Drag Illustrated Issue 112, August 2016 | Page 79

Main Girl PHOTOS: TERA WENDLAND GRAVES, CHRIS GRAVES Ashley Fye, long time girlfriend and now fiancé of Palmer’s, is central to virtually every aspect of his racing operation. Serving as crew chief on the team’s Top Fuel dragster and experimental nitro-burning Pro Mod, Fye’s input is critical to Palmer’s on-track success, but it’s her support and encouragement away from the drag strip and on the road that Palmer appreciates the most. “It’s especially rewarding to race with Ashley,” he says. “But I have to admit that there’s more to it than that. I couldn’t and wouldn’t do it without her. She doesn’t get the credit she deserves. She builds every cylinder head we run, measures and checks rods and pistons aft er every run, builds every clutch pack for every run, makes a lot of calls on things like head gasket thickness, overdrive on the blower, strips the superchargers, and she’s driven the damn thing. She’s a RacePak technical representative, she can do it all. She’s a legitimate bad ass, and she’s beautiful.” in more cars, or bring back teams who have been on the sidelines for a few years? NHRA has actually tried to get people out there. Not financially, but I think they’re trying to work with the teams. The big teams have helped a lot with a few of the smaller independent teams that don’t come out much, they’ve actually helped them with their setup. They will give you advice. They’ll help you if you want it. You can go to Kalitta Motorsports or a Jim Head or somebody, and they will help you. They’re definitely working toward getting more people out there. I don’t believe you can do anything to make the price cheaper. I don’t think that’ll ever happen because then the ‘big show’ is not the ‘big show’. It’s the ‘big show’ because it’s so hard to do. If they tried to slow them down, then it would lose its luster. I think the quarter-mile versus thousand-foot deal has kind of at least died down a little bit because – let’s face it – we’re not going back to quarter-mile. I just don’t ever see that happening, as much as people would like it to. To a point I think thousand-foot helped the smaller guys for a while. But now these cars are running so fast early and the RPM in these cars is incredible. Ten years ago, if you want 8,000 RPM at the hit, you had a badass hotrod. There’s cars out there now that go to 8,800 to 9,000 and they just murder it. They just slip the clutch, and they go fast that way. That just makes everything hard. I just can’t even imagine the thing having 78- gallons, 80-gallons August 2016 of fuel at 9,000 RPMs on a fuel motor. It blows my mind. Where we run ours is about 8,300 – and that’s high for us. You can tell it’s hard on parts. But I don’t think you’re ever going to get away from that because going really fast is what makes it cool. The big Pro teams have been vocal about how their major corporate sponsors have responded positively to the increased exposure from the new FOX Sports television package. How have your sponsors or fans reacted? People love the FOX deal or they hate the FOX deal. But I’ll tell you…the FOX Sports deal has helped our program. It has helped us find more help. Whether you believe it’s good coverage or not, I can prove to you and tell you without a shadow of a doubt that it has worked for us. I know I hear good and bad about it, but I can show you where it’s helped us a lot. You’ve had some unconventional sponsorship deals over the years, especially this year. How did the deals with the Lucas Oil Drag Boat Series and drag boat icon Tommy Thompson Motorsports come about? We run the Lucas Oil Drag Boat Series logo on our car because Lucas helped us, and they have a badass big team. So us running Lucas Oil logos all over the car doesn’t really help them because we know we’re not a top-end car - we’re not a big-budget team. So, we run the Drag Boat series logo because we have a drag boat, and that’s also because of Lucas – not because we have the money, because Lucas does. So, we promote the boat series. From that exposure, the boat racers have noticed they have gotten more coverage and recognition. We’ve had drag racers going to the boat races, hanging out with us, and boat racers are coming out to drag races. It’s been crazy. Marty Logan, who owns House of Colour down around Dallas, he’s got a big paint shop there and he helps our team – our car and boat team some, and he runs a boat, too. Tommy Thompson, he’s like the [Don] Schumacher of boat racing. He owns six boats. Personally, he has carried boat racing for 30-years. He’s spent millions of dollars in boat racing. Helps everybody, and he’s helped so many people, you could never name them all. But he came to me when we were just friends and told me that the exposure he gets and that boat racing gets through FOX and from the Lucas Oil Drag Boat Series sticker being on the car has been so good, and that it’s nice to see excitement back geared toward boat racing again. So, Tommy has joined our team. He came to me and said he wanted to keep us out there. He has stepped in and you see Tommy Thompson Motorsports on the side of the car and it’s a great deal for us. It’s a deal where he basically said, ‘I want you to be able go as far as you want to go, but I want you to be able to do it your way. I don’t want that to change. I like it after hours when we’re relaxing and we’re able DragIllustrated.com | D r a g I l l u s t r a t e d | 79