Callaway Racing......
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Callaway Racing......
This is a thread devoted to the cars and characters that made Callaway's a relative household name for Vette lovers...Feel free to add comments, images and just about anything you want related to Callaway Racing Corvettes.
Last edited by critt99 on Sun Aug 31, 2008 9:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Callaway Racing......
When I think of Callaway Racing ...this is it.....ahhh...I miss the good o'le days....
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Re: Callaway Racing......
By the way, if anyone could find a set of those valve covers, I would pay handsomely....And make you many models!
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Re: Callaway Racing......
Photo posted with permission from Ron Perry
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Re: Callaway Racing......
Love the info and pictures, thanks!!
2011 Callaway Supercharged 427 Grand Sport
Callaway built C5R block, ultra lightweight forged crank, billet rods, forged pistons, Callaway cam and valvetrain, 4LT, Mag ride, severe duty RPM transmission 668 brake HP 632 torque
Callaway built C5R block, ultra lightweight forged crank, billet rods, forged pistons, Callaway cam and valvetrain, 4LT, Mag ride, severe duty RPM transmission 668 brake HP 632 torque
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Re: Callaway Racing......
WOW, these are pics and documents I never seen before
thanks Mike,
thanks Mike,
Callaway Owners Group : Division Europe
Callaway C1 project registry member
Callaway C1 project registry member
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Re: Callaway Racing......
Great pics Mike. Those press releases are
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Re: Callaway Racing......Hubba Hubba
critt99 wrote:
OK, this picture should be in a larger format!
-Luigi
cool
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Re: Callaway Racing......
I dont so you can keep focused......steady now.....
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Who is that young guy with lots of hair?
Notice the duct tape and the boxes holding on the bonnet...just a short time later, that same car was on the pole for GT.
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After winning the first European Champ in 30+ years....
The Callaway Corvette Z06R continues to whoop some...!@#
Aston Martin and Corvette dominate Brno Race One
All through the free practice sessions at Brno, the Aston Martin DBRS9 looked like the car to beat; so it proved in round 7 of the FIA GT3 European Championship, when the No 17 Brixia Racing Aston Martin of Diego Alessi and Marcello Zani led home Jean-Claude Lagniez and Fred Makowiecki in the No.10 Hexis Racing Aston Martin; third place went to the Czech pair of Martin Matzke and Jiri Skula, in the No.38 MM-Racing Corvette Z.06R GT3. The No.17 car was in contention right from the beginning, having started in second place, but the success of the other two podium finishers was founded on avoiding several first-lap incidents.
Order shuffled by first-lap mayhem
Once again there was chaos on the first lap; into the first corner the No.5 Kessel Racing Ferrari F430 GT, which had started from pole, spun in front of the pack, triggering frantic avoidance efforts. Just a couple of hundred yards later the No.45 Gravity Racing Ascari KZ1R GT3 lost control under braking, punting the No.21 Matech GT Racing Ford GT into the gravel and out of the race. After those incidents the No.17 Brixia car led from the No.8 Hexis Racing Aston Martin, and these two quickly pulled out a 5-second gap over the field. It was clear the No.8 car was quicker, its lights flashing in pursuit.
On the fourth lap the No.8 car was through into the lead – but at the same time the No.3 and No.4 Kessel Racing Ferraris had a coming-together on the exit of turn 15, putting them both out of the race from the lower reaches of the top 10; the No.4 car was heavily damaged when it hit the barrier, and the safety car was sent out to allow the cars to be removed. The safety car stayed out for three laps; when it came in, there were 40 minutes remaining.
Penalty decides the race outcome
Once the race restarted the No.8 car immediately pulled out a lead, but just two laps later the pit-stop window opened and the No.17 Aston Martin opted to change drivers as early as possible, as did a number of other cars. The No.8 squad took the opposite tactic, leaving their change until the last possible moment – and when they came out, it was less than a second ahead of the No.17 car. However, their joy was short-lived – the car was given a 1-second stop-go penalty for their pit-stop being that one agonising second too short.
From there to the end of the race the No.17 Brixia car enjoyed a comfortable lead, coming home over 12 seconds clear. Second place went to the No.10 Hexis Racing Aston Martin car – a remarkable result given that it had been eighteenth on the grid, and outside the top fifteen when the pit-stops began. With six laps remaining, they overtook the No.38 MM-Racing Corvette for third; behind those three, a furious battle raged over the remaining points positions. With four laps remaining, fourth to eleventh positions were covered by just 5 seconds, and there were continual overtaking moves and blocking manoeuvres.
When the chequered flag fell it was Championship leaders Peyroles and Ruffier, in the No.1 Martini Callaway Racing Corvette, who had climbed to fourth, ahead of the No.37 MM-Racing Corvette of Vojtech and Lacko. The No.2 Martini Callaway car of Bert and Meir was sixth, ahead of Julien and Manuel Rodrigues in the No.9 Hexis Racing Aston Martin, while the final point went to the No.6 Trackspeed Porsche 997 GT3 Cup S of Ashburn and Williams, who also had the honour of being the first car home which wasn’t an Aston Martin or a Corvette!
“There was some chaos on the opening lap – but it was all behind me,” said Alessi. “The Brixia car is very consistent and easy to drive, which made my job easier.” Zani agreed, saying: “The car is fast in race set-up, and I kept pushing right to the end of the race, even though I had no cars near me, because you never know what might happen. As driver and team manager, this is doubly satisfying for me, and I’m grateful to all the guys in the team who have worked hard for this.”
The result extends the lead of Peyroles and Ruffier in the Drivers’ Championship to eight points; their nearest rivals, Khan and Mutsch, finished a disappointed 10th in the No.20 Matech GT Racing Ford GT. Third place for Matzke and Skula moved the pair up to fifth overall, just three points away from third place; while Mutsch will start today’s race from pole position, the Czech pair must be hoping to make further progress on their ‘home’ track.
Driver quotes and photos are available on the FIA GT3 website.
Note: After Qualifying, numerous penalties were applied which affected the grid positions; the grid for Race One is attached.
Aston Martin and Corvette dominate Brno Race One
All through the free practice sessions at Brno, the Aston Martin DBRS9 looked like the car to beat; so it proved in round 7 of the FIA GT3 European Championship, when the No 17 Brixia Racing Aston Martin of Diego Alessi and Marcello Zani led home Jean-Claude Lagniez and Fred Makowiecki in the No.10 Hexis Racing Aston Martin; third place went to the Czech pair of Martin Matzke and Jiri Skula, in the No.38 MM-Racing Corvette Z.06R GT3. The No.17 car was in contention right from the beginning, having started in second place, but the success of the other two podium finishers was founded on avoiding several first-lap incidents.
Order shuffled by first-lap mayhem
Once again there was chaos on the first lap; into the first corner the No.5 Kessel Racing Ferrari F430 GT, which had started from pole, spun in front of the pack, triggering frantic avoidance efforts. Just a couple of hundred yards later the No.45 Gravity Racing Ascari KZ1R GT3 lost control under braking, punting the No.21 Matech GT Racing Ford GT into the gravel and out of the race. After those incidents the No.17 Brixia car led from the No.8 Hexis Racing Aston Martin, and these two quickly pulled out a 5-second gap over the field. It was clear the No.8 car was quicker, its lights flashing in pursuit.
On the fourth lap the No.8 car was through into the lead – but at the same time the No.3 and No.4 Kessel Racing Ferraris had a coming-together on the exit of turn 15, putting them both out of the race from the lower reaches of the top 10; the No.4 car was heavily damaged when it hit the barrier, and the safety car was sent out to allow the cars to be removed. The safety car stayed out for three laps; when it came in, there were 40 minutes remaining.
Penalty decides the race outcome
Once the race restarted the No.8 car immediately pulled out a lead, but just two laps later the pit-stop window opened and the No.17 Aston Martin opted to change drivers as early as possible, as did a number of other cars. The No.8 squad took the opposite tactic, leaving their change until the last possible moment – and when they came out, it was less than a second ahead of the No.17 car. However, their joy was short-lived – the car was given a 1-second stop-go penalty for their pit-stop being that one agonising second too short.
From there to the end of the race the No.17 Brixia car enjoyed a comfortable lead, coming home over 12 seconds clear. Second place went to the No.10 Hexis Racing Aston Martin car – a remarkable result given that it had been eighteenth on the grid, and outside the top fifteen when the pit-stops began. With six laps remaining, they overtook the No.38 MM-Racing Corvette for third; behind those three, a furious battle raged over the remaining points positions. With four laps remaining, fourth to eleventh positions were covered by just 5 seconds, and there were continual overtaking moves and blocking manoeuvres.
When the chequered flag fell it was Championship leaders Peyroles and Ruffier, in the No.1 Martini Callaway Racing Corvette, who had climbed to fourth, ahead of the No.37 MM-Racing Corvette of Vojtech and Lacko. The No.2 Martini Callaway car of Bert and Meir was sixth, ahead of Julien and Manuel Rodrigues in the No.9 Hexis Racing Aston Martin, while the final point went to the No.6 Trackspeed Porsche 997 GT3 Cup S of Ashburn and Williams, who also had the honour of being the first car home which wasn’t an Aston Martin or a Corvette!
“There was some chaos on the opening lap – but it was all behind me,” said Alessi. “The Brixia car is very consistent and easy to drive, which made my job easier.” Zani agreed, saying: “The car is fast in race set-up, and I kept pushing right to the end of the race, even though I had no cars near me, because you never know what might happen. As driver and team manager, this is doubly satisfying for me, and I’m grateful to all the guys in the team who have worked hard for this.”
The result extends the lead of Peyroles and Ruffier in the Drivers’ Championship to eight points; their nearest rivals, Khan and Mutsch, finished a disappointed 10th in the No.20 Matech GT Racing Ford GT. Third place for Matzke and Skula moved the pair up to fifth overall, just three points away from third place; while Mutsch will start today’s race from pole position, the Czech pair must be hoping to make further progress on their ‘home’ track.
Driver quotes and photos are available on the FIA GT3 website.
Note: After Qualifying, numerous penalties were applied which affected the grid positions; the grid for Race One is attached.
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Callaway Racing......
Most folks are unaware of the earlier Callaway Racing projects...note the name on the wing....
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Callaway Racing action at Nogaro
Late-race drama gives Aston Martin easy win
Having taken over from Accary, Pierre-Brice Mena seemed to have the race under control, with a lead over some 10 seconds from the No.21 Ford GT – but that reckoned without the pace of James Ruffier, in the No.1 Martini Callaway Racing Corvette Z.06R GT3. Lying third after the pit-stops, Ruffier soon caught Alex Mortimer, in the No.21 Ford GT; after an abortive outbraking attempt at the end of the main straight Ruffier made it past at the same point a lap later – and on the following lap, von Gartzen demoted Mortimer to fourth.
Ruffier had clearly decided the race win could be his, and he was closing the gap to Mena by as much as a second a lap – but then, smoke started coming from the rear of the Corvette. It quickly worsened – but it seemed to have no effect on Ruffier’s pace. The gap was down to under four seconds, with less than five minutes of the 60-minute race remaining, when the Corvette finally died – Ruffier was forced to pull off, a premature end to what had looked to be a thrilling climax. Since Ruffier and team-mate Arnaud Peyroles were just two points behind Khan and Mutsch, the mechanical failure – thought to be the differential – robbed them of a chance to leapfrog Khan and Mutsch.
Having taken over from Accary, Pierre-Brice Mena seemed to have the race under control, with a lead over some 10 seconds from the No.21 Ford GT – but that reckoned without the pace of James Ruffier, in the No.1 Martini Callaway Racing Corvette Z.06R GT3. Lying third after the pit-stops, Ruffier soon caught Alex Mortimer, in the No.21 Ford GT; after an abortive outbraking attempt at the end of the main straight Ruffier made it past at the same point a lap later – and on the following lap, von Gartzen demoted Mortimer to fourth.
Ruffier had clearly decided the race win could be his, and he was closing the gap to Mena by as much as a second a lap – but then, smoke started coming from the rear of the Corvette. It quickly worsened – but it seemed to have no effect on Ruffier’s pace. The gap was down to under four seconds, with less than five minutes of the 60-minute race remaining, when the Corvette finally died – Ruffier was forced to pull off, a premature end to what had looked to be a thrilling climax. Since Ruffier and team-mate Arnaud Peyroles were just two points behind Khan and Mutsch, the mechanical failure – thought to be the differential – robbed them of a chance to leapfrog Khan and Mutsch.
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Re: Callaway Racing......
I've never seen that Aston Martin before. Doesn't even look like an Aston.
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Re: Callaway Racing......
Brangeta wrote:I've never seen that Aston Martin before. Doesn't even look like an Aston.
YES IT DOES!