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Jordan Phillips Off to a Great Start in the 2017 Grand National Cross Country Racing Series

Jordan Phillips jumping at the GNCC round 1 in Union, South Carolina

Phillips gets air in the GNCC round 1 (Photo: Ken Hill)

Jordan Phillips opened his 2017 Grand National Cross Country Series (GNCC) campaign with a solid top 10 performance. Phillips is a K&N-sponsored 4x4 Pro ATV rider for the factory Can-Am X-Team. The AMA-sanctioned GNCC staged its opener in Union, South Carolina, the first weekend in March. Phillips’ first-round race aboard his Can-Am ATV was the model of consistency.

One of the unique aspects of GNCC racing is the fact that the course can be a bit of a mystery for the competitors.

“Upon arrival Friday afternoon I began walking the course,” Phillips said. “As most of you know there is no practicing or riding the track prior to race day. The course was fast and mostly dry. [There were] a few hidden stumps and rocks throughout the course that I knew I would have to watch for.”

Jordan Phillips roosting at the GNCC round 1 in Union, South Carolina

The South Carolina track was mostly dry for the early March race

Early season races in the GNCC can involve extremely variable weather and track conditions, and the season opener in South Carolina got off to a brisk start. “Saturday morning before our 10:00 AM race time, the temperatures were chilly, down in the 20s,” said Phillips. “The sun came out quick and that made a difference so it wasn't too bad.”

“When the green flag dropped, I rocketed forward and went into the woods in the top 5 of our class,” Jordan said. “I kept my head down and stayed with the leaders for the first lap. I experienced some arm pump and was trying to fight that off. I never could make any passes, but maintained 5th until the checkered flag. I also placed 9th overall out of 250 racers.”

The solid class and overall finish in South Carolina is an encouraging start for Phillips’ 2017 championship run. “Overall, I am happy with this [result] for the season opener,” said Phillips. “Thanks for everyone's continued prayers and support!”

Jordan Phillips jumping at the GNCC round 1 in Union, South Carolina

K&N-backed Phillips ran a solid and consistent race

K&N sees great things on the horizon for this rising star in GNCC racing.

2017 AMSOIL GNCC Racing Schedule

Round 1 March 4-5 Big Buck Union, SC (Micro)

Round 2 March 11-12 Wild Boar Palatka, FL (UTV)

Round 3 March 25-26 Cannonball Sparta, GA (Micro)

Round 4 April 8-9 Steele Creek Morganton, NC (Micro)

Round 5 April 22-23 Camp Coker Bullet Society Hill, SC (UTV)

Round 6 May 6-7 Limestone 100 Springville, IN (Micro)

Round 7 May 27-28 The John Penton Millfield, OH (UTV)

Round 8 June 10-11 Tomahawk Odessa, NY (Micro)

Round 9 June 24-25 Snowshoe Snowshoe, WV

Round 10 September 9-10 Unadilla New Berlin, NY (Micro)

Round 11 September 23-24 Mountaineer Run Masontown, WV (UTV)

Round 12 October 7-8 Powerline Park St. Clairsville, OH (UTV)

Round 13 October 28-29 Ironman Crawfordsville, IN (UTV)

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K&N's Nicole Pitell-Vaughan and Total Chaos Team Take on The Mint 400

Photo of the Total Chaos truck staged and launching off the start line at the Mint 400

Total Chaos launching off the line at the 2017 Polaris RZR Mint 400 presented by BFGoodrich

The history of the Mint 400 is replete with excitement, drama and quite a bit of celebrity, just like Vegas itself. Known as the toughest, most sensational off-road race in North America since 1968 when it was first run, the Mint 400 desert race was created by Norm Johnson who not only participated in the event until 1982, but was acting race director until 1974. What began as a public relations event to promote the Mint Hotel’s annual deer hunt quickly turned into a legitimate desert race. To maintain momentum Norm enlisted the help of a few of his friends, famed race car drivers Mel Larson and Parnelli Jones. Throw in a guaranteed prize purse of $30,000, and the participant list grew at an exponential rate.

Photo of Nicole smiling and behind the wheel of her race truck

Ready to rock 'n roll, Nicole is exactly where she wants to be, behind the wheel of her race truck

Competitors in the event came from all over the world, from all racing genres along with the television and film industry. Indianapolis 500 winners Al Unser, Rick Mears; off-road champions Mickey Thompson, Ivan Stewart, Walker Evans; and actors James Garner and Steve McQueen are among the many racing and entertainment notables who competed in the Mint 400.

Photo of Nicole and Tom heading down Fremont Street in Old Town Las Vegas with 1000s of onlookers

Nicole and Tom head down Fremont Street in the old part of Las Vegas with 1000s of onlookers

After the sale of the Mint Hotel in 1988, competitors and enthusiasts said goodbye to an era of racing that would not be forgotten. In fact, this great American off-road race would return to the Mojave Desert with a vengeance in 2008.

For some, life is about dreaming big and setting goals. Pushing to achieve their goals regardless of how big the challenge may seem. Never giving up on their dreams and stretching until those goals are reached. As the co-owner and Director of Operations at Total Chaos Fabrication, Inc., Nicole Pitell-Vaughan, known to some as “CHAOS”, is forward thinking and determined in every aspect within the business, proving that she is anything but chaos!

Photo of Total Chaos Truck in Main Pit

Lap 1 main pit, everything is as it should be

For more than 18 years now Total Chaos Fabrication, a female owned automotive fabrication business, has been affiliated in the sport of off-road, participating as racers, chasers, spectators, weekend warriors, and customers, manufacturing premium quality Toyota aftermarket suspension equipment and accessories here in the USA. But beyond the desk, she lives her life in the dirt. As a driver, competitor, and big air chaser, K&N-sponsored driver, Nicole Pitell-Vaughan, raced her 2005 Toyota Tacoma, with the Best in the Desert Racing Association in the Polaris RZR Mint 400 presented by BFGoodrich, with co-driver, Tim Schrader. Nicole will tell you that she doesn't chase checkered flags, but when she does she has the most amazing inner circle of friends that are really an extension of family at Total Chaos. Vaughan has competed in off-road (two and four wheel) for 18 years and is known for her aggressive racing style and her love of air. On Saturday, we saw Nicole, laser-focused and driven, having come back from knee surgery to train pretty hard so she could stay behind the wheel for the entire distance of her first Mint 400 race.

Photo of Nicole Pitell-Vaughan behind the wheel, crossed up in her Toyota Tacoma

Nicole Pitell-Vaughan is best known for her aggressive behind the wheel style

The Total Chaos race truck, known as “Lil T”, is a 2005 Toyota Tacoma Regular Cab 2WD. The front suspension features the Total Chaos Long Travel system with 2.5” Fox Coilover shocks, 3.0” Fox Bypass shocks, and 2.0” Fox Hydraulic/Air bumpstops. “Lil T’s” sporting a Total Chaos 4 Link in the rear with 49.5” long control arms. They’ve added a Currie 9” axle housing, Inland Empire Driveline driveshaft, Wilwood disc brakes, 2.5” Fox Coilover shocks, 3” Fox Bypass shocks, 2.0” Hydraulic/Air bumpstops. All the Total Chaos suspension components are equipped with the same uniballs, materials, and construction techniques that you find in Total Chaos bolt-on production suspension systems. Unique to the 7200 class, “Lil T” is not a tube chassis race truck. Under the Tacoma badging, it is a production chassis retaining many original parts including the stock frame, cab, doors, and headlights. The custom built suspension bolts to the factory control arm mounting locations and utilizes modified OE Toyota components to complete the build. Total Chaos performed a 4.0L 6cyl motor swap installing a 4.0L Dual Over Head Cam 1GR-FE V6 VVT-i. They added a K&N intake and filter and installed Doug Thorley Headers with a Dynomax Muffler to create a tough growl. The team modified a 2007+ Tundra steering rack to fit the narrower vehicle and custom fabricated 86-95 Toyota 4WD lift spindles that utilize Land Cruiser hubs. The interior was fitted with a Full 4130 chromoly roll cage, Mastercraft Pro seats, Mastercraft window nets and harnesses plus a Momo steering wheel. To complete the exterior they added Glassworks Unlimited front fiberglass and Hannemann fiberglass bedsides.

Photo of Total Chaos in the Toyota Tacoma killing it on Lap 1

Out on course with the Total Chaos team in the Toyota Tacoma - killing it on Lap 1

The Mint 400 started and finished at Primm Valley Resorts. Each lap, a 116 mile loop, in what is considered the roughest section of the Mojave Desert that Team Total Chaos would run three times. It was windy and overcast and time to put game faces on. While many were focused on the party aspect of what is The Mint 400, this team was keeping their eyes on the prize, knowing that they were indeed the dark horse. However, Pitell-Vaughan was racing with reports of an unforgiving course, she made a plan and stuck to it. First lap would be reconnaissance and she would drive to sort the track and the truck out. In Lap 2, she would up the ante and lay down a solid, hard charged race lap - what she is known for! On her third and final Lap she would put the hammer down and go for it.

Photo ofCo-Driver Tim Schrader, The ultimate McGyver with the insane ability to stay awake for days.

Co-Driver Tim Schrader, the ultimate McGyver with the insane ability to stay awake for days

Right off the line all things went according to plan for lap 1. However heading into lap 2 was a bit more like survival of the fittest with trophy trucks that had started an hour earlier blazing through amidst the other competitors. Sadly time was lost. With only 10.5 total hours to complete the race inside the time limit, our K&N driver lucked out. Nicole had clear air and set a blistering pace on lap 3. They passed vehicle after vehicle broken along the track – not surprising given the mini-van sized boulders strewn across the insanely rutted course. The team pumped up by the spectators and teams who cheered them on, as the pump gas, door-banger Toyota on 35” BFGoodrich Mud Terrains, purchased off the shelf at Tire Rack, put the hammer down to get to the finish.

Photo of spectators lined up to watch the unlimited truck class as they fly by!

Spectators lined up to see the wheel spinning, dirt spitting unlimited class trucks

The Total Chaos team couldn’t be more pleased. After starting 11th they finished an unofficial 5th in the 7200 Unlimited Class. There equipment has been designed to enhance ride quality and reinforces the weak links that tend to show up on race day in the OE platforms. And while the bolt-on equipment is used for recreation and vehicle-based adventures, the same bolt on parts are used in racing applications. Durability test for Total Chaos suspension? You bet. The best kind. Inspired by having the cards stacked against her and sometimes being the underdog, Nicole is driven not to prove others wrong, but to prove to herself that anything is possible.

Photo of Team Total Chaos in front of "Lil T" just before the Mint 400 race in Primm, Neva

The Total Chaos team of renegades that know where to find adventure and make a little chaos

When asked about the Total Chaos team, The Mint 400, and what’s important, Nicole Pitell-Vaughan, co-owner of Total Chaos and driver of #7211 “Lil T”, had this to say, "TC’s team of renegades lives life differently. We are fans. We are innovators. We love taking dirt roads to nowhere. We are energized by customers and their adventures. We personally test our equipment – from Death Valley to Baja Mexico pre-running and surf trips, recreational fishing trips to hidden creeks, hunting trips in Canada, racing in Africa, at the Mint 400, and Vegas to Reno, and the notorious last minute 'hey let’s stop here and let’s see where this dirt road goes'. We chase adventures."

Looking forward Nicole Pitell-Vaughan would love to see the automotive programs return the senior high school education level. This industry needs creative, strong, intelligent men and women to keep pushing forward and we believe that she can be a driving force!

Photo of inside the Total Chaos Toyota Tacoma, "Lil T"

Inside the cockpit of the Total Chaos Toyota Tacoma, "Lil T"

Photo of "Lil T" in main pit on Lap 3 before they head to the finish line

Final Pit on Lap 3 for Nicole and Tom, as they charge hard to the finish line

Photo of Nicole after crossing the finish line in an unofficial 5th place

Nicole's smile say it all. The Total Chaos team has crossed the finish line in 5th place

Photo of the Total Chaos truck on the podium at the finish of the race.

Completing the legendary Mint 400 desert race to come in unofficially 5th place

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NHRA Pro Stock Drivers are Lining Up for K&N Horsepower Challenge

NHRA, K&N Horsepower Challenge, Pro Stock, Greg Anderson

NHRA Pro Stock driver Greg Anderson won the K&N Horsepower Challenge in 2016

NHRA Pro Stock drivers are jockeying for position for the K&N Horsepower Challenge. The top-seven drivers in the Pro Stock standings plus an eighth driver voted in by fans will race for a $50,000 purse at the Denso Spark Plugs NHRA Nationals in Las Vegas on April 1.

Greg Anderson won the K&N Horsepower Challenge last year. Anderson was making his 12th appearance in the K&N Horsepower Challenge and beat teammate Jason Line in the final race with a pass of 12.336 seconds at 89.67 mph.

“It’s so much fun racing this race, you don’t have to worry about points, you don’t have to worry about screwing up or anything; you just go have fun and try to win the big cash,” Anderson said. “Fifty grand is big to us. It’s huge. It’s obviously the biggest payday we can make a year.”

The runner-up receives $10,000. The two semifinalists win $3,000 apiece. The No. 1 qualifier at each NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series Pro Stock event wins an additional $3,000 bonus.

NHRA, K&N Horsepower Challenge, Pro Stock, Jason Line

NHRA Pro Stock driver Jason Line was the runner-up in the K&N Horsepower Challenge in 2016

Erica Enders, a two-time NHRA Pro Stock champion and two-time winner of the K&N Horsepower Challenge, is in ninth place in the Pro Stock standings after the first two events. Drivers started accumulating points for the K&N Horsepower Challenge at the 2016 Denso Spark Plugs NHRA Nationals in Las Vegas.

"It's the top eight drivers and cars in the Pro Stock class going after the biggest payday the NHRA offers so it's a very important race to be a part of," Enders said. "We didn't qualify on points because we had a down year performance-wise in 2016 but we're back in our trusted Elite Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro and feel as though, given a chance, we can make a serious run at this race title.”

Enders won the K&N Horsepower Challenge in 2014 and 2015. She was the runner-up in 2013. Anderson won the Pro Stock event at the NHRA Arizona Nationals in February. Enders lost in the first round to Shane Gray.

“My fans have proven to me time and time again to be the best in any sport anywhere. They have always been so supportive of me and I love them so much for always having my back,” Enders said. “It would be huge if everyone takes a moment and goes to vote for me to run this year's race. I won't let them down.”

NHRA, K&N Horsepower Challenge, Pro Stock, Erica Enders

NHRA Pro Stock driver Erica Enders is a two-time winner in the K&N Horsepower Challenge

Fans can vote for their favorite drivers in the K&N Horsepower Challenge until noon on March 27 at K&N Horsepower Challenge site at http://www.nhra.com/KNChallenge.

In addition to Anderson, Line, and Enders, Chris McGaha, Drew Skillman, Gray, Allen Johnson and Vincent Nobile were in the K&N Horsepower Challenge field last in 2016.

“This class is as strong as it ever was,” Anderson said after winning the NHRA Pro Stock event in Arizona. “We got new blood in the sport, in the class right now. It’s just I think every race I had today was decided by less than a foot. You just don’t get better racing than that. It’s fantastic out there.”

The next event in the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series is the Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals in Florida from March 16-19.

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Chris Ferguson Looks Forward to New Chassis for Busy 2017 Super Late Model Season

With a new Rocket Chassis, Chris Ferguson is ready for a run of good luck in Super Late Models

With a new Rocket Chassis, Chris Ferguson is ready for a run of good luck in Super Late Models

Many racers would be ecstatic with six Super Late Model wins in a year. However, K&N racer Chris Ferguson has racked up a laundry list of feature wins in Late Model and Super Late Model racing in the decade since he jumped from go-karts—where he’d piled up 100 event wins—to the dirt oval, so his half-dozen victories in 2016 came across slightly disappointing. It wasn’t for lack of pace, though; Ferguson led as many as 16 of his 50 races. Snakebit in 2016 by a bad luck in the form of flat tires, mechanical troubles, and untimely punts from the lead, Ferguson is back in 2017 and taking aim at a win total more like the 13 he put up in 2015.

“2016 was a tough year because of the races that we had a legitimate shot at winning not going our way,” Ferguson said. “We’re looking to get back to where we were two years ago. We’re still there, we just didn’t have things go our way.”

Armed with a new XR1 from Rocket Chassis, Ferguson is ready to hit the dirt with plans for between 40 and 60 races in 2017. Those will include runs with the big sanctioning bodies of World of Outlaws’ Craftsman Late Model Series and Lucas Oil Late Model Dirt Series along with more local groups like the Southern All Star Late Model Series, Ultimate Super Late Model Series, and Carolina Clash Super Late Model Series. He’ll also sprinkle in some of the big-money events like the $100,000 Dirt Track World Championships and Dirt Late Model Dream.

After six feature wins, K&N driver Chris Ferguson looks to improve upon that and score big wins.

After six feature wins, K&N driver Chris Ferguson looks to improve upon that and score big wins.

“We’re looking at running a mix of eight to 10 each of World of Outlaws and Lucas Oil, 10 to 20 regional events, and then five to 10 ‘crown jewel’ races,” Ferguson said. “I’d love to get one win from each tour and my ultimate goal is get one of those really big ones. I’ve been fortunate enough to win a World of Outlaws race, but the next step is competing in the big races.”

Chris will again get his 875 horsepower from a Chevrolet small block-based 430ci V8 from Clements Racing Engines. That howling engine breathes through a K&N air filter that gets a workout, often working through long features while picking up dirt clods. Chris uses K&N air filter spray cleaner to clean up the dirt-spattered filters, noting that no other filter cleaner has ever knocked the dirt out as easily. The Clements 430ci also gets its fuel via a K&N fuel filter and uses a K&N crankcase breather filter.

Racing is in Ferguson’s blood. His grandfather raced Ralph Earnhardt and Lee Petty while his dad, Bryan, raced six-cylinders at the hallowed Concord Speedway that preceded Charlotte Motor Speedway as Oval Racing’s Capital. His uncles and cousins? They raced. Family remains a huge part of Chris’ racing; his dad Bryan Conard co-owns the car while his brother, Brandon Conard, works as the car’s crew chief.

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Celebrities, Racing Legends, and K&N Stars On Hand at the Mint 400 Contingency

Jay Leno at the Mint 400 Contingency in Las Vegas, Nevada

Leno brings his enthusiasm for motor sports to the Mint 400 (Photo: Mint 400)

Thousands of race fans packed Fremont Street in downtown Las Vegas, Nevada, for the 2017 Mint 400 Desert Race Contingency. Mixed in with the masses enjoying the electric contingency experience were entertainment celebrities, racing legends, and K&N race stars.

Possibly the highest profile star set to race in the Mint 400 is Jay Leno. Leno has joined a long line of A-list celebrities who have thrown their hat (or helmet) into the Mint 400 ring. James Garner, Steve McQueen, Lee Majors, and Ted Nugent are among the other stage and screen stars to have strapped in for a Mint 400 experience.

Jessi Combs and Robin Leach at the Mint 400 Contingency in Las Vegas, Nevada

Jessi Combs talks to the press as Robin Leach checks his schedule (Photo:Tim Kessel)

The former Tonight Show host is a major motorcycle, car, and truck collector. He is also a big race fan, and his experience in the Mint 400 will be the focus of an upcoming episode of his show "Jay Leno's Garage." Leno will start as the driver of a Toyota Tacoma TRD Pro in the Mint, but will not drive the entire race.

The Grand Marshal of the 2017 race, Robin Leach of “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” fame, talked to reporters during the contingency press conference about his connection to desert racing. The amiable Brit reporter and journalist discussed that his son Steve Leach has been a longtime chase crew member of the McMillin Off-Road Team.

Katie Vernola at the Mint 400 Contingency in Las Vegas, Nevada

K&N Racer Katie Vernola rolls her SxS through contingency (Photo:Tim Kessel)

Also speaking to the press on Fremont Street was builder, fabricator, TV personality, and friend of K&N, Jessi Combs. Combs discussed her excitement about competing in the Mint 400. Combs' Mint 400 experience will become an episode of the Autoblog show "The List: 1001 Car Things To Do Before You Die!" Combs will drive in the vintage class.

There will be no shortage of TV shows reflecting on this year's Mint 400. Builders Diesel Dave and Heavy D will be racing a truck they built in the Mint's morning race. They will be documenting their Mint experience for their Discovery Channel TV show "The Diesel Brothers."

Storied Mint 400 racers like Rod Hall and early race promoters were on hand to reminisce about the event’s infancy in the 1970s, as current racers worked through the contingency out in the street. The legends talked about the incipient stages of “The Great American Desert Race.”

RJ Anderson at the Mint 400 Contingency in Las Vegas, Nevada

Desert racing champion RJ Anderson meets fans at the K&N booth (Photo:Tim Kessel)

Of course, a full slate of K&N-sponsored racers were in attendance at the Mint Contingency. Katie Vernola drew crowds wherever she rolled her SxS. Vernola was more than a little excited to be driving in her first Mint 400.

"I just want to go with the flow," Vernola said. "You have to take what the course gives you. If your car is hurting, you're hurting." Vernola is slated to run the full schedule of the Best in the Desert racing series in 2017.

No stranger to the Mint 400 is the 2015 runner-up RJ Anderson. Anderson missed the top podium spot that year by a matter of minutes. The five-time off road racing champion signed posters for fans in front of K&N’s truck.

Katie Vernola at the Mint 400 Contingency in Las Vegas, Nevada

Vernola poses with her K&N-protected SxS at the contingency (Photo:Tim Kessel)

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