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A Tale of Two Engines

 <<Engine Development Release.doc>> 
 <<MellingMorgan1.JPG>> 







For Immediate Release
For more information, please contact:
David Harris, SFX/Cotter Group
(704) 455-4291 - office/(704) 756-9301 - mobile
David.Harris@sfx.com

A Tale of Two Dodge Engines
NASCAR and NHRA Build Upon Early Success

HARRISBURG, N.C. (May 1, 2001) -- The word technology is often associated
with Silicon Valley and space-age robotics. 

Many forms of competitive motor sports, especially the NASCAR Winston Cup
Series and NHRA Winston Drag Racing, are built on the foundation of
stringent rules to regulate the amount of technology being used.

But technology, in its purest form, is the driving force behind Dodge and
Mopar's motor sports efforts -- more specifically, its NHRA Winston Drag
Racing and NASCAR Winston Cup Series programs. Advanced computer design and
3-D modeling has helped Dodge and Mopar engineers, in association with its
race teams, put together two of the premier racing engine programs in the
world. These programs are redefining how quickly  competitive race engines
can be developed.

Both the new 358-cubic-inch Magnum R5-P7, which powers the 10 factory backed
NASCAR Winston Cup Series Dodge Intrepid R/Ts, and the new 500-cubic-inch
NHRA Pro Stock Hemi engine of Mopar's three Pro Stock teams, started from
'clean sheets of paper' a little over two years ago and have become
extremely competitive in a short period of time.


"We didn't have a chance to do anything twice," said Dodge manager of NASCAR
engine programs Ted Flack. "Therefore, we had to use all of the computer
technology and features we could. From the time they announced the NASCAR
Winston Cup Series program, we had about 400 days until we raced. There was
very little time."

In a project that began in November 1999, the NASCAR Magnum R5-P7 shocked
the collective racing community when the No. 9 Ray Evernham-owned Dodge
Motorsports Intrepid R/T entry of Bill Elliott captured the pole for this
year's Daytona 500. The Melling Racing No. 92 Kodiak Dodge Intrepid R/T of
Stacy Compton grabbed the outside pole, making Dodge's modern day NASCAR
Winston Cup Series debut a huge success. And Dodge Intrepid R/T's grabbed
the first three slots at the most recent Winston Cup race in Talladega,
Ala., when the No. 40 Coors Light Dodge Intrepid R/T of Sterling Marlin,
Compton and Elliott completed the task.

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A Tale of Two Engines
Page Two

Long-time NASCAR Winston Cup Series engine builder Ernie Elliott, who builds
engines for Melling Racing and Chip Ganassi Racing, spoke on how engine
building has changed.

"Today's technology makes it so much easier and more exact," said Elliott.
"The Dodge 
engineers were able to simulate and develop a new engine based on computer
models. Not that long ago, we were still trying to do things based on
experience and trial-and-error. It was pretty inexact."

The same could be said of the Dodge's new Pro Stock Hemi engine program.
With limited time to put it together, the Dodge motorsports engineers
designed, developed and built a competitive 500-cubic-inch Pro Stock engine
in little over a year. After an inauspicious debut at the season-opening
2000 Winternationals in Pomona, Calif., the new Hemi engine roused the NHRA
world when a Mopar Parts Dodge R/T broke the national elapsed-time record
with a 6.809-second pass during the national event at Memphis (Tenn.)
Motorsports Park last September. 

"With the amount of precision in the design software, we were able to build
parts and fit them together on the computer," said Greg Reeves, Dodge Hemi
engine engineer. "We couldn't do that in the past. We are now able to make
sure a part fits by drawing it on the computer. We have the ability to
create the perfect part without literally building it first."

The two engine programs were developed side-by-side, meaning there was some
technology crossover.

"The same designers worked on both blocks," said Flack. "We were using the
same technology and design software to make it work. Both programs spent a
lot of time on the computer, designing and developing and experimenting.

"Utilizing the advanced software packages, we are able to completely build
all of the parts and piece them together on the computer," Flack added. "So,
it was pretty neat to see that all of the pieces fit perfectly together when
we assembled it the first time for real. The computer was able to design the
parts to perfect scale. That doesn't happen very often."

Dodge Motorports R/T Pro Stock driver Larry Morgan, who has been at the
forefront of Hemi engine development, feels that Dodge's commitment to both
sports is key.

"I think the biggest part of this is Dodge's commitment to motor sports,"
said Morgan. "They are committed financially and committed engineering wise.
Motorsports isn't just something they do -- it's something they live."


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