Let’s state right at the

outset that there are innovative tuners and builders, and then there are the

likes of men like Austin Coil and Alan Johnson. 

They are, by any measuring stick you can come up with, ahead of the

curve.  We mean no disrespect towards

anyone when we say that, because we know a couple of dozen guys out there who

are, whether anyone likes to admit it or not, infinitely sharper than the tech

inspectors charged with keeping them honest.


The championships that

Johnson and Coil have won are proof positive of their respective talents.  We said it in our coverage of the ’07 Finals

and again after the Winternationals: 

Alan Johnson is a genius.


But – and this is

important – Johnson is also a smart businessman.  Alan Johnson Performance Engineering, located

in the hinterlands of California,

produces a substantial line of must-have hardware, including cylinder

heads.  Johnson realized long ago that no

matter how brilliant his innovations, if he failed to share those goodies with

his clientele there would be no clientele. 

No clientele, no business.


True, Johnson must be at

or very near the top of the highest paid tuners list, as well he should

be.  The record he’s amassed is proof

positive of his skills, and while there seems no end in sight for his brilliant

trackside career, there’s probably going to come a day when he’d prefer a less

hectic lifestyle, and that’s when he’ll be most appreciative of the way he’s

operated AJPE.



Image

Right now only the Tony Schumacher-driven Army fueler is utilizing the new AJPE Stage VI heads, but others are sure to follow.

Let’s state right at the

outset that there are innovative tuners and builders, and then there are the

likes of men like Austin Coil and Alan Johnson. 

They are, by any measuring stick you can come up with, ahead of the

curve.  We mean no disrespect towards

anyone when we say that, because we know a couple of dozen guys out there who

are, whether anyone likes to admit it or not, infinitely sharper than the tech

inspectors charged with keeping them honest.


The championships that

Johnson and Coil have won are proof positive of their respective talents.  We said it in our coverage of the ’07 Finals

and again after the Winternationals: 

Alan Johnson is a genius.


But – and this is

important – Johnson is also a smart businessman.  Alan Johnson Performance Engineering, located

in the hinterlands of California,

produces a substantial line of must-have hardware, including cylinder

heads.  Johnson realized long ago that no

matter how brilliant his innovations, if he failed to share those goodies with

his clientele there would be no clientele. 

No clientele, no business.


True, Johnson must be at

or very near the top of the highest paid tuners list, as well he should

be.  The record he’s amassed is proof

positive of his skills, and while there seems no end in sight for his brilliant

trackside career, there’s probably going to come a day when he’d prefer a less

hectic lifestyle, and that’s when he’ll be most appreciative of the way he’s

operated AJPE.


Image

Worth repeating: Alan Johnson is a genius.

At the season-opening

Winternationals Johnson outfitted the Tony Schumacher-driven, Army-sponsored

Top Fuel car that would go on to win the race with a brand new set of what are

being titled Stage VI heads.  Theirs was

the only car in the pits thus equipped, and while they did win the race, their

performances were not the best of the weekend. 

By milliseconds, Schumacher’s final round 4.499 was eclipsed by Antron

Brown’s 4.495 qualifier and teammate Hot Rod Fuller’s first round 4.494.


Following the event there

was a mini-uproar from rival tuners and team owners, several of whom claimed

first that Johnson’s heads hadn’t been given the green light to appear in

competition by NHRA, and later amended their complaints along financial

lines.  Their contention was that the

configuration of the new heads, which feature raised exhaust ports, among other

things, were a needless increase in the costs of racing at a time when holding

things in check seems more important than ever before.


Addressing the first

issue, Johnson had a letter of approval from the NHRA Tech Department prior to

the opening of the Winternationals, so that complaint was immediately

discarded.  The second issue is a bit

more complicated.


On the off chance you’re

unfamiliar with how the NHRA has been addressing the issue of new racing hardware

in the last 10 years or so, there’s been a more or less across the boards

moratorium on anything that’s viewed as potentially increasing the costs of

racing.  That moratorium also includes

anything the NHRA deems to be a performance-improver.  In case you’re naïve enough to still believe

that drag racing is supposed to be about unlimited innovation, that concept

went out the window decades ago when aluminum clutch cans were outlawed and

steel cans mandated in their place.  Then

came minimum weights, and far too much more to even begin talking about

here.  The point is that drag racing has,

of necessity, become an endeavor in which rules have had to be implemented to

contain things.  Were the sport to be as

wide open as it was during its formative years it would simply cease to exist,

because those with the deepest pockets would merely “buy” their way into the

winners circle through their ability to experiment and build or buy the best of

everything.  It wouldn’t be too long

before there’d be three- or four-car Top Fuel fields and probably no more than

a half dozen Funny Cars.


Image

It doesn’t matter who built these heads, or what model they are. What’s evident is the way the fuel block rail for the down nozzles has been machined into the head. Note the efforts to keep that fitting sealed. The Stage VI heads solve this problem through the use of a higher valve cover rail.

There are other factors to

consider as well.  Neither Goodyear or

the NHRA is excited about the prospect of 340 MPH quarter mile speeds, and

frankly, the sport doesn’t need them to be exciting.  Side-by-side races with speeds of around 330

MPH with 4.5 second elapsed times are more than enough to fill the grandstands

and increase television ratings.  One car

going 4.399/345.00 sounds great on paper, but the potential negatives if there’s

any kind of equipment failure at those speeds is enough to make even the fans

with the hardest of hearts cringe with anxiety.


While money will always

play a factor in the outcome of any automotive speed contest, this goes beyond

one’s ability to buy performance.  Some

of the better equipped teams in competition have the manpower and technical

skills to build proprietary cylinder heads that will flow like the exhaust on

an F-22 on afterburner, but if, say, John Force Racing or Don Schumacher Racing

were the only teams who had them, say goodbye to real racing.  Everyone else in the class would be racing

for second place – or worse.  So, while

the moratorium on new parts continues to impact aftermarket suppliers like

Johnson, it also holds in check what an individual team might be able to do on

its own, and like it or not, that appears to be good for drag racing.


In an effort to ascertain

the performance potential of Johnson’s Stage VI heads we contacted a leading

aftermarket manufacturer of both heads and engines.  When we questioned him about whether or not

the raised exhaust ports would be a performance enhancer he would go no further

than to say, “It could.  He refused to state unequivocally that they

would, as he felt there were too many variables to consider to make that kind

of statement.  He then went on to briefly

outline a cylinder head modification he’s suggested to one of the leading Top

Fuel tuners that’s not only within the rules, but that can be done with a hand

grinder in an hour or two at virtually no expense.  Should this modification prove out – and it

does not include either intake or exhaust port relocations – performances may

very well increase without a commensurate increase in costs.


But, let’s address the

Stage VI heads specifically.  Before we

even consider what they’re all about (and trust us on this, you’re not about to

read a highly technical dissertation if for no other reason than we’re

incapable of writing one!), let’s do a price comparison.  Right now the AJPE head of choice is the

Stage V.  A set of bare Stage Vs –

meaning no valves, no springs, no rocker arms, nothing but the heads themselves

– ring up the cash register to the tune of $6,475.


The new Stage VI heads,

also bare, cost (wait for it) the same $6,475.


So much for the argument

that the new heads are going to increase the costs of racing, although we’ll

grant that the heads do require different headers because of the raised

ports.  However, as AJPE manager Chris

Barker points out, “Headers and things like spark plug tubes are expendable

items to begin with.”


As Barker says, “The

biggest change is that the exhaust ports are raised, and we’ve gone with what

Alan considers to be a more logical header flange.”  The basic header flange design hasn’t changed

in about 20 years, but as exhaust ports continued to see some “movement” with

new head designs, it became almost mandatory to make the change.


Barker believes the

biggest change is raising the valve cover rail .5-inches.  This means that the fuel “rail” for the down

nozzles that runs along the top of the head is now fitted through the end of

the rail with a bulkhead fitting.  Up

until now most of the teams installed the fuel rails with a square fitting

they’d cut into the end of the valve cover rail and then had to seal with

silicone or some other sealer.  Fuel

leakage was sometimes a problem, although most teams seem to have solved that

in recent years.  If a piston was burned

during a run the increased pressure throughout the engine did have the

capability of blowing out that fitting, forcing oil directly onto the headers,

and thus generating one of those fire-spewing spectaculars television and still

photographers love so dearly, but cost team owners just as dearly.


Contrary to what some have

thought, this new head does not require new or different exhaust or intake

valves.  The same hardware that worked on

earlier heads works on the Stage VI model. 

“What you will have to have,” Barker says, “are new valve covers, new

spark plug tubes and new headers.”


When asked about a

potential performance improvement, Barker adds, “To be honest, we haven’t seen

it yet.  Basically, one of the reasons

Alan did this is because he believes that since (NHRA) has gone back to 90%

nitro the raised ports will help cool the heads off a little bit.


“The architecture of the

heads in terms of valve sizes and locations remains the same as before, per the

NHRA rules.  This was done primarily from

the safety and engine life standpoint, not performance.”


Barker also points out

that not every product that comes out of their shop works the way Alan Johnson

may have hoped it would.  The Stage III

heads, for example, did not perform well for Johnson, so he took them off the

car he was working with at the time, yet the Kalitta teams as well as Larry

Dixon’s car continued to successfully utilize those heads well into the

introduction of the Stage V model.  He

also mentions that during her final year of competition Shirley Muldowney’s car

was running 4.5s with Stage I heads at a time when almost everyone else had

moved to Stage IVs.


What usually happens when

Johnson develops a new product is that most of the competitors wait for him to

prove its worth before placing orders, and that seems to be the case again this

time.  Only Johnson’s Army car will have

the heads this weekend in Phoenix,

although Tony Pedregon may test with them on Monday, after the race.  As of our deadline no one else has yet placed

an order for the Stage VI heads – and they may not have to if current

performances continue to keep pace with Tony Schumacher.

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Competition Plus Team

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