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Atchison
Racing came into existence in the late fifties and
early sixties when Bob Atchison started drag rag racing at
St. Thomas Dragway near his hometown of London. Bob began
racing his street car and then built a "Henry J"
powered by an Oldsmobile engine. This fueled the fire for
Bob's quest for speed until he built a string of dragsters
ending up running Top Fuel throughout Ontario,Michigan and
New York State. 1964 Bob started Atchison
Machine Service to fill the need of local racers of a for
a local quality machine shop to work on performance engines.
Bob also constructed complete turn key race cars from Altered
to Dragsters while successfully campaigning his own Top Fuel
Dragstser. Over the years, the engine building business grew
and expanded that Bob stopped building complete race cars.
With the business continuing to grow and consume Bob's time,
he reluctantly retired from driving after the local tracks
either closed or stopped racing Top Fuel. After a few years,
he was asked to come and help a friend at the local oval track;
soon after he purchased his own car. As they raced and became
more dominant in the Late Model stock car class, he then bought
another car. Now with a two car team, they successfully campaigned
throughout Southern Ontario. He quit racing in the mid seventies
to concentrate on raising a family and concentrate on expanding
and growing his business. The business continued to grow and
expand into the Diesel engine market.
The Torch is past to "The Next Generation"
In
1994, after Bob's son Rob joined
the company on a permanent basis, they decided to start drag
racing together. With Rob driving, they campaigned the For
Wheels Auto Care Camaro throughout the 1995 racing season
winning two Super Pro events and numerous runner ups, finishing
9th in points at Grand
Bend Motorplex in his rookie season. During the end of
the 1995 season, they purchased
a Top Alcohol Funny Car, less motor and transmission, to compete
in the Quick "16", Pro Comp. Eliminator, with Supercharged
Chevrolet and Automatic Transmission.
In
1996 they won the Pro Comp. Championship
at Grand
Bend Motorplex and continued to thunder. In 1997
they campaigned the car in Quick "16" races in Indiana,
Michigan and Ontario with frequent #1 Qualifiers, with a best
time of 6.53@208.00 MPH.
In
July 1998 they purchased their
first true Top Alcohol Funny Car and began making test runs
in September and October to learn the new clutch and transmission
combo. The 1999 debut for the
new car was at the IHRA
Prolong Winter Nationals March 12 -14
in Darlington, South Carolina, was quick and exciting. The
6.155@225.32 MPH qualifying pass put Rob into the #9 qualifying
spot. The 6.155 was the quickest run ever by a Chevrolet powered
Alcohol Funny Car. Rob went on to win "Best Engineered
Pro Car" at the IHRA Amalie Oil Nationals at Cordova.
Rob qualified # 5 at the IHRA World Finals with a 5.99 on
his way to finishing 10th in points. The
2000 season began with the team
looking to improve on their 10th place IHRA points. Rob set
The Grand Bend track record with a career best 5.93 second
pass. He also captured his first career # 1 qualifier at the
inaugural Mopar Canadian Nationals. Rob finished 7th in points
consistently qualifying in the top half of the IHRA fields.
Rob
and Crew were off to their best start in 2001
and
were in 3rd place in IHRA points heading into the Mopar Canadian
Nationals at Grand Bend Motorplex. The season then became
The Crash and Burn Tour !!! During first round
of qualifying at Grand Bend the car suffered a magneto failure
causing a terrifying chain of events. The failure caused the
engine to cross fire popping the burst panel and supercharger
breaking a fuel line which in turn caused a methanol fire.
This melted the air lines to the shifter pods on the transmission
sending the car into low gear at 200 MPH causing the engine
to explode with an oil fire. With a great driving job with
parachutes burning and the car engulfed in flames Rob managed
to stop the car and jump out unhurt thanks to his Simpson
Driving suit and on board fire equipment. The fire crew did
there best but the car was a total loss. After missing the
next event the team returned with the backup Oldsmobile Achieva
and clawed their way back into the top ten. In late August
with new associate sponsor Erickson Manufacturing on board
the team headed into Norwalk, Ohio looking to improve their
position in the standings. After qualifying well bad luck
again struck the team. During the first round of eliminations
Rob got into some residual oil left undetected on the race
track causing him to fight with the car and pulling his chutes
late. The car would not stop and went off the end of the track
at approximately 175 mph. With no sand trap to slow the car
it struck a ditch sending it airborne flipping end over end
and crashing hard completely destroying the car. Thanks to
the Simpson safety equipment Rob managed to come out of this
horrific crash with only a very painful broken tailbone and
a few bruises.
The
2002 season was a return to form
for Rob and Crew. New sponsors Erickson Manufacturing and
PRIDE Fighting Championships, new cars and new truck and trailer.
2002 also brought aboard
West Coast Transportation, Team Truck Centre and Ultimate
Touch Custom and Collision.The new cars featured a new paint
scheme designed by fellow Canadian Stu Wotypka. The paint
was masterfully applied by Branko and Paul of Ultimate Touch.
The new trailer is hauled by a TEAM Truck prepared Freightliner
Condo-Conventional modified to seat six in air-ride comfort.
The team performance continued to improve with Rob continuing
to qualify in the top half of the field. Rob set a career
best ET with a 5.836 second pass at the AC Delco Canadian
Nationals. Rob was 4th in the IHRA points chase when disaster
struck at Epping when the magneto again failed causing yet
another fire destroying the Pontiac. With the help of sponsors
family and friends the team returned to Budd's Creek and then
Rockingham with the "Stealth Car" named for it's
flat black primer paint job. The team qualified well and ended
the 2002 seasson 5th in points.

The
Championship Rob suffered a setback early in 2003
with the sudden and unexpected death of Pride Fighting's
President. He was the supporter of the racing and the sponsorship
fell through when he died. The team missed the first race
in San Antonio because of bad weather at ho me
would not permit the hauler to be loaded or move. The next
race the team went to Rockingham and qualified # 1 before
with a career best before the race has been rained out and
rescheduled to October. 2003 marked the addition of new product
sponsors Crane Cams,FlatOut Gasket, Hoosier Tire,Mother's
Wax ,Ringers Gloves, Tool and Cutter Supply and Weld Wheels
to Atchison Racing. Brent and Connie Erickson and the Erickson
Family became the primary sponsor just before the Mopar Canadian
Nationals and the Rob and the team responded with their first
IHRA victory setting the Grand Bend track record 5.727 seconds.
Erickson Manufacturing became title sponsor for the balance
of 2003 at Grand Bend in early June. In July a deal was struck
to keep the Erickson name on the "Door" for 2 more
years plus an option year. Armed with the knowledge that the
team had a secure sponsorship deal they blasted their way
through the competition winning 6 races, finishing runner-up
at 2 races,setting 7 track records, qualifying # 1 an unbelievable
9 times and finishing with a winning percentage of .860 in
11 races. Winning their first career championship.
The 2004
season began with the team qualifying well but facing a
red hot Mark Thomas who started the year with 4 straight
victories. The team trailed by 147 points at the halfway
point and a lot of people had wrote the Erickson Manufacturing
Team off in the Championship defense. A great team never
quits and when a champion is down but never out because
he is the champion. The team started what is one of IHRA
history's most remarkable comebacks as they won 3 races
and had 5 runner-ups on their way to their 2nd and "Back
to Back" Championship. Along the way the team scored
9 # 1 qualifiers and went to 8 final rounds becoming the
first IHRA Funny Car team to go to eight finals in back
to back years. 
The 2005
season began with a track record setting performance at
San Antonio with the Erickson Manufacturing teams first
Texas Nationals victory. Rob and Crew continued throughout
the year
to qualify well with 9 # 1 qualifiers and 9 low et's for
the event in 11 races. The team also won 7 races and scored
1 runner-up on their way to their third straight championship.
Rob's 16th career victory placed him 4th all-time behind
Jimmy Rector as well as making Rob the Canadian Career leader
in IHRA wins. Rob was also voted by the race as as Canadian
Pro Driver of the Year and his father Bob was voted as Canadian
Crew Chief of the Year. 2005 also saw the Atchison Racing
Team honor the Canadian War Veterans by donating the rear
quarter panel of the Funny Car to Torchbearers and the "Year
of Veteran" on their way to victory at the Canadian
Nationals at Toronto motorsports Park. At the final race
the team became the first ever IHRA Alcohol Funny Car to
run a 5.60 with their record setting 5.685 in the final
pass of 2005. Rob and the team also set the record as being
the only IHRA Alcohol team to appear in 8 finals in three
consecutive seasons
Erickson
Tie Downs and Tow Straps renewed in the fall of 2005 with
Atchison Racing for 3 more years beginning in 2006.
The new commitment from Erickson brought forth the new Monte
Carlos and a complete new engine program. Not a team to
rest on past performances the team sought new territory
and set the IHRA MPH record at Epping on their way to victory
at 249.09. The year was filled with new challenges as the
team struggled to find their consistency and wound up 2nd
in points. The learning curve bodes well for the future
as the Erickson Monte Carlo is extremely quick and very
fast. With continued support from Erickson Tie Downs and
Tow Straps and the many wonderful sponsors Rob and Crew look
to expand their race schedule to include some NHRA races
as well as the IHRA Championship chase in 2007.

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