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THE
CLUB |
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The American
Racing Drivers Club was organized in 1939 by a group of East Coast
midget drivers and car owners for the purpose of looking after the
interests of fellow midget drivers and owners. Bill Schindler was
elected its first president and virtually every midget driver in the
East signed up.
ARDC is governed by a Board, which consists of a president, vice
president, treasurer, secretary, driver’s representative, owner’s
representative, and a member at large. A trustee is elected into office
for a three-year term. Elections occur at a general membership meeting
held in November. The Board of Governors usually meet once a month to
discuss matters of the club.
ARDC members include lifetime members, owners, drivers, owner/driver
combinations, crew members, associate members, working officials and the
press. Over the years, drivers such as Mario Andretti, Nick Fornoro
Senior and Junior, Larry Dickson, Johnny Parsons Jr., Ron ‘Sleepy’
Tripp, Jan Opperman, Bobby Marshman, Tom Bigelow, Smokey Snellbaker,
Mitch Smith, Mel Kenyon, Wally Dallenbach, Len Duncan, Leigh Earnshaw
Jr., Pancho Carter, Billy Hughes, and many more have come from the ranks
of ARDC.
ARDC, having no ‘home’ track, travels to speedways throughout the
Eastern Atlantic region. It retains its own entourage of officials
including a starter, race director, an announcer, scorer and pit
stewards. |
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THE EVENTS |
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In a single season ARDC sanctions or co-sanctions approximately 20 races
ranging from New York to North Carolina. They can race on dirt ovals
varying in size from one-quarter mile to five-eighths mile.
An ARDC show consists of two or three heat races, usually eight to ten
laps in length. Followed up with a twenty to twenty-five lap feature
race. The cars are lined up according to an established ARDC
handicapping system. |
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THE DRIVERS |
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ARDC averages 30 registered drivers per year. Their experience varies
from the first year rookie to the seasoned veteran of twenty years or
more.
The drivers come from all walks of life with most of them being a ‘blue
collar’ member of the work force. Many have developed their driving
skills racing a micro sprint or quarter midget although some have seen
duty in the three-quarter midgets, late model stock cars and sprint car
divisions (URC, 358, 410). |
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THE CARS |
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The midget chassis registered with ARDC come from established builders
like Stealth, Beast, Ellis, Drinan, Striker, Hawk and Beaber. The vast
majority of engines are a four cylinder in-line configuration. The
professionally built engines come from the better known shops such as
Brayton, Gearte, Fontana, Snyder, and Skat. They are identified by their
cylinder head in combination with the engine builder for example ....
Brayton Ford, Gearte SB2, Pontiac, Olds Quad 4, Brayton Alan Johnson,
Gearte - 12 (dash 12), etc. Occasionally you will see a Skat V-4, a
Chevy V-6, or an in-line Ford 6 cylinder.
ARDC employs the stringent safety
rules that are generally accepted nationwide. In general, they must have
a full roll cage made of aircraft grade moly tubing, the thickness and
diameter as specified in the rulebook. A five point seatbelt system is
used and must be replaced with new every three years. All cars must have
an aircraft type fuel bladder with alcohol being the only type of fuel
accepted. All drivers must wear fire-resistant suits, underwear, gloves,
socks, and hood. Arm restraints are mandatory as they keep the drivers
arms within the cockpit should the car be involved in a rollover
situation. A top wing can be used (promoters option.) The wing aids in
stability and traction and is primarily found on midgets racing in the
eastern United States. The wheels are made of a lightweight material,
are limited to 13 inches in diameter and a maximum width of 10 inches on
the right rear of the chassis. An 8-inch width is the maximum width for
the other three corners. |
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