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Racecar Driver John Heinricy Enjoys Running Autocross And HPDE While Helping Others Fine-Tune Their Cars
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Flint Club Hosts Record-Breaking NCCC Meeting; Now Eyes Corvette Crossroads Show In Mackinaw City

More than 200 attended the National Council of Corvette Clubs Michigan Region awards banquet sponsored by the Flint Corvette Club at Matick Chevrolet.
In 1953, the first Corvettes were manufactured in Flint, Mich., a fact not lost on the Flint Corvette Club.
“Our club motto is ‘Birthplace of the Corvette,’†says Jim Harris, club president.
The club itself originally came together back in 1969.
Harris has been a member since 1973, when his ride was a 1971 red Corvette coupe. Now 74, he owns a 2003 Corvette coupe — and the car color is still red.
“My taste hasn’t changed a lot over the years. Black is beautiful, too, if you have someone else doing the polishing,†he jokes.
The Flint club’s 50 members get together monthly to attend events or just “dine and drive.â€
“We do what the members want to do,†Harris says.

Club member Stu Moore relaxes at last summer’s Mackinaw City Corvette Show.
Some of the activities include participation in the Sloan Museum Auto Fair and Back to the Bricks where car lovers gather to park their classics in downtown Flint every August.
This Aug. 27, hundreds of Corvette lovers — including members of the Flint club — will assemble in northern Michigan’s Mackinaw City for the annual Corvette Crossroads Auto Show.
Harris, a retired electrician, and Flint club members helped organizers pull the first show together 27 years ago, he says, because people have a way of finding him because of his long association with Corvettes.
“I’ve gone every year except the one year I had to work,†he says. “It’s a nice place to go with a craft show, shops, and sights to see.â€
The club members gather for an annual corn roast, ball games, and bell ringing for the Salvation Army or Super Bowl parties.

A young Corvette lover checks out the Corvette racer driven by Danny Kellermeyer on display at a recent club meeting. Danny is sponsored by Matick Chevy.
The Flint club is also part of the National Council of Corvette Clubs (NCCC) and is sponsored by George Matick Chevrolet in Redford Township, Mich., a leading Corvette dealer and GM’s Chevy Dealer of the Year for 2014 and 2015.
When a person joins the Flint club, they are also required to join the NCCC.
Harris, who lives in nearby Lennon, Mich., points out one of the national club activities involve competitive driving, including autocross.
“This year we’ll do our program Aug. 14 at Michigan International Speedway,†Harris says.
Participants line up for autocross, racing against the clock, not each other, on a course defined by plastic cones.
After the Flint club lost its dealership sponsor, one of the members who connected with Matick Chevy suggested calling the big Redford dealership, says Harris.
“It’s worked out great,†Harris says.
Matick Chevy and the Flint club hosted the April 3 regional awards banquet for the NCCC Michigan region. Read that story here.
More than 200 attended from 16 Michigan clubs. That was a record turnout, officials reported.
Funds raised were donated to Veterans Outreach of Southeast Michigan.
“It was a good turnout and we recognized people who participate in rallies and shows,†he says.

Club member Barbara Harris gets ready to lead the parade at the 2015 Mackinaw City Corvette Show, which the club has helped coordinate.
As for Corvettes, Harris has a trunkful of reasons for being a fan.
“They’re fun to drive and I appreciate the way the car handles and the technology that has taken place with the Corvette since the 1960s.â€
Harris says he feels youthful behind the wheel.
“You see lot of us old geezers in newer cars,†he says.
The camaraderie connected with Corvette clubs might even affect an owner’s personal life.
Harris met his wife, Barbara, at a national Corvette gathering in the mid-1980s.
“A mutual friend of ours in ‘Corvetteing’ set things up for us to meet,†Harris explains.
Barbara was a Corvette owner and a member of a Toledo area club.
The couple met at a convention in Indiana, and Harris says, “The rest is history.â€
The Flint club welcomes new members. “We are open and friendly,†he explains. “And we’re always looking for new people.â€
Racecar Driver Kellermeyer Posts Record Lap Times Twice On Way To Two Championship Titles For 2015

Danny Kellermeyer set the T1 fastest-lap record at the new National Corvette Museum Motorsports Park this summer. Photo by Jeff Loewe
Legendary Michigan racecar driver Danny Kellermeyer racked up another amazing season in his #37 yellow C6 Corvette.
In addition to setting track lap records at the National Corvette Museum Motorsports Park and Mid-Ohio Sports Car race tracks, Kellermeyer repeated as the winner of two titles — the SCCA Great Lakes Championship Series, which includes race results from tracks in five states, and the Waterford Hills Road Racing (WHRRI) Championship series in Michigan.
“The WHRRI Championship was hard fought over the season’s 15 races and it came right down to the last weekend to finalize the points winner,†reports Kellermeyer of the George Matick Chevrolet-sponsored DJ Racing Team. “The Clarkston, Mich., WHRRI is a challenging 14-turn, 1.5-mile road race track that draws a very competitive group of drivers from Canada, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and as far away as New York.
“We experienced exceptional racing this year with great competition from BMWs, Porsches, as well as other Corvettes,†he adds. “Our Matick Chevy Corvette racecar was able to win 10 of the 15 races this summer, which put us on top for the championship.â€

The Waterford Hills Road Racing championship came down to the last day of racing with Danny Kellermeyer retaining the title. Photo by Mark Windecker
The DJ Racing Team faced challenging competitors at multiple tracks in the SCCA Great Lakes Championship Series.
Kellermeyer competed in the first “door-to-door competition race†at the new National Corvette Museum Motorsports Park in Kentucky. The 184-acre facility — completed in late 2014 — hosted its first SCCA competition event in June.
The $20-million facility consists of a west and east course and, when combined into the Grand Course, creates an exciting 3.15-mile extremely technical course.
“This new track was on my list of things to do this season, and we were going to tackle the track with vengeances,†Kellermeyer reports. “I love studying new tracks and this one was going to be new to everyone. It was a fun event and I was able to have my family all together at the track. It’s not often I have been able do that.â€
The track consisted of three sections where more than 125 mph could be obtained, two of those areas continue into carousels where 95-100 mph are maintained. Add in 23 turns, a LeMans straight, a 30-foot sink hole drop, a 75-mph chicane in the front straight and you have the most technical track anywhere, he says.
“I thought I had the track figured out before I got there, but I found out how wrong I was. I did not calculate for all of those elevation changes. The complete track is rolling except for the front straight,†says Kellermeyer.
His #37 yellow Corvette emerged triumphant, winning both races and setting a new track record each day. “Our Matick Chevy/Corvette Central/Hawk-sponsored performance Corvette will go down in history as the first Corvette to win at NCM Motorsports Park in a competition event,†boasts a happy Kellermeyer. “I set the T1 record the first race and then broke the record by 1.5 seconds in the second race.â€
At the Gingerman Raceway in West Michigan, Kellermeyer captured another first-place podium finish as well as top finishes at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington, Ohio. He once again broke the T1 track record on the pro course at Mid-Ohio.
“The track got better the final day and I was able to lower the lap record by more than a second on the final day. I was able to qualify under the record, but we can only set the record during the race. So we worked on the car to get it ready for the race to run another fast lap and it worked.â€

Racecar driver Danny Kellermeyer enjoys meeting with fans, signing posters and talking about his Matick Chevy-sponsored C6. Photo by Jeff Loewe
The DJ Racing Team also managed to support other venues. Highlights of these were the Waterford Hills Road Racing Vintage Race, Corvette Autocross events, shows and displays, and hosting various Corvette clubs with DJ Racing shop tours.
DJ Racing’s 29-year-old C4 Corvette was prepped and ran its first vintage races. A podium finish was obtained in all three races, finishing with two second places and a first place. “The older racecar still was impressive as it had been stored in a barn for the past nine years,†he says.
The Flint Corvette Club (Mich.) and Irish Hills Corvette Club teamed up to hold an NCCC autocross event at Michigan International Speedway (MIS) this summer. The event brought in competitors from as far away as Nebraska. The DJ Racing team supported the event with a display of the Matick Chevy-sponsored C6 Corvette racecar, as well as offering free corner weight evaluations of the competitors’ cars.
“We set up the scales and scaled a lot of cars,†says Kellermeyer. “Each competitor got a Matick Chevy corner weight sheet documenting their Corvette. I don’t think anyone has ever offered this at an event and we had Corvette owners waiting for their opportunity to drive up on the scales.â€

Corvette driver Danny Kellermeyer took the checkered flag numerous races this season as he finished with two series championships. Photo by Mark Windecker
GM Student Intern/Muscle-Car Lover In Awe Of GM’s Heritage Center

A pair of 1963 Corvettes, one a convertible and one with hard top, both with a 327 under the hood.
Guest post by Mitchell Bergslien
Growing up, my dad always took me to local (and not so local) muscle-car shows, which only grew my love and appreciation for American muscle cars —where they came from, why they were important and the heritage that they represented.

GM Intern Mitchell Bergslien.
When muscle cars were hot, it was a simpler time — it was all about who had the biggest V8 and things like the “radio delete†option, checked off to save weight for your quarter-mile time. One of the most important vehicles, I think, that represents heritage, speed, V8s and pure Detroit Muscle is the Chevrolet Corvette.
As a General Motors intern this summer and muscle-car lover, I (and fellow interns) was given the amazing opportunity to visit the GM Heritage Center in Sterling Heights, Mich. Walking in, the first car you see is a perfect-condition 1956 Chevy pickup, beautiful in black with black wheels and chrome hubcaps — the epitome of what every Chevy truck guy would love to own.
That truck was just the tip of the iceberg in the GM North American Heritage Collection. In addition to a facility full of 600 concept vehicles, rare and classic muscle cars, and experimental vehicles, a very cool part of the museum features archives that contain records of every GM car and truck going back forever.
A visitor could look up, for example, the marketing campaign for the original Corvette from 1953, which is amazing compared to the modern-day marketing for the current C7 Corvette. (Ok, it was cool for me, anyway, considering that I am a marketing major/intern at GM’s world headquarters in Detroit this summer.)
After touring all of that, we were invited to the museum’s warehouse. It was GM muscle-car heaven — a dream come true for me to see all these cars in perfect condition, and with such great heritage.
You could see anything from a 1957 Bel-Air or 1996 Chevrolet Impala SS to a 1970 Nova SS or a 1939 Buick Roadmaster. There is a full line of Chevy and GMC trucks from the first Chevy Suburban and 1902 Cadillac. The progression of cars is amazing — it’s exciting to see how far we’ve come.

Here’s the rear view of the beautiful pair, got to love that split window styling! They don’t make them like that anymore.
By far the coolest section was the Corvette line-up, including a perfect Sebring Silver 1963 split-window 327 4-speed with a black interior. Prominently on display next to her is the 1963 convertible 327 4-speed, fashioned in tuxedo black with a gorgeous red interior.
Those two were my personal favorites — the split window was the coolest thing that Chevy ever designed! Of course, the holy-grail Corvette would have to be the 327 fuel injection, 360 horsepower engine, but beggars can’t be choosers. Still, it’s a beautiful car to look at and it is in good hands! I’m so glad that these cars are preserved and kept as a piece of Chevy history.

Two Mako Shark Corvette concepts – painted with the fade from dark blue to light gray just like the Mako Shark itself.
Right next to those two beauties sat a pair of 1973 C3 Corvettes, one in classic white and the other in pace car spec. It was really cool to see the progression of the Corvette in just 10 years. The biggest surprise is the amount of horsepower coming out of those engines.
In 1963, the 327 made more than 300 horsepower. Fast forward to 1973 through the gas/oil crisis, a Chevy small block 350 can’t even make 200 horsepower. As cool as the 1973 Stingray looked, it just didn’t have the performance to match it.

A display of Corvette racing memorabilia.
The next generation C6 Corvette was much farther ahead in 2006 — a beautiful car painted in the classic Lemans blue with a black interior. Today’s Corvettes share similar qualities with their older generations, but are still very different, long, low and lean with a big engine.

A C3 interior. Even in today’s C7 you can now get an all-red leather interior, but with much more gadgets and technology.
The most important feature shared was the four circular taillights. Corvette has stayed true to those taillights throughout the years. While other things have changed, including the exterior styling, the interiors and even the Corvette badge, one thing that stayed for a long time was the four round taillights … until the big change with the C7 generation.
This particular C6 had the 400 horsepower LS2 6.0L V8. One thing I don’t like that all the manufacturers did was switch to liters instead of cubic inches. “Cubic inches†just sounds way cooler than liters, but that’s just me.
Either way, the new Corvette engines are monsters and if they had put this kind of power into a classic ’63 Corvette, it would be beauty-meets-the-beast and it would definitely own the street.

Check this mid-engine 1990 Corvette prototype car. Look how low that is to the ground!
On top of all the cool production Corvettes, the museum features a handful of experimental and concept Corvettes that were really cool to see. One that stuck out in particular was the 1961 Mako Shark Corvette. Inspired by the Mako Shark itself, this looker has the 427 V8 and is even painted like a shark — dark blue on top fading down to a grayish white on the bottom. And of course, it features huge side exhaust pipes.

C6 Corvette when they were first introduced in 2005. Oh how far they have come with the styling! For better or worse?
Having the opportunity to experience GM’s entire heritage and to see how far the company has come was just amazing. The progression of cars is fantastic and technology is great, but it’s important to know from where you came.
I would love to go again and would encourage anyone who has the opportunity to go!

A prototype Corvette, no motor in this, just a cool concept body that would be amazing if they ever put into production!
Access to the GM Heritage Center is limited to GM internal groups and external organizations seeking a unique and exclusive venue that was designed to create an ideal setting for a variety of events. Information about reserving the venue for a special event, meeting, or group tour can be found here.
Mitchell Bergslien, of Oswego, Ill., is a marketing major at Northern Illinois University who is spending the summer in Detroit as a GM marketing intern working in Dealer Network Planning and Investments.
Posted July 31, 2015
July 25 ‘Corvette Generations’ Car Show Pre-Registration Due July 6
The North Oaks Corvette Club‘s third annual “Corvette Generations” Car Show on Saturday, July 25 in downtown Birmingham, Mich., is limited to 120 Corvettes.
The $25 pre-registration fee is due July 6. Update: The fee is $35 from July 7 to the day of the show.
Check out these flyers for more details. It’s one of Michigan’s best Corvette shows.




