Gallery number two from the 2016 Texas Outlaw Challenge. For Gallery One click here!
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Gallery number two from the 2016 Texas Outlaw Challenge. For Gallery One click here!
Rusty Rahm and Jeff Harris of Wake Effects took first price at the Marathon Super Boat Grand Prix this weekend! The duo averaged 110.39 mph during the 20 lap course that ran a full 4 miles, and inched out Bob Bull and Randy Scism in CMS by a mere second.
Always identifiable in their 48 ft. MTI, you better keep an eye out for them as they are clearly a step ahead of everyone this year.
βWe got one, two and three,β said Scism. βBob did a great job. Jeff and Rusty got faster and faster as they gained seat time together. Mike and Gary had a Guardian (protective engine mode) issue problem but were running hard.
βIt just doesnβt get any better than today,β he continued. βRusty and Jeff are leading in points for the National Championship. Itβs a great start of the season for Wake Effects.β (www.speedonthewater.com)
See the video footage below and watch Wake Effects and CMS battle it out!
(Video Provided by ZipZapPower)
(Featured Image from wwwspeedonthewater.com)
P3-3 Blue Heaven Fountain race boat dropped from crane in Marathon Florida.
(Video Credit –Β http://wsvn.com/)
Check out the 2nd batch of Texas Outlaw Challenge photos here!
Another batch added 6/28, more photos to be posted in another gallery.
More photos added 6/27, with even more to come!
Here come the first pics, stay tuned to this page for more as they come!
Marine Design Corporation has made waves again with the success of their DriveGuardian! Saris RacingΒ was the only boat in their class that didn’t break in the rough water in Atlantic City all thanks to the “slipping clutch” developed by MDC to alleviate stress on the drives and other components.
Check out the MDC website to see what the DriveGuardian can do for you!
Our local offshore racing club, OPBRA, short for Offshore Power BoatΒ Racing Association, was formed in 1963 as an alternative to theΒ Bahamas Powerboat Group. The Bahamas group was owned andΒ operated by Sherman F. βRedβ Crise, a cranky sumbitch who was veryΒ successful in sucking money out of the Bahamas Government, andΒ keeping it. We all owe him a big βHuzzahβ for starting up internationalΒ offshore racing in 1956, with the first Miami-Nassau offshoreΒ powerboat race. I have always felt that the coincidence of my arrivalΒ in South Florida at that exact moment was more than chance, but IΒ havenβt found any evidence to back it up.
The new club was wildly successful. Literally every offshore racingΒ participant in the world was a dues paying member, and we createdΒ two new offshore races immediately. First was the Miami to Key WestΒ race, always held in November, when the winter winds were usuallyΒ howling from the north, then the Sam Griffith Memorial race inΒ February for the same reason. We could have used a club psychiatristΒ to find out why everyone pretended that they enjoyed getting theΒ crap beaten out of themselves on a regular basis. In all fairness, IΒ didnβt see that much leather or whips and chains…..
It turns out that managing a race was a real pain in the ass, and thatΒ Red Crise did it because he was being paid copious amounts ofΒ Bahamian cheese, which, of course, he stashed, since his races at thatΒ time did not pay a cent. We paid him for the privilege. Other venuesΒ sprung up around the country and the world, and each one made ourΒ club just a bit less important. The new racing groups were asΒ enthusiastic as we once were, and finally, the club just wasnβt viableΒ any more. We even elected Sammy James, a known hoot, asΒ president. Although Sammy was a top guy in everything offshore, heΒ couldnβt seem to re-light the flame either. Sammy and I were having aΒ beer after on OPBRA meeting, and he collared me and said βBrownie,Β what shall we do? We donβt have a club-managed race anymore.Β Membership is way off, dues are off. I am at a loss at what to doβ.Β Fortunately, I had been drinking during the entire meeting with DavidΒ Gillmore, Paul Clauser, Don Pruett, Jake Trotter and Jim Breuil, mostΒ of us on the Board of Directors. One of us said βSammy, how much doΒ we have in the treasury?β βAbout $3500β. I said, βScrew it, letβs drinkΒ it up!β The place brightened up immediately. We built on that terrificΒ idea, and came up with a βFun Ocean Raceβ from Miami toΒ Islamorada, with the finish line at the famous βSunset Innβ. TheΒ owners were friends of mine, and my family and I had spent dozens ofΒ weekends there, enjoying the Keys. They had a private island there,Β on the bay, that was to be our party site. Rules for the race were βRunΒ what you brungβ, and club membership was required. Entries andΒ new or re-fluffed memberships in the club soared. I do not recall theΒ total number of entries, but do recall that we had 54 finishers,Β probably still a record for an offshore race.
We took enough booze to the island to knock the hard spots off theΒ entire middle keys. For the first time, I saw Goombay Smashes beingΒ prepared in 30 gallon barrels, two of them, stirred by oars. SammyΒ decorated the menβs room door with an 8 x 10 photo of Don AronowβsΒ face, just below the word βMENβ.Β We had prepared 60 or 80 identical trophies, black on mahoganyΒ plaques, that said βMiami-Islamorada Powerboat Race. 1969.Β Winnerβ. We presented every finisher (and good looking girl) aΒ trophy, except the winner, Billy McDonald, who received nothing. Β Billy had driven his 18β Donzi with Mark βBig Dirtyβ Raymond. NeitherΒ was very adept at navigating, and I suppose they also won the Miami-Β Lower Matecumbe Race and a few others before they stopped.
One of the entrants was Roger Hanks, in his shiny new Nova 24βΒ pleasure boat. He never located the starting line, and we didnβt seeΒ him again for several weeks. He apparently liked the experience, asΒ he took his Nova to the Offenhauser guys in California and got it allΒ fluffed up. He later bought several 36β Cigarettes, all namedΒ βBlondieβ. He introduced tuned, stainless steel exhaust headers and aΒ number of other important improvements to offshore racing inΒ general. He has a permanent place in the colorful history of offshoreΒ racing as the guy who stuck his 36β Cigarette βBlondieβ, right throughΒ a 41β Hatteras check boat, apparently knocking a lady right off theΒ John in the forward stateroom.
My entry in the race was new 19β Nova runabout with a big ChryslerΒ V8 on Vee drive. For crew, I carried my wife, Deanna, famous racingΒ throttleman Harold βSmittyβ Smith, Delta Airlines pilot, βPornographicΒ Bobβ Stothard, my dear friend Curt βRedneckβ Leggett, and SandyΒ Chisholm, son of Donzi Marine President, Tim Chisholm. Leggett hadΒ brought a big bottle of rum. I was an American Power BoatΒ Association Vice President, and I informed him that we would beΒ disqualified if the rum was found on the boat. We were afraid toΒ throw it overboard, being tree-huggers and all, so we drank it. SandyΒ was about 16 or 17 years old, and a couple of slammers did him inΒ immediately. Upon our arrival, we had to hide him from his dad, whoΒ had ridden down in Jake Trotter and Jim Breuilβs 27β Magnum. LeggettΒ carried him around like a briefcase, leaving him behind bushes andΒ such, until he sobered up.
The party lasted two days and nights, and near the end, was totallyΒ staffed by strangers who had just wandered by. The Lorelei Bar, aΒ couple of blocks down the street, had their worst weekend ever. TheΒ OPBRA went into remission, and lasted another 20 years.
In an effort to curb the rising number of boating under the influence incidents during the summer, the Florida Wildlife Commission will putting a plan into place this Friday called a “heightened awareness and enforcement weekend” that piggy backs off of the Operation Dry Water campaign started in 2009.
Boating under the influence is a serious crime and a danger to everyone on the water, and Operation Dry Water is a year round, national campaign focusing on raising awareness as well as increasing the FWC Law Enforcement Division’s presence on the water. The FWC wants to remind boaters that first offenders caught with a BAC level of .08 or higher could pay fines up to $1,000 or serve up to six months in jail.
Major Richard Moore, FWC’s boating and waterways section leader, said boating under the influence is dangerous for all parties involved, and it’s the FWC’s job to help protect the public.
“It’s our job as law enforcement officers to identify and remove impaired boaters from the water so that everyone else can continue to have an enjoyable boating season,” Moore said in a news release. “Protecting the public goes to the heart of our mission.”
So be safe out there whenever you decide to hit the water!
(Video Credit –Β DeloPerformance)
The Seahorse is currently under development, but with 60 models already sold these unique houses are set to draw a lot of attention once they are finished in Dubai.
Credit – VVIP
Another great poker runΒ tookΒ place this past weekend! The Precision Power Offshore Poker Run took place as part of the Muskegon Powerboat Weekend on June 18. West Michigan Offshore hosted the event on the Gold Coast of West Michigan, where performance powerboating reigns.
Saturday wasΒ the big day, with the poker run beginning at noon fromΒ Muskegon Lake. New stops were in White Lake and Grand Haven, and the 70-mile run finished back in Muskegon.Β Approximately 75 boats were lucky to have an unusually calm day on the water to run all around Lake Michigan.
West Michigan Offshore, the area’s one-year-old powerboat club that already has around 200 members, put on the event, which also included a Friday night offshore street party featuring 16 of the area’s hottest boats.Β
By all accounts, this was an incredible summer weekend in Michigan and everyone who attended had a great time.Β A special thank you goes out to the event’s Principal sponsorΒ Precision PowerΒ OffshoreΒ .
Click here to see all the pictures:Β THE CHASE CHARITY POWERBOAT EVENT
The Lake Cumberland Thunder Run lived up to its name this weekend with the roar of high performance boats taking over every inch of the lake and surrounding shores. Great weather and a big turnout made this a weekend to remember!
Lake Life FotosΒ was on the scene and in the chopper getting some up close and personal action shots of all the poker run crews hitting the water! Make sure you check out the Facebook page or website for more pictures from the run to see if you made the cut!
Lake Life Fotos also made the great decision to bring alongΒ Bennie BrawleyΒ of Bennie Brawley Photography and the two teamed up to cover every single moment of the run. If you participated in the run there your bound to be in one of their photo albums. We hope Β you had the change to stop by their booth as well to take part in the raffles as well as buy any prints you liked on the spot!
We’ve also included some great photos by the participants themselves right here like these hilarious shots byΒ Amanda Rae.
(Image courtesy of Terry and Melanie Martin)
It was everything we expected and have come to love about powerboating on Lake Cumberland and we’re sad to see that it’s already over, but we’re looking forward to getting out there next year for an even bigger and better time!
The 2016 Hartwell Lake Poker Run was a huge success this year with an even bigger turnout than in the past. Β A big group of powerboat enthusiasts in South Carolina gathered together to have fun, go power boating, and raise money for Meals on Wheels and this last weekend they had great success with everything. Β A record number of boaters (reported at over 200 boats) hit the water in everything from sport center consoles to high performance cats, thoroughly churning up the lake watersΒ to the sound of high powered roars as everyone came out to enjoy the weather and party.
Below you can find the links to all the photos and video from the well known Freeze Frame as well as many captured by participants themselves!
(Image by Blair Davidson)
Lake Hartwell Poker Run Event Page and Photos (Facebook)
Lake Hartwell Poker Run Video Release by Jason Krawl
(Featured image courtesy ofΒ Freeze Frame Video)