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Oswego Speedway


The Oswego Speedway (nicknamed "The Steel Palace") is a race track in Oswego, New York. It was built in 1951 and today is an asphalt race track. The track is the Labor Day Weekend home of the 200-lap, non-wing, big-block supermodified Budweiser Classic and Race of Champions (a modified touring series event). Oswego Speedway also hosts the annual "King of Wings" event for winged supermodifieds. In 2016 Oswego Speedway will host the 45th edition of World Racing Group's Super DIRTcar Series Super DIRT Week. The speedway will be covered by approximately 6,900 cubic feet of clay for DIRTcar modified drivers to compete in the NAPA 300. The richest dirt modified race in the world. The event will take place Oct 5-9, 2016.

The track is located at 300 East Albany Street, Oswego, NY 13126, about 35 miles northwest of Syracuse on State Highways 481 and 104; telephone 315-342-0646. The facility has covered and uncovered grandstands on the north side, as well as uncovered grandstands the south. Total seating is =/- 10,000.

Unpaved, open-field parking is available on both sides of Albany Street to the north and east of the "oval" track surface. (It is not truly an oval, but is more of a "four-corner" track. Banking is about thirteen degrees.)

Owned and operated for more than four decades by the Caruso family, the "Big O" is now owned and operated by Eric and John Torrese. Greg Furlong has won the Labor Day Weekend Classic event six times since 1999, and has finished on the podium on two other occasions. Famed Indianapolis 500 drivers Davey Hamilton, Bentley Warren and Joe Gosek are all Budweiser Classic winners. Warren won the Budweiser Classic six times from 1969 through 1998, as well as winning the ISMA Supernationals winged supermodified event in 1994 and 2006 (at the age of 66).

The modern supermodified car is a front-engine / rear-drive vehicle with a truck-block engine mounted on the left side of the chassis to maximize kinetic force for left turns on the 5/8-mile, asphalt track. The normally aspirated, fuel-injected engines make 900 or more horsepower, or one horsepower or more for each two pounds of weight (1800-lb. minimum). Save for the roll cage extension, the cars may be no more than 36 inches high. Most cars have wedge-shaped bodywork to provide downforce. The fastest non-wing supermodifieds are capable of circling the track in less than 16.5 seconds, averaging better than 136 miles per hour in the process.


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