The last few days of our Bonneville Speed Week experience were marred with intermittent storms and rain, so on our last day at the salt we were racing both the weather and the clock in an effort to inch closer to the 400mph mark. After strapping into the car, Amir got up to speed, made a good run and pulled the chutes. Then things went sideways – literally. A problem with a parachute caused the car to go airborne and jump sideways. Amir got it straightened out and slowed down, and the team is hard at work getting the chute system redesigned for our next run in a few weeks.
Archive for the ‘Bonneville 2009’ Category
The Scary Run
Wednesday, September 1st, 2010How to Drive 350+mph: Guided Tour of a Land Speed Run
Wednesday, September 1st, 2010Amir takes us on a guided tour of what he experiences in the cockpit of the Spectre SpeedLiner on a 350+mph land speed record run, from the first push off the starting line through sideways slides at over 300 to pull the shoots and the finish line and the g-forces he experiences.
The Blue Hat
Wednesday, September 1st, 2010Some people spend decades in the hunt for the coveted blue hat: the 300mph Chapter of the Bonneville 200mph Club. This was a huge moment for both Amir and the team, after our second run (the backup to Amir’s licensing run) at Speed Week.
Bonneville Speed Week 2010: THE RUN
Sunday, August 29th, 2010Over the course of six days and eight runs, the fastest single pass Amir made in the Streamliner was his backup pass with the “A” motor, where he exited the course just on the edge of setting the record for all-time fastest wheel driven, gasoline powered streamliner. This is the story of that run.
Bonneville SpeedWeek by the numbers.
Thursday, August 19th, 20106 days
8 runs
2 classes
3 records

Last week the record was 286mph and Amir skipped the 200 club completely with a blistering 324mph average pass. That’s almost 40mph faster than the previous record. Less than 24 hours later we pushed the record even higher, to 356mph. In the end, we broke the existing A/BGS (under 500 cubic inch, blown gasoline streamliner) record by 70mph!
Engine Swaps and Storm Fronts: Wednesday on the Salt Flats
Thursday, August 19th, 2010
The hurt motor on Tuesday prompted an engine swap to the larger cubic inch Caddy mill, and a whole new class, AA/BGS. Removing and replacing an engine on the salt is a difficult task, even with a stripped down streamliner, so Wednesday morning found us still with quite a bit to do before we could run.
The talented crew was undaunted, and not only was the new engine fitted, but the gas and brake pedals were moved to give Amir more room and there was still time to do an interview with a reporter from the Salt Lake Tribune!
Just as the car was getting buttoned up to head for staging, dark clouds piled up overhead and it began to rain. Amir and Kenny spent the time rehearsing the run and discussing driving technique, and as quickly as the weather moved in, it was gone, and the sun was back in force.
Attrition has taken its toll on the Bonneville racers, and the line at staging was short and quick. There’s still some amazing cars running and driving, and there’s no lack of surprises. We even saw a Ferrari Enzo in the tech lanes. Amir might have to bring the F40 out to hold his record!

Speaking of records, the new SpeedLiner engine had a conservative tune, so the 344 run didn’t exactly have the crew jumping for joy. Still, it beat the old AA/BGS record we set in October 2009, and the Speedliner is back in Impound until the back-up run.

Wednesday night was the 200mph club banquet, and along with the new 200mph inductees for 2009/2010, Kenny and Amir were recognized for their 300mph runs. Amir had the whole audience in stiches during his acceptance speech, and Kenny had quite a few jokes of his own. If this racing thing doesn’t pan out, maybe they can start a comedy act.
The weather is a full blown thunder and lightning show this morning, but if/when it clears up, we’re going to hit it again with a more aggressive tune on the big engine and see what happens.

Good News, Bad News
Tuesday, August 17th, 2010It’s about noon on Tuesday and we have a good news/bad news scenario. The good news: on our backup run this morning we made it official and broke our own A/BGS record running 351mph and creating a two-way average of 356mph. That beats the original record by 70 mph and our new record by over 20mph.
The bad news: we dropped a cylinder on the run, which is why the final velocity was lower than we hoped. So… now for more good news: we’re pulling the “A” motor and swapping in the 529 cubic inch “AA” motor that makes even more power. We’re hoping to have the new engine in the car by end of day, and will be running hard tomorrow morning looking to break the AA/BGS record we set back in October at the World Finals and possibly even break the 400mph barrier. Stay tuned!
Breaking our own Record: Back in Impound
Monday, August 16th, 2010Wow, after the drama this morning, we had a fantastic afternoon. The Cad Company and Performance Fabrication crews worked their butts off, did a full chassis inspection, fixed the sheetmetal, raised the suspension slightly and tuned the motor. Then we hit the salt again about 3:00pm, and Amir accelerated hard from 1st through 5th and exited the course at an incredible 366mph! That qualifies us for a new record, breaking the old record we set about 24 hours ago. The car is back in impound, and tomorrow morning at sunrise we back it up in the fresh cool air, which will hopefully make more power. Stay tuned. In the meantime, we offer a bird’s eye view of Amir in the cockpit, driving the SpeedLiner like it’s a landlocked intercontinental ballistic missile. Check out the G-forces as he accelerates through 3rd (it gets good around 1:10)
Drama on the Salt
Monday, August 16th, 2010Well, we thought this morning would be our big run. The car was in impound for a record run, the weather was cool with zero wind and our engine guru Courtney from Cad Company had just tuned up the boost profile for extra power. Amir said the car felt extremely strong off the start and the car was throwing a huge rooster tail of salt spray, and it was well over 300mph by the half course mark. Then he heard a loud “bang” noise, throttled the car down and pulled the shoots. At first we thought it was a blown tire, but as it turns out we think we hit a pot hole or a large chunk of salt… it tore an aluminum belly panel and made a lot of noise, but nothing else was damaged. We consider it a lucky run.
Metal master Troy Trepanier from Rad Rides by Troy (builder of the BlowFish land speed Barracuda) stepped up and TIG welded the panel for us, since we don’t have a welding rig on site.
The car is back on the ground now, and we’re planning on running again in the late afternoon. If all goes according to plan, we’ll make another strong run and hopefully be back in impound tonight.
The Ultimate Filter Proving Ground
Sunday, August 15th, 2010At Spectre, we pride ourselves on building the ultimate high performance air filters, and we call them hpR Filters – for HorsePower Rated. We tell everyone that our filters offer the ultimate in performance and protection, but unlike other companies on the market, we prove it – BIG TIME. How? By punishing our filters in the most brutal environment on the planet, the Bonneville Salt Flats.

Most streamliners run a single air intake scoop on top of the fuselage, where they can get nice clean air and they don’t have to run a filter at all. We run dual scoops on the bottom of the body close to the ground in a high-pressure zone, so we get a ram-air effect (which is good), but also vacuum up salt the entire length of the five mile course (which is bad). We typically pick up over 20 pounds of salt PER RUN, and most of it goes into the airbox. How do we prevent the turbos from ingesting big hunks of salt and grenading? With hpR filters.

What you see here is the first sneak preview of our new “Black” series ultra high performance hpR Filters. They look cool, flow an incredible amount of air and offer unmatched protection. As you can see, the outside of the filter is loaded with salt, but the inside is clean. As for power, our twin turbocharged Caddy powered SpeedLiner is (as of this writing) the fastest car of the meet at 349mph and has already set a record. We hope our good fortune will continue and we’ll continue to post big numbers for the rest of SpeedWeek. In the meantime, we thought everyone would get a kick out of knowing that we believe in our own product enough to punish it in with pounds and pounds of salt blown into the airbox at 350 mph.

Breaking our own record – Top Speed of the Meet (so far)
Sunday, August 15th, 2010We just made our second run of the day, the third of the event so far. Mid-course we hit a soft spot of salt and Amir had to do some real driving to keep the car going straight, but he did… to the tune of 349.651mph! Our average speed on the course was 347.872! That beats our own record we set earlier today, so the car is back in impound. We have a few bugs to work out and the air will be cooler in the morning, and we hope to post even bigger numbers. Stay tuned!
New World Record!
Sunday, August 15th, 2010We did it! At 7am this morning Amir strapped into the SpeedLiner, fired it up and rolled off the line. Soft salt caused him to have to really drive the car and pedal it quite a bit, but he exited the traps at 344mph! The two-way average and new A/BGS world record is 324mph – which also qualifies Amir for the exclusive 300mph Club! We’re getting ready for a second run now, to try and bump our own record….
Bonneville 2010: Day 2, Up Early at the Starting Line
Sunday, August 15th, 2010Bonneville 2010: End of Day 1
Saturday, August 14th, 2010We’re wrapping up our first day of racing on the salt. So far so good, the car is running great. Tomorrow we have to back up the run and post a big number, then we have a new world record in our class. Then we keep pushing to see how fast we can go!
Amir’s First Run: Qualified for a new record!
Saturday, August 14th, 2010Amir’s first run in the Spectre SpeedLiner went VERY well. He was as calm as Cool Hand Luke, and kept the car on track for a 300mph qualifying run. We had a speedometer failure mid-course, so he did his best to guess top speed and ended up running 312mph at the 5-mile and leaving the course at 320mph. That’s enough to qualify for a AA license and a new A/BGS (under 500 inch blown gas streamliner) record. The previous record was 286mph. We put the car in impound and had 4 hours to prep it. Then tomorrow we hit the salt again at 7am.
If all goes according to plan, Amir will back up the run with an even faster pass, lock in both a NEW WORLD RECORD, an unlimited license and the coveted blue hat of the 300mph Club. We will have lots of great high-def video and film coming soon, but in the meantime here’s a quickie little preview we pulled from the onboard cameras.