When most people hear the words race car, they think of a thunderous, ill-mannered beast that is every bit as good at draining your wallet, as it is at fulfilling your dreams. After all, the road to victory is strewn with useless parts and broken hearts, and if you're in it for the gold, you may as well quit before you get started. Racing is surely a sport of love, but that doesn't mean you have to go broke doing what makes you happy.
No one knows this better than Randy Stinchcomb, because he spent 13 years crewing for other people. So when he decided to build his own race car, he wanted something he could have fun with and race often, without the worry of it one day staring back at him from the confines of a dusty garage, too spectacularly broken to fix.
To this end, Randy purchased a brand new '96 GT, with the sole purpose of relegating it to strip duty. As a longtime friend of 4.6-gearjammer, Barry Shepard, Randy already had a list of items that he knew would breathe economical performance into his engine.
Randy started with a Motorsport manifold which he ported himself, then added Motorsport reduction pulleys, Motorsport headers, a Lincoln 80mm mass air, and a K&N air filter. "The bigger mass air tends to make it run a little lean," explains Randy, "so I use a 150-lph in-tank pump and a Kirban adjustable regulator to increase the fuel pressure to about 10 psi above stock." The only other additions to the engine are Amsoil synthetic oil and plugs that are two heat ranges cooler than stock.
One thing you'll notice, as you look inside Randy's purple 'Stang, are two computers on the passenger-side floor. One is the stock computer, and one is the Motorsport computer designed for use with the SVO heads and intake. He uses these in conjunction with a JET piggyback chip, making it possible to run several different chip/computer combos to suit various weather/track conditions. "It's kind of like a poor man's laptop," Randy laughs.
Backing up the warmed-over 4.6 is a Motorsport King Cobra clutch assembly, which transmits power to the 3.73-geared stock rearend via a Motorsport aluminum driveshaft. Providing the hook is a pair of Steeda lower control arms, Motorsport uppers (boxed for added strength), Kenny Brown subframe connectors, and Weld wheels shod with Hoosier 26x9x15-inch tires. Randy's best elapsed time to date is a 13.63 at 100.5 mph--pretty impressive when you consider how simple the combo is.
Of course, no race car is ever finished, and Randy already has his GT's future laid out. "I plan on an aluminum Cobra short-block with Motorsport two-valve heads and a power adder of some kind. At first I was thinking about a blower, but now I might go with nitrous instead. My ultimate goal is for the car to still be streetable and run in the high 10s." Hmmm... so much for a cheap race car.