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On the quarter-mile, Foltz's products were an integral part of the 1996, 1997, 2000, 2002, and 2007 Pro Stock world championships, two for Jim Yates and three for Jeg Coughlin. "That first championship in drag racing, as a supplier for Jim Yates in 1996, was huge," Foltz said. "To compete against the Warren Johnsons of the world was beyond comprehension at the time."
Four years later, CFE-equipped cars won the Pro Stock championship, (Coughlin) the Winston Cup (Bobby Labonte), the Indy 500 (Juan Pablo Montoya), and the Indy Racing League series title (Buddy Lazier) in the same season, unprecedented in the history of racing. CFE drivers did it again in 2002, with Coughlin winning another U.S. Nationals and another Pro Stock championship, world-famous Tony Stewart winning the Winston Cup, Helio Castroneves a second straight Indy 500, and Sam Hornish a second consecutive IRL championship.
"Making more power has been my passion forever, since I was a kid," said Foltz, 45. "You have dreams of accomplishing something like that, but we didn't win those championships – our customers won them. I could give a set a of heads to other people, and they wouldn't win a thing."
Today, Foltz leads a dedicated staff in a state-of-the-art facility using five-axis machining centers. In the beginning, it was just him. "I've been porting heads since I was 15 years old, in the late '70s, which was a great time to start," Foltz said. "That's when flow benches were just coming out."
Foltz's first major drag racing success came at the 1985 Winternationals, when David Nickens and the late Larry Kopp staged in the Comp final, both using CFE sheet-metal manifolds. Foltz was 22. His Comp program took another quantum leap in 1991 when the late John Lingenfelter, who would be one of CFE's most influential customers, made the first six-second pass in a normally aspirated, gas-burning vehicle. His Comp dragster, powered by a 440 cubic-inch, single four-barrel engine with CFE-ported Big Chief Pro Stock heads and a CFE manifold, ran a 6.92 at the Keystone Nationals. |
Drivers in drag racing classes as varied as Pro Mod, Top Sportsman, Super Gas, and organizations such as PSCA, NSCA, ORSCA, and NMCA also benefit from CFE's expertise, but the company's foundation was built on its success at the highest level of the sport: Pro Stock.

In 1993, Foltz became involved with Yates' operation, which was headed up by master engine builder Richard Maskin. A year later, Yates, who has gone on to become the eighth-winningest driver in Pro Stock history, won his first of 25 professional titles at the 1994 NorthStar Nationals in Brainerd. Since then, there have been an avalanche of CFE wins in Pro Stock – 75 and counting. The three hottest drivers in the class this summer – Coughlin, Dave Connolly, and Allen Johnson – all run CFE heads, as do contenders Greg Stanfield, Richie Stevens, and Ron Krisher. In America's biggest racing series, NASCAR Nextel Cup competition, CFE has never gone more than three years without winning a Cup championship. Labonte won the 2000 Cup title, and Stewart won it all in 2002 and 2005 for Joe Gibbs Racing.
In the Indy Racing League, four-valve V-8 GM engines with CFE heads account for countless race wins, scores of pole positions, seven consecutive championships, and the 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, and 2002 Indianapolis 500s with drivers Arie Luyendyk, Eddie Cheever, Kenny Brack, Montoya, and Castroneves (twice), respectively.
"The beauty of what we do is that what you learn from all these different applications really does help in other areas," Foltz said. "Not everything – that's the whole thing. You learn what applies to other kinds of racing. Some of it does, and some doesn't. Because we're so diverse, we have an advantage in understanding how to apply different technology to each arena." |