderson has been here before. He has won four NHRA Pro Stock championships, the last coming in 2010. He admits that it’s been a while, but it is nothing new to be in contention and having the championship come down to the final event of the season.

He won the championship in 2010 in the Countdown to the Championship format. The final six races of the season are the playoffs for the drivers and riders in the NHRA Top Fuel, Funny Car, Pro Stock, and Pro Stock Motorcycle divisions. “It’s crazy. I guess that’s the design,” Anderson said. “They want it to come down to the end of the day on Sunday. And that is certainly the coolest way, it makes it tougher on the drivers. I’ve been here before and I’ve witnessed that deal.”

Anderson won two events in the Countdown to the Championship, most recently the event in Las Vegas. He is a 12-time winner at Auto Club Raceway in Pomona and has 90 victories in his career. But this year has been one of the more competitive ones in Pro Stock. Anderson said as many as 10 drivers and teams have the potential to win the season finale at Pomona.

“Every year it seems like it does get tougher,” Anderson said. “The only way I can explain it is they learn the right way to race. They learn how to race at that top level. Every year we have more and more depth in the field.” Unlike Anderson, Butner is experiencing the Pro Stock Countdown to the Championship for the first time. Before this season, Butner never won a Pro Stock race. He has won four times this year. He still considers himself a sportsman racer, but he has become one of the top Pro Stock drivers quickly. “It’s a great year,” Butner said. “It’s a dream season, probably even beyond that because it’s in the pro category. I can’t ask for anything better. I’d like to be ahead, don’t get me wrong. We have a shot and that’s great.”

At the end of the weekend, it was Butner who took the win in Pro Stock over teammate Greg Anderson

At the end of the weekend, it was Butner who took the win in Pro Stock over teammate Greg Anderson

Butner has won one of the Countdown events. He has never been worse than second in the Pro Stock standings since the NHRA Spring Nationals in Houston in April. “We led from like Topeka on,” Butner said. “Of course if it was the other way, I’d love it. We started out 1-2 going into it. Now he’s one and I’m two.”

Butner has never won a Pro Stock race at Auto Club Raceway in Pomona. The odds might be stacked against him heading into the final race of the year, but he wouldn’t have it any other way. “This is a different deal. It’s a dream,” Butner said. “That’s all I’ll ever be is a sportsman racer. It’s been great, but it would be unimaginable to get up there on stage. I don’t know what else you could possibly do. I’m not going to quit by no means. “I have zero nerves. I’m having a great time. It’s fun. I do this for enjoyment, not for a living.

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The K&N RK-3955 Street Metal Air Intake Adds Style and Power to Harley® FL Models

The RK-3955 intake installed on a Harley-Davidson FL

The RK-3955 intake adds a classic ram-air look to the Harley V-twin

More than any other motorcycle manufacturer, Harley-Davidson® has always made the air intake a prominent design and style feature on the iconic V-twin engine. K&N knows this, and we have designed a line of intakes that accentuates the look of that Harley powerplant.

The K&N RK-3955 Street Metal Intake harkens back to the aggressive styling of muscle car shaker ram-air intakes. However, it’s not just a look; the RK-3955 intake is guaranteed to boost the performance of the Harley 107CI Milwaukee 8 FL model line. Let’s take a look at the style and performance of the RK-3955.

Style

The powdercoated aluminum body of the RK-3955 is open in the front, exposing the familiar and respected K&N filter element. Flowing back from that ram-air leading edge are raised, natural aluminum ridges that add an aggressive, three-dimensional element to the most visible surface of the intake.

The RK-3955 intake for Harley FL models side view

K&N's designers outdid themselves with the aggressive look of the RK-3955 intake

The iconic K&N logo graces the top surface of the intake housing. Out back, three, large-diameter holes add even more style and airflow to the intake. Simply put, the RK-3955 adds a new level of cool to that massive V-twin engine.

Performance

'All show and no go' is simply not what K&N does. The RK-3955 is as long on performance as it is on style. The intake is built around a highly refined internal velocity stack that provides and focuses a large amount of air. There are also internal breathers that eliminate the stock plumbing.

That same housing that provides those great looks is also designed to provide massive airflow to the engine. That increase in airflow is where the power is. When installed on an otherwise stock 2017 107CI Harley-Davidson Road Glide, K&N’s testing showed an estimated power increase of almost 3.5 horsepower at 4700 RPM.

Convenience

The RK-3955 intake for Harley FL models top view

An engineered velocity stack is housed in that great looking intake body

The RK-3955 intake installs easily in about 90 minutes. Once installed, the durable K&N high-flow filter element is fully washable and reusable. When periodic cleaning is needed, the process of washing and re-oiling the pleated, cotton gauze filter media is made easy with a recharge kit like the K&N 99-5000.

Take a look at the application list below and consult K&N online search tool for all of your filter needs.

2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLTRXS ROAD GLIDE SPECIAL 107 CI - All Models
2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLTRX ROAD GLIDE 107 CI - All Models
2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLTRU ROAD GLIDE ULTRA 107 CI - All Models
2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLRT FREEWHEELER 107 CI - All Models
2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLHXS STREET GLIDE SPECIAL 107 CI - All Models
2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLHX STREET GLIDE 107 CI - All Models
2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLHTKL ULTRA LIMITED LOW 107 CI - All Models
2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLHTK ULTRA LIMITED 107 CI - All Models
2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLHTCUTG TRI GLIDE ULTRA 107 CI - All Models
2017 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLHR ROAD KING 107 CI - All Models

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K&N Pro Series Driver Todd Gilliland Wins His Second Pro Series West Championship

NASCAR, K&N Pro Series West, Todd Gilliland, Bill McAnally Racing

Bill McAnally Racing driver Todd Gilliland won the 2017 NASCAR K&N Pro Series West championship.

Todd Gilliland didn’t need to win the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West season finale at Kern County Raceway Park, in California, to secure his second series title in a row. But it would have been nice.

Gilliland was the runner-up in the West Coast Stock Car Hall of Fame Championship 150 presented by Napa Auto Parts, the final race of the 2017 NASCAR K&N Pro Series West season.

Gilliland needed to finish in seventh place or higher to win the K&N Pro Series West championship. Chris Eggleston, who entered the season finale in second place in the West Series standings, had a flat tire on lap 65 and had to pit. When he returned to the race, he was several laps down and out of contention.

That left Gilliland in a race against the track. All he needed to do was bring the car home in one piece to secure his second K&N Pro Series West championship. Eggleston ended up in second place in the K&N Pro Series West standings.

The runner-up finish in the race at Kern County gave Gilliland 11 top-fives in 14 K&N Pro Series West races. He won the K&N Pro Series West championship by 29 points over Eggleston. The two drivers posted the same amount of top-five finishes, 11, and top-10 finishes, 13. The difference was in races won.

Gilliland won six races en route to his second K&N Pro Series West title in a row. Gilliland and Eggleston, his teammate at Bill McAnally Racing, combined to win 10 of the 14 K&N Pro Series West races in 2017.

“That makes it definitely very interesting in the team meeting,” Gilliland said about having Eggleston as a teammate and championship contender. “Overall, I think Bill let us race as hard as we could. I feel like he did a great job balancing that for us. I feel like we pushed each other a lot this year to be the best we could be. That’s a lot of why we finished 1-2 in the points.”

NASCAR, K&N Pro Series West, Todd Gilliland, Bill McAnally Racing

Todd Gilliland won the pole and finished in second place in the K&N Pro Series West season finale.

Gilliland said he celebrated his championship by going to Southern California for his grandmother’s 90th birthday. His team also had a night of go-kart racing and a celebration dinner.

Gilliland ran the entire K&N Pro Series East schedule as well. He came into the final race of the East Series schedule with the lead in the standings. But Gilliland blew a tire and crashed in the K&N Pro Series East finale at Dover International Speedway in Delaware, effectively taking him out of the lead in the K&N Pro Series East standings. He finished in 13th place in the race at Dover. Harrison Burton won the race and the K&N Pro Series East championship.

“To come this close to getting them both is tough also,” Gilliland said after winning the K&N Pro Series West championship at Kern County. “It’s all part of racing, the 99 (Eggleston) had a tire issue tonight, so hard saying what could have happened if we didn’t have one.”

Gilliland said a big part of winning the K&N Pro Series West championship came at the beginning of the year. The first four races were in a span of seven days at three tracks, Tucson Speedway, Kern County Raceway Park and Irwindale Speedway.

“That was a pretty big part of our season right there and we were able to come out of there with three wins and a second,” Gilliland said. “That set a good tone for the beginning of our season. From there we stayed in the lead all the way until the championship. It was pretty good. Definitely had a lot of battles with our teammates. It was a lot of fun for sure.”

Rookie Derek Kraus won the first race of his K&N Pro Series West career at Kern County. He posted three runner-up finishes in his rookie season. In the K&N Pro Series West race at Meridian Speedway in Idaho in September, he had the lead on the final restart. But he lost his lead to Michael Self, who went on to win the race. Kraus dropped to fifth place at the checkered flag. Kraus wasn’t going to make the same mistake at Kern County.

NASCAR, K&N Pro Series West, Todd Gilliland, Bill McAnally Racing

Todd Gilliland won six races en route to his second NASCAR K&N Pro Series West championship in a row

“I knew at Meridian there was going to be a yellow with just a few to go,” Kraus said. “Luckily tonight that didn’t happen. I’m sure it was close, probably a few times, luckily it didn’t happen and we didn’t have a final restart.”

Gilliland said he will probably race a few NASCAR K&N Pro Series events in 2018. He is ready to move up in NASCAR and will enter more Camping World Truck Series events next year. Racing in the K&N Pro Series has prepared him immensely for the next step.

“It’s just a huge deal to be able to compete in this series,” Gilliland said. “Nothing’s possible without the support of K&N. Definitely want to thank them for everything they’ve done.”

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Mopar or No Car: SEMA 2017 Was Home to Some of the Baddest Mopars in the Scene

While Chevrolets and Fords are without question the most popular choices among builders who are constructing display vehicles for the SEMA Show, there’s always a bit of variety whether it’s a model from an import manufacturer, or a domestic manufacturer long defunct. One brand that runs closely behind the Ford and Chevrolet offerings are the Mopars – Dodge and Plymouth primarily. Here’s a rundown of some of the most unique and inventive interpretations of classic and current Mopars on display at the 2017 SEMA Show.

Petty’s Garage 1970 Plymouth Superbird

Constructed as first prize for a contest conducted by the team's sponsor Smithfield

Petty's Garage recreated a street version 1970 Superbird in Petty colors from a Plymouth Satellite

Perhaps one of the hardest to miss cars in the entire show was the Petty’s Garage recreation of the 1970 Plymouth Superbird, with which Richard Petty won eight Super Speedway races that year in its NASCAR incarnation. As a promotional giveaway for sponsor Smithfield, Petty’s converted a stock Plymouth Satellite coupe in a glorious replicant that even Ridley Scott couldn’t tell apart. The Satellite was stripped to bare metal with all offending rust repairs. Added were Dodge Cornet front fenders with air scoops added, a custom back window installed, the three-piece wing with internal bracing in the trunk, and of course the hood extensions and fiberglass nose. The modern drivetrain consists of a 392 CID Gen III Hemi, a four-speed automatic overdrive from SST, QA1 coilovers and big brakes from Wilwood. And of course air filters from K&N.


The Roadster Shop cut the floor off the unibody and fitted with with one of its Fast Track chassis

Ratty on the outside, gnarly on the inside: Jesse James' twin-turbocharged Hemi-powered Polara

Jesse James’ RS 1964 Dodge Polara

The Roadster Shop constructed this interesting concept for Jesse James. The unibody was cut away from this ’64 Polara and all rust repaired. They then installed on an RS FastTrack frame. Under the hood went an immensely powerful Wegner Motorsports twin-turbo Generation III Hemi engine that draws through K&N air filters to produce over 1600 horsepower. The interior appears to have been removed for an early 1960s factory-built drag car with its minimalist interior, while the exterior is the sunbaked patina you might expect but a carefully-planned illusion executed by the Roadster Shop.


1968 Dodge Charger “General Mayhem”

Named after the seemingly indestructible star of the Dukes of Hazzard television program

The General Mayhem, now powered by a 707 HP Hellcat engine, is a car looking for trouble

Constructed over several episodes of the online video series Roadkill, in which the hosts, David Freiberger and Mike Finnegan, introduced the bare shell of the 1968 Charger on episode 23. Over the next few episodes, the Charger was built out and repowered by a 440 CID Mopar V8 that was pulled out of a defunct motorhome. When “off” road testing the Charger on episode 32, it earned it's nickname, based on the heavily stunted but never actually damaged (on TV at least) General Lee of Dukes of Hazzard fame. Someone was then insane enough to provide the pair with a 707 horsepower Generation III Hemi V8 engine out of a Hellcat and the car (and hosts) have been creating general mayhem ever since.



One of the first new-style Charger show cars, it carries many prototype components

Watch out for the sting of this Super Bee, with its 700 CID bottle-fed Hemi powerplant

2007 Dodge Charger SRT8 Super Bee

Ken Ticknor’s Charger might be better named Killer Bee to separate if from the factory stock Super Bee, as its modifications are so significant. Under the carbon fiber hood beats an enlarged 7.0L Generation III chock full of forged internal components that can take the strain of a direct port nitrous system, drawing, of course, through K&N filtration.

Underneath is a full coil-over conversion with stouter sway bars, while the interior has been upgraded to second generation Charger configuration. Not just a straight swap, mind you, but also a recover with over 30 hides of smooth-shaved crocodile with dyed honeycomb. Certainly not a Super Bee that’s easily mistaken from one that is straight off the assembly line.

If you own a Chrysler, Dodge, Plymouth, or RAM, K&N has the filters you need to keep you classic or soon-to-be classic running at its peak. Whether it’s an air cleaner element for a 1958 Chrysler 300 with a 392 CID First Gen Hemi or a Typhoon air intake system that adds almost 24 horsepower to a 2018 Dodge Challenger Hellcat, K&N has it. And don’t forget K&N also offers cabin air filters, oil filters, and fuel filters for many Mopar applications.

The K&N Race-Specific KA-1016R Air Filter Adds Power to the Kawasaki Ninja ZX-10R

Kawasaki Ninja 1000 on the track

The KA-1016R adds more knee-draging power to the ZX-10R (photo: Kawasaki)

If you are ready to sharpen the blade on your 2016 – 2018 Kawasaki Ninja ZX-10R, K&N has the race-specific filter to start your modifications. The KA-1016R filter is designed to help you get all the horsepower your ZX-10R can deliver.

The newest flagship Kawasaki sport bike has one of the most advanced fuel delivery systems on the market. The four 47mm Mikuni throttle bodies feature oval sub-throttles. Each one delivers fuel through two injectors per cylinder.

To cap it off, the latest Ninjas have redesigned cylinder heads featuring straighter and wider ports. To get the most air/fuel mixture to feed that beast of an engine, you need a free flowing air filter. That’s where the KA-1016R comes in.

K&N race-specific KA-1016R air filter top view

Just 2 layers of filter material adds up to massive air flow with the KA-1016R

The KA-1016R performance filter is designed to increase horsepower and acceleration by greatly reducing intake restriction. The filter utilizes just two layers of cotton gauze filter media to open up the lungs on the liter-sized Ninja. The added airflow helps unleash the full potential of the 998cc inline four.

Unlike K&N’s standard, direct replacement units, this high-flow, track-only filter will require fuel management modifications. When combined with engine remapping, and possibly a less restrictive exhaust if you choose, the KA-1016R will deliver markedly increased torque and horsepower to the Ninja’s rear wheel.

The KA-1016R is fully washable and reusable, making post-race maintenance a snap. You can put a stop to the endless cycle of replacing expensive disposable air filter elements that eat up your race and track budget! All you need is a K&N recharge kit like the 99-5000.

K&N race-specific KA-1016R air filter  and box

The K&N Race-Specific KA-1016R comes pre-oiled and ready to install in your Ninja

The KA-1016R comes pre-oiled and ready to use. The application-specific filter frame and sealing bead ensure a secure fit in the stock air box. No cutting or modification to the air box is required.

The K&N KA-1016R comes with a one year limited warranty. This product is for closed course competition use only and fits the following bikes:

2018 KAWASAKI ZX1000 NINJA ZX-10R 998 - Race Specific
2017 KAWASAKI ZX1000 NINJA ZX-10R KRT EDITION 998 - Race Specific
2017 KAWASAKI ZX1000 NINJA ZX-10R ABS KRT EDITION 998 - Race Specific
2017 KAWASAKI ZX1000 NINJA ZX-10R ABS 998 - Race Specific
2017 KAWASAKI ZX1000 NINJA ZX-10R 998 - Race Specific
2016 KAWASAKI ZX1000 NINJA ZX-10R KRT EDITION 998 - Race Specific
2016 KAWASAKI ZX1000 NINJA ZX-10R ABS KRT EDITION 998 - Race Specific
2016 KAWASAKI ZX1000 NINJA ZX-10R ABS 998 - Race Specific
2016 KAWASAKI ZX1000 NINJA ZX-10R 998 - Race Specific

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